After departing Arafah at sunset, hacilar travel to Muzdelife where they pray Maghrib and Isha combined, collect pebbles for the Cemerat stoning, and spend the night under the open sky. The Kur'an instructs: 'When you depart from Arafat, remember Allah at al-Mash'ar al-Haram' (2:198).
Muzdelife is an open plain located between Arafah and Mina, approximately 8-9 kilometers from each. After the sun sets on the Day of Arafah, hacilar depart for Muzdelife. Due to the massive number of people moving simultaneously, the journey — which should take 20-30 minutes — often takes 2-6 hours. Upon arrival, the immediate obligation is to pray Maghrib and Isha combined and shortened (Maghrib three rak'ahs, Isha two rak'ahs), with one adhan and two iqamahs. Delaying this namaz until reaching Muzdelife is the sunnah, even if it means praying Maghrib well after its normal time has passed.
At Muzdelife, hacilar collect the small pebbles (approximately chickpea-sized) they will use for the stoning of the Cemerat over the following days. The minimum needed is 49 pebbles (7 for the 10th, 21 each for the 11th and 12th), though many scholars recommend collecting 70 to have extras. The overnight stay at Muzdelife is considered wajib (farz) by most scholars, though the exemption for elderly, ill, and weak hacilar (and their companions) to depart after midnight is well-established. For others, the sunnah is to spend the night, pray Fajr at its earliest time, then stand at al-Mash'ar al-Haram making dua until the sky brightens, before departing for Mina.
Muzdelife is specifically mentioned in Kur'an-i Kerim: 'But when you depart from Arafat, remember Allah at al-Mash'ar al-Haram. And remember Him, as He has guided you, for indeed, you were before that among those astray' (2:198). Al-Mash'ar al-Haram (the Sacred Monument) is identified with a specific area within Muzdelife, though Hz. Peygamber clarified that all of Muzdelife is a valid stopping place. The Kur'anic instruction to 'remember Allah' at Muzdelife underscores that this is a site of worship, not merely a transit point between Arafah and Mina.
Muzdelife offers a unique spiritual experience within the Hac journey. After the emotional intensity of Arafah, the haci arrives at a barren plain with no facilities, no comfort, and no shelter. Sleeping on the bare ground under the stars alongside millions of others creates a profound sense of radical simplicity and equality. There are no walls, no rooms, no beds — just the earth and the sky. Many hacilar describe this night as one of the most memorable of their entire Hac, not despite the discomfort but because of it. The simplicity strips away the last remnants of worldly attachment and prepares the heart for the intense ritual activity of the 10th of Dhul Hijjah.