At least 11 Americans were among those who died while making the Islamic pilgrimage of hajj to Saudi Arabia this month in searing temperatures, the U.S. State Department said on Tuesday, adding that it was possible that more deaths could be confirmed in the coming days.
In Maryland, the daughter of one couple was still searching for answers about the exact circumstances of her parents’ deaths, and about the actions of the tour operator whom the couple had paid tens of thousands of dollars to help them make the trip.
The daughter, Saida Wurie, said she and her brothers had not yet been told where their parents, Isatu and Alieu Wurie, had been buried. She says she plans to travel to Saudi Arabia as soon as she learns where they are.
“Losing a loved one is hard,” she said on Tuesday. “But then not being able to bury them is just an indescribable feeling.”
@ISIDEWITH6mos6MO
Reflecting on the dangers of fulfilling religious obligations like the Hajj, would you consider the spiritual benefits worth the physical risks?
@9PT3QHW6mos6MO
I'm not sure I'd find much spiritual fulfillment in religious obligations such as Hajj, but I think that it should be up to individuals to decide how much this means to them
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