Medina

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Medina in Saudi Arabia is one of the holiest cities in Islam and a major religious destination. It is home to Al-Masjid an-Nabawi (the Prophet’s Mosque), built around the tomb of the Prophet Muhammad, and it holds immense spiritual significance for Muslims worldwide. The city was historically known as Yathrib and became central to early Islamic history after the Prophet’s migration (Hijra) from Mecca in 622 CE, marking the beginning of the Islamic calendar. Today, Medina is a modern, well-planned city that welcomes millions of pilgrims each year, especially during Hajj and Umrah seasons. It features expanded infrastructure, hospitality services, and carefully managed sacred zones centered around its religious heritage.

Medina, one of Islam’s holiest cities in western Saudi Arabia, nestles in a valley of the Hejaz region as a spiritual heart of 1.5 million residents whose sun‑baked streets radiate reverence under 42°C summer heat and mild 14°C winter nights since the Prophet Muhammad’s migration from Mecca in 622 CE. Must‑sees center on the vast Al‑Masjid an‑Nabawi (Prophet’s Mosque), its silver‑domed burial shrine and glowing green dome drawing millions of pilgrims, the serene Quba Mosque the first mosque in Islam with its cool courtyard and shaded arcades, the historically rich Qiblatain Mosque where prayer direction shifted from Jerusalem to Mecca, the Geranium‑scented gardens of the Rawdah ash‑Sharifah near the Prophet’s tomb, and the surrounding hills of Uhud whose battlefields echo with stories of early Muslim resilience. Culture flows through nightly Taraweeh prayers in Ramadan when the mosque glows with thousands of worshippers reciting Quran in unison, the quietly solemn visits to the Prophet’s grave respected with whispered prayers rather than loud celebration, the scholarly traditions of local madrasas preserving Hadith and fiqh under palm‑lined courtyards, and the warm hospitality of local families offering dates and cardamom‑scented coffee to visitors. Cuisine delights with sticky lamb‑studded kabsa rice perfumed with saffron and cardamom, soft lamb haneeth slow‑roasted in banana leaves, flaky samboosa filled with spiced meat or cheese, honey‑drizzled dates served after every meal, and garam‑scented Arabian coffee marking the end of gatherings and spiritual pauses.

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