Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Gulf Saudi

Saudi Arabia: School exams brought forward in Mecca due to Hajj

Over 2 million Muslims expected to perform upcoming pilgrimage



Accordingly, practical tests will begin on the 14th of the Islamic lunar month Dhul Qadah corresponding to May 22, written exams on Dhul Qadah 18 or May 26, and oral exams on June 3.
Image Credit: Shutterstock

Cairo: The final school examinations in the Saudi holy city of Mecca have been brought forward due to next month’s annual Islamic Hajj pilgrimage.

The authorities announced advancing dates of the end-of-year exams in the city’s schools “exceptionally” because the Hajj season is drawing close.

Get exclusive content with Gulf News WhatsApp channel

Accordingly, practical tests will begin on the 14th of the Islamic lunar month Dhul Qadah corresponding to May 22, written exams on Dhul Qadah 18 or May 26, and oral exams on June 3.

This year’s Hajj rites in and around Mecca are expected to begin on June 14, depending on the sighting of the new moon.

Advertisement

Also read

More than 2 million Muslims from across the globe are projected to attend upcoming Hajj.

Saudi agencies engaged in preparing for Hajj works anticipate record numbers of pilgrims after around 30 million Muslims from inside and outside the kingdom undertook Umrah or minor pilgrimage in the Grand Mosque, Islam’s holiest site, in Mecca during the past Islamic sacred month of Ramadan that ended on April 9.

Some 1.8 million Muslims from around the world last year performed Hajj, marking the return of their numbers to pre-pandemic levels.

Saudi Arabia has embarked on early preparations for this year’s Hajj under a new strategy for overseas pilgrims. Therefore, no specific places would be allotted any more for countries. Instead, places for different countries are allocated depending on the time of finalising contracts.

Advertisement

The new mechanism aims at facilitating preparations for Hajj, an obligatory Islamic duty that must be carried out at least once in a lifetime by Muslims who can afford it physically and financially.

Advertisement