Edmonton Muslims face financial woes due to Hajj pilgrimage entry restrictions - Action News
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Edmonton

Edmonton Muslims face financial woes due to Hajj pilgrimage entry restrictions

With Hajj cancelled for Muslims outside of Saudi Arabia, many are devastated not only at not being able to fulfill a religious duty but the cancellation also comes with financial woes.

Muslims in Canada have either lost or are waiting on thousands of dollars in refunds after Hajj got cancelled.

In this March 7, 2020 file photo, workers disinfect the ground around the Kaaba, the cubic building at the Grand Mosque, in the Muslim holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia after authorities emptied Islam's holiest site for sterilization over fears of the new coronavirus. Saudi Arabia said Tuesday, June 22, 2020 this years hajj will not be canceled, but that due to the coronavirus only very limited numbers of people will be allowed to perform the pilgrimage that traditionally draws around 2 million people from around the world to Mecca once a year. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil, File) (Amr Nabil/The Associated Press)

For the past several years Waseem Ashtikar, a kitchen manager at Boston Pizza in Edmonton has been saving money for himand his wife to fulfil their final religious duty as Muslims, to perform Hajj.

The annual pilgrimage a mandatory duty for all those physically and financially able is set to begin on July 28 this year and ends on Aug. 2. For the past several years millions of Muslims, from all walks of life save up to go for Hajj in Saudi Arabia.

According to the General Authority of Statistics for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, more than two million people attended Hajj in 2017. That number only grows each year.

This year, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, only 1000 Saudi citizens will be performing Hajj. Everybody else had to cancel their plans, including Ashtikar.

He was devastated when he realized Hajj would not be a reality this year.He said he had been saving moneyfor the past three to four years.

"It's a big savings from this country like if we are going from some other country like back home (India) or somewhere else, it's cheaper," he said.

"Here like it's minimum you need at least $25,000 to $30,000 to save for the Hajj."

In Canada and the U.S, Muslims interested in going for Hajj often purchase all-inclusivetravel packages from companies that exclusively takepeople on the pilgrimage. The packages offer hotel stays, transport, food and sometimes will include flights too. They vary in price, depending on the proximity of hotels to the mosques, the amount of transportation required and food choices but are usually in the tens of thousands of dollars per person.

Ashtikar was set to fly to Saudi Arabia on July 12, but in February Saudi Arabia moved to temporarily halt entry into the kingdom. He waited for the next few monthshoping that COVID-19 cases might drop andHajj could be a possibility, but they didn't.

Another traveller, Khadija Farooq was lucky enough not to invest all her money right away.

The speech pathologist from Edmonton had also been saving for two years to go to Hajj with her husband.

Khadija Farooq with her husband and two-year-old. Farooq and her husband were supposed to go for Hajj this year but had to cancel due to the pandemic. (Khadija Farooq)

Their Hajj package which included the cheapest hotels farther away from the mosque and least amount of transport hence requiring them to walk everywhere, cost $22,000 in total not including flights.

"It's quite a pricey and financial commitment, right, that you are making," she said.

Farooq had only given in a $200 deposit and had not paid the full fee yet.

"We were some of the lucky ones who didn't end up paying the full $22,000, but I know that a lot of people weren't fortunate as we were," she said.

Travel companies are also struggling as they face mass cancellations from clients.

Tamir Ali, owner of ECO Travels in Edmonton, said after Hajj got cancelled his clients expected their money back right away.

"Most of the money is already split between airline deposits and hotel deposits and some of these deposits are not refundable and you will just get it as credit," he said.

"They think it can happen right away, a refund. So we are in a very tough situation."

Ali said to keep the lights on he took a loan from the federal government, however he does not believe it will sustain him in the long term.

"We are looking for a more comprehensive strategy to help us businesses that are affected harshly in this crisis."

Where some like Farooq are waiting until the pandemic is over to reconsider their Hajj plans, Ashtikar is holding out hope for next year.

"This year Almighty didn't plan for us (to go), but next year we are planning to go again," he said.