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Remembering the siege of Makkah

Remembering the siege of Makkah
The Hajj at the Grand Mosque in Makkah in 1973. Six years later, a sacrilegious storming of the mosque by armed fanatics shook 海角直播 and sent shockwaves through the Islamic world. (Bettmann/Getty Images)
Updated 19 November 2019

Remembering the siege of Makkah

Remembering the siege of Makkah
  • Forty years ago, a group of armed fanatics led by Juhayman Al-Otaibi were primed for an assault that would cast a long, regressive shadow over 海角直播

JEDDAH:听 In November 1979, the Middle East was already on a knife edge. In Iran, a liberal monarchy that had ruled for almost four decades had just been overthrown by a fundamentalist theocracy preaching a return to medieval religious values that many feared would pollute and destabilize the entire region.

For the citizens of 海角直播, however, the greatest shock was yet to come. The sacrilegious storming of the Grand Mosque in Makkah by armed fanatics that month sent shockwaves through the entire Islamic world.

Murder and mayhem erupted in the very heart of Islam, perpetrated by a reactionary听sect determined to overthrow the Saudi government and convinced that one among their number was the Mahdi, the redeemer of Islam whose appearance, according to the hadith,听heralds听the Day of Judgment.听

Ahead lay two weeks of bitter, bloody fighting as听Saudi forces听fought to reclaim the Holy Haram for the true faith, but that battle was merely the overture to a war for the very soul of Islam in the Kingdom.

Open, progressive and religiously tolerant, 海角直播 was about to travel back in time. Only now, as the Kingdom pushes forward into a new era of transparency and modernization, can the full story of the siege of Makkah and the regressive shadow it would cast over the country for the next 40 years finally be told.

As the citizens of Makkah and those pilgrims who had remained behind after Hajj saw out the final hours of Dhu Al-Hijjah, the 12th and final month of the Islamic calendar, and prepared to greet the year 1400 in prayer within the precincts of the Grand Mosque, a few inconspicuous pickup trucks slipped unchallenged听into it听through an entrance听used by construction workers听under the Fatah Gate, on the north side of the mosque.

The trucks and the men who drove them were there at the bidding of Juhayman Al-Otaibi, a disaffected former corporal in the Saudi National Guard.

As a firebrand at the head of a small group of religious students based in a small village outside Madinah, Juhayman had been on the radar of the authorities for some time.听According to Prince Turki Al-Faisal, who in 1979 was the head of 海角直播鈥檚 General Intelligence Directorate, the group consisted of students from various religious seminaries who had put their faith in the eschatological figure of the Mahdi, the supposed redeemer of Islam.听

鈥淭heir aim, according to their beliefs, was to liberate the Grand Mosque from the apostate rulers of the Kingdom and to liberate all Muslims by the coming of the so-called Mahdi,鈥 Prince Turki said in an interview with Arab News.

Juhayman and his group were set on a path that would lead to tragedy, reaching out to potential recruits听both inside and outside听the Kingdom. 鈥淭hrough their correspondence and preaching, they managed to recruit a few individuals,鈥 Prince Turki said.听




Juhayman Al-Otaibi after his capture following the end of the seige. (AFP)

One temporary recruit was the Saudi writer Abdo Khal, who in 2010 won the International Prize for Arabic Fiction for his novel 鈥淭hrowing Sparks.鈥 In an interview in 2017 with MBC television, he said that when he was 17 he was one of Juhayman鈥檚 men and had even helped to spread the group鈥檚 ideology by distributing leaflets.

鈥淚t鈥檚 true, I was going to be part of one of the groups that was going to enter the Haram,鈥 he said and, were it not for the intervention of his elder sister, he might have found himself among those who were to seize the Grand Mosque.听

鈥淚 was supposed to move out to (a mosque) where our group was gathering. We were supposed to be in seclusion at the mosque for three days, and we were supposed to leave with Juhayman on the fourth day.鈥

But his sister stopped him going to the rendezvous point, on the ground that he was too young to be sleeping away from home for three nights. Almost certainly, she saved his life. 鈥淎nd then, on the fourth day, the horrendous incident happened.鈥澨

Writer Mansour Alnogaidan was only 11 years old when the siege happened, but like many Saudis of his generation, he felt the tug of various Salafi groups in his youth.

Now general manager of听Harf and Fasela Media, which operates counter-terrorism websites, he has done extensive research on the Makkah siege.

Alnogaidan says there were a number of possible reasons behind the 1979 incident, including an existing idea in the mind of Juhayman and his group that they were the successors of a Bedouin movement by the name of 鈥淚khwan-men-taa-Allah.鈥

鈥淪ome believed they had a vendetta against the Saudi government,鈥 he said in an interview with Arab News. 鈥淎nother issue was essentially the personal desires of certain people (such as Juhayman) who sought power and control. He wanted to satisfy something inside him.鈥

Alnogaidan added: 鈥淎lso, we must not forget that this incident came after the Khomeini revolution in Iran, which had an influence even though not a听direct one.鈥

Juhayman and his group were on the radar of the security services.听Over time, recalled Prince Turki, 鈥渢here were many attempts by authorized religious scholars in the Kingdom to rectify the group鈥檚 beliefs by discussion, argument and persuasion.鈥澨

Occasionally individuals were taken in for questioning by the authorities 鈥渂ecause they were considered to be potentially disruptive to society. Once they were taken in, however, they always gave affidavits and signed assurances that they would not continue with the preaching and so on.鈥

But 鈥渙nce they were released, of course, they returned to their previous ways.鈥

At some point in the closing months of the 13th Islamic century, Juhayman鈥檚 group听identified one of their number, Juhayman鈥檚 brother-in-law Mohammed Al-Qahtani, as the Mahdi.

In the early hours of Tuesday, Nov. 20, 1979, as the inhabitants of Makkah and the pilgrims who had lingered after Hajj gravitated toward the Grand Mosque for the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to experience the dawning of a new century in Islam鈥檚 holiest place, the stage was set for the most unholy of outrages.

Carrying firearms within the Grand Mosque was strictly forbidden; even the guards were armed only with sticks. An armed assault on the precincts of the mosque 鈥 on the sacred values it enshrined for the world鈥檚 two billion Muslims 鈥 was unthinkable.

But on the first day of the听Islamic new year of 1400, the unthinkable happened.

Juhayman: 40 years on
On the anniversary of the 1979 attack on Makkah's Grand Mosque, Arab News tells the full story of an unthinkable event that shocked the Islamic world and cast a shadow over Saudi society for decades

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