The Hadj, or sacred journey, is the pilgrimage to the house of God at
Mecca that all Muslims are asked to make once in their lifetimes. One of
the world's longest-lived religious rites, having continued without
break for fourteen hundred years, it is, like all things Islamic,
shrouded in mystery for Westerners. In The Hadj, Michael Wolfe, an
American who converted to Islam, recounts his own journey a pilgrim, and
in doing so brings readers close to the heart of what the pilgrimage
means to a member of the religion that claims one-sixth of the world's
population. Not since Sir Richard Burton's account of the pilgrimage to
Mecca over one hundred years ago has a Western writer described the Hadj
in such fascinating detail.