Shops in Madinah see surge in demand as Hajj pilgrims shop for gifts

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Pilgrims shop for gifts in Madinah before they leave for home. (SPA)
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Pilgrims shop for gifts in Madinah before they leave for home. (SPA)
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Pilgrims shop for gifts in Madinah before they leave for home. (SPA)
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Pilgrims shop for gifts in Madinah before they leave for home. (SPA)
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Updated 17 July 2022
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Shops in Madinah see surge in demand as Hajj pilgrims shop for gifts

  • Most popular dates purchased are the Ajwa and Safawi varieties, according to sellers
  • Clothes, prayer mats, rosaries, and gold jewellery are also popular items

RIYADH: Stores in Madinah are seeing a surge in pilgrims shopping for gifts as they visit the Prophet’s Mosque and important historical sites in the holy city after performing Hajj.

Dozens of gold shops near the Prophet’s Mosque have seen an increase in demand for jewellery, and pilgrims have also been purchasing clothes, prayer mats, rosaries, and different types of dates grown in Madinah.

Shop owners reported that rosaries, prayer mats, and Saudi thobes are bought by pilgrims to gift to their loved ones back home. 

Nearly every pilgrim who visits the holy sites returns with dates to distribute among family and friends, and the most popular are the Ajwa and Safawi varieties, according to sellers. Fresh dates also proved popular among pilgrims.  


Saudi Foreign Ministry: Israel's decision on the West Bank undermines efforts to achieve peace and stability

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Saudi Foreign Ministry: Israel's decision on the West Bank undermines efforts to achieve peace and stability

The Saudi Foreign Ministry said Israel's decision on the West Bank undermines efforts to achieve peace and stability, in a statement published by Alarabiya on Monday. 

The Ministry said Israel had no right over Palestinian territories and was undermining the two state solution with it's decisions to take control of parts of the west bank. 

Israel’s cabinet on Sunday approved ‌further measures to tighten Israel’s control over the occupied West Bank and make it easier for settlers to buy land, in a move Palestinians called “a ​de-facto annexation.”