The mourners participating in the condolence ritual "Rakdat Twayreej" are flocking to the shrine of Aba Al-Fadl Al-Abbas (peace be upon him)..

Mourners going towards the shrine of Aba Al-Fadl A
The mourners participating in the condolence ritual of "Rakdat Twayreej" continue flocking to the shrine of Aba Al-Fadl Al-Abbas (peace be upon him). The groups of the followers of Ahl Al-Bayt (peace be upon them) creeping towards the holy shrine, their voices rumbling "Ya Hussayn! Ya Hussayn!" a scene that inspires spirituality and the grandeur of the occasion, like if these crowds came to answer the call of Imam Al-Hussayn (peace be upon him) to support him, liek if they arrived late until after the martyrdom of the Imam (peace be upon him), this is why they are bashing their heads calling "Ya Hussayn" Ya Hussayn!
The run began after performing the noon prayers, the time when the Imam (peace be upon him) has fallen on the desert of Karbala.
The run of Twayreej is a spontaneous demonstration, held by the people and clans of "twayreej" - District of Hindiyah of the province of Karbala, 20 km to the city- to commemorate and to answer the call of Al-Hussayn the tenth day of the sacred month of Ashura "Ama min nasirin yansuruna" [is there any supporter to respond to my call for aid?]
One of the specialized centers in statistics considered it, one of the largest human gatherings in the world, unique event of its kind and a distinct and special religious ritual.
The first year of this run was 1303 AH corresponding to the year 1885, on the eve of Ashura, people gathered in the house of Sayed Saleh Al-Qazwini for the commemorations, and once they finished reading the story of the martyrdom, they spontaneously went out calling "Wa Hussayn" "Wa Hussayn" trotting in the streets of the city for supporting him. On the subsequent years, this ritual became organized, then moved to Karbala in an orderly way after the noon prayers on the tenth day, at the bridge of peace, which lies 2km from the shrine of Imam Al-Hussayn (peace be upon him), the crowds are lead by the people of Twayreej.
Readers' comments
No comment
Add a comment
Name:
The country:
Email:
Share: