
A view of
an outside wall of the haram
hints at some of the incredible
archictectural use of gold,
marble and inlaid stones
throughout the haram. The floors
are indeed cleaned and polished
enough you could eat off them.
This is an incredible
satellite photo of the Haram
and surroundings. Kind of scary
that non-muslims are also
monitoring this, but perhaps in
the future we can use these
images and GPS to control the
flow of hajj
better ;) The rest of
us could watch as the satellite
updates every couple of minutes
to show the movement of ppl
during the hajj!!
Here's another
satellite image, but bigger.
The Kaaba. The focus of
the entire Muslim world and the
most sacred building on earth.
This photo shows how big the
kaaba really is relative to the
ppl constantly in motion around
it. You can also see some of
the beauty of the interior
levels of the haram.
This picture shows the
haram one night when it is
jam-packed with ppl from in
front of the kaaba all the way
up to the rooftop. The haram
glows with power an energy in
the midst of Makkah.
Twilight at the haram
filters everything into a blue
light. Worshippers sit or stand
right in front of the holy door
to the Kaaba and the Maqam
(station) of Ibrahim.
Cars, buildings and
mountains surround the
picturesque masjid. The haram
looks as if it's hiding a
mysterious, beautiful secret
within.
An aerial view of the
haram before much of the
construction that exists today.
Here you can almost imagine
Makkah without any of these
tall buildings...the Kaaba
alone in the middle of a
mountainous desert with only
small houses in the hills
surrounding it.
A man prays in one of
the sacred mosques. This photo
symbolizes the essence of
Islam. Serenity, peace, faith
in God, simplicity, beauty...
A lovely shot from the
courtyard of the Prophet's
Mosque. Underneath this green
dome lies Rasulullah (saw), Abu
Bakr (ra) & Umar (ra).
Row after row of
pillars and arches follow each
other inside the haram of
Madinah. Beautiful carpets line
the floors. A cleaner leans on
a pillar, taking a break from
attacking even the smallest
speck of dust.
Hundreds of ppl take to
the roof of the prophet's
mosque in Madinah praying under
the open sky. Pillars and
zamzam coolers line the roof as
well as the floors underneath.
A look at the interior
of the orignial Masjid an-Nabi.
Here the mihrab of rasulullah
(saw) is shown along with a
white flowered carpeted area
which indicates the Rawdah.
From my house to my minbar is a
garden (rawdah) from the
gardens of Paradise, said the
prophet (saw). This area is
always packed with ppl vying
for even a hand span to do
their sajdahs.
This photo evokes the feelings
of solitude and peace inherent
of Madinah. Behind this quiet
wall lies Rasullullah (saw).