Back to All Events

Pandemic Pilgrimage: Ottoman Arabia, the Indian Ocean Hajj, and the Global Crisis of Cholera

 

Between 1831 and 1914, cholera spread from India to Mecca and the Hijaz on at least forty separate occasions. This talk traces the development of Ottoman and international quarantine and public health controls in the Hijaz, Red Sea, and Persian Gulf between 1865 and World War I. Low argues that pandemic cholera and the inter-imperial public health and travel regulations that its reign of terror spawned were foundational to the creation of the modern system of mass pilgrimage that we know today.

In light of our current global crisis with the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and its role in Saudi Arabia’s difficult decision to dramatically restrict hajj and umrah travel this year, the relevance of Mecca’s pandemic past raises urgent new questions for understanding the present and future of pilgrimage management and even wider questions of mass mobility, travel restrictions, and border management.

Speaker
Michael Christopher Low, Senior Humanities Research Fellow, NYUAD

Moderated by
Suphan Kirmizialtin, Visiting Scholar, NYUAD

Previous
Previous
October 5

Situating World Religions in Modern Islam

Next
Next
October 19

Familiar Futures: Time, Selfhood, and Sovereignty in Iraq