LONDON: A British Muslim of Iraqi-Kurdish origin is walking from the UK to 抖阴短视频 to arrive in time for next year鈥檚 Hajj pilgrimage.
Adam Mohamed, 52, set off from Wolverhampton, where he lives, on Aug. 1 and aims to reach Makkah before the pilgrimage starts in July.
He has already reached the Netherlands and will pass through Germany, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Turkey, Syria and Jordan. The journey is around 6,500 km and he is walking on average 17.8 km each day.
鈥淥ne day I just woke up and I said I am going to walk toward Hajj, toward Makkah, which is what I did, and to pray on the way and beg for Allah to give us mercy and forgive us as a humankind, all of us, not just one race, or one identity, or one faith, everyone,鈥 Mohamed told Arab News.
Hajj is one of the five pillars of Islam and must be performed at least once in a lifetime. The annual pilgrimage to Islam鈥檚 holiest city is one of the world鈥檚 largest gatherings with more than 2 million people taking part each year. This year however, Saudi authorities did not permit foreign pilgrims and restricted the ritual to 60,000 people already living inside the Kingdom in a bid to stop the spread of the coronavirus disease.
Pushing a cart weighing up to 250 kg and outfitted with speakers playing Islamic recitations, Mohamed said he is spreading messages of love, peace and equality.
鈥淚 came out from my home, and my journey is turning up to be Ummah鈥檚 (the community鈥檚) journey,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ow, it鈥檚 not not my journey anymore, it鈥檚 for every different race, religion, faith and ethnicity.鈥
The self-employed electrical engineer is meeting dozens of people along the way.
鈥淪o many people are coming forward just to pay their respects from everywhere, they are bringing me food every single day, most of them pay me money as well and a lot of them leave everything behind and they come and stay with me and push the trolley with me,鈥 he said.
A was set up on Aug. 1 to raise money for his 鈥淧eace Journey from UK to Makkah鈥 initiative and has raised nearly 拢30,000 ($41,240), well over his target of just 拢1,000.
Mohamed built the trolley, the size of a coffin, in two months with the help of a local welding company, and fitted it with electricity to help him sleep and cook. It bears the name of his mission in English and Arabic and at the back it reads 鈥淎ll Lives Matter.鈥
After the pandemic hit, the father-of-two began questioning many things, dived deep into the Qur鈥檃n and began to examine life and human behavior. He said he wanted to remind people along the way that life is short and imagine if something else comes along 鈥渁 little bit bigger or a little bit stronger, what could happen?鈥 h
He said: 鈥淢y message is to all humanity: Please stop hatred, stop judging people, we are human, we are brothers. Plus, we as Muslim communities in the EU 鈥 around 30 or 40 million Muslims 鈥 have been forced to leave our lands. We came here and we came as refugees, we came seeking peace. The people of Europe provide that for us, so we should respect them.鈥
Within 25 days he has gained half a million followers on TikTok as he documents his journey daily on social media. People driving past in their cars are beginning to recognize him with children running up to him and telling him that they are listening to his advice.
鈥淵ou cannot imagine how happy and proud I feel when I see the kids running toward me and say 鈥楿ncle Adam, my hero鈥 and hug me. I鈥檓 inspiring them as well as women and men,鈥 he said. In one of his videos, he also wears a hijab for a day as a tribute and to encourage Muslim women to wear it with pride.
The humble humanitarian said he is not bothered about fame and money, but wants to help people and be 鈥渁 servant for humanity from the biggest head of the government, to the smallest member in the community.鈥
Mohamed, who speaks four languages, including Arabic and Farsi, has already received many requests for assistance when he returns, among which is a request to help fight against a ban on halal meats in European countries like France, Poland and the Netherlands.
Mohamed moved to the UK in the late 1990s after serving in the Iraqi army as a soldier and being captured as a prisoner of war. He expressed his pride in Queen Elizabeth II and the British government for removing difficulties faced by Muslims in other countries and the principle of basic human rights they adhere to.
鈥淚 feel honored to be his daughter because I never thought he would do something so amazing and bring so many people together,鈥 his eldest daughter Dalya told Arab News.
鈥淗e brought peace, love and humanity and restored all of that back into us as humans, and I think a lot of us we鈥檙e forgetting that at the end of the day we are all brothers and sisters, and he is bringing so much positive in so much negative that there is at the moment in the world,鈥 Dalya, 21, said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to see one person be able to bring all of this together.鈥