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Saudi factory stitches gold-laced cover for Islam's holiest site

Known as the 'kiswa,' the cloth is woven from silk and cotton and adorned with verses from the Quran
A man embroiders the 'kiswa,' a silk cloth covering the Holy Kaaba, ahead of the annual haj pilgrimage, at a factory in the holy city of Mecca (Reuters)
Par Reuters

Dozens of Saudi craftsmen, mostly in their 40s and 50s, are at work in a factory in Mecca preparing an embroidered black and gold cloth to cover the Kaaba, the holiest site in Islam.

Known as the kiswa, the cloth is woven from silk and cotton and adorned with verses from the Quran. A new one is made each year to be placed on the Kaaba in Mecca's Grand Mosque during the annual Muslim haj pilgrimage, which begins on Wednesday.

Many of the craftsmen have worked in the factory in the Oum al-Jood district of Mecca all their lives, but as they approach retirement a new generation is being trained to carry on the trade.

General manager Mohammed bin Abdullah Bajuda said King Salman had ordered all the machines, which were introduced some 30 years ago, to help automate the process, to be replaced with newer ones by next year.

“He also called for a new cadre of manufacturers to take the place of the current one,” Bajuda said during a visit to the factory on Saturday.

A cube-shaped stone structure, the Kaaba is a focal point of the haj, during which some two million pilgrims walk around it in a mass ritual.

When Muslims anywhere say their prayers five times a day, it is towards Mecca and the Kaaba that they face.

The Kaaba's black stone was revered even before the birth of Islam. Muslims believe it was originally built by the prophet Ibrahim, the Biblical Abraham, on the site of the first house of worship built by Adam. It has since been rebuilt more than once.

'The best feeling'

The kiswa was made in Egypt until 1962. There have been red, green or white coverings in centuries past, but now it is always black with embroidered gold calligraphy.
 
Nearly 670kg of silk, enough to cover a structure estimated to measure about 15 metres high and 12m long, is imported from Italy. Silver and gold-plated thread comes from Germany.
 
But the kiswa is embroidered and stitched together in Saudi Arabia and paid for by the kingdom each year at a cost of $6m.
 
Asked about that expenditure at a time of austerity in the kingdom, Bajuda said: "This glorifies the house of God. The Kaaba more than deserves this honour."
 
Waleed al-Juhani has worked at the factory, which opened in 1977, for 17 years.
 
"Thanks to God we are working to serve the holy Kaaba. This is a great blessing," he said, while embroidering a Quranic verse that takes 60 days to complete.
"When we succeed in our work, we are glad that Muslims will celebrate a new cover for the Kaaba. This is the best feeling."
 
At the end of haj, the used cloth will be cut into pieces to be distributed to dignitaries and religious organisations. Recipients regard the fragments as heirlooms.
 
With the haj imminent, this year's kiswa is complete, and the workers have already started on the next one.
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