In 1922, a young Austrian journalist named Leopold Weiss set out for the Middle East on assignment.
He returned as Muhammad Asad—a Muslim, an Arabic speaker, and a confidant of Arabian kings.
The Road to Makkah chronicles this extraordinary transformation. Traveling by camel and automobile across Arabia in the 1920s and 1930s, Asad encountered:
Yet this is far more than a travel memoir. Asad’s journey is both outward and inward—across deserts and through the terrain of doubt, discovery, and spiritual awakening. His vivid reflections capture:
With literary elegance and philosophical depth, Asad explores Islamic theology, law, and ethics—offering a perspective rare for its era and still powerful today. He speaks as one who came searching, questioned honestly, and embraced truth with conviction.
What emerges is a portrait of Islam from within—not as dogma, but as a lived experience of heart, intellect, and community.
A timeless spiritual classic that continues to inspire readers across cultures and generations, The Road to Makkah invites you to travel alongside one of the 20th century’s most remarkable minds as he finds, in the heart of Arabia, his way home.