What you should do is choose a religious group that strikes your fancy and see if you can't go with them. With Jews, the obvious answer is to go with Birthright for a free trip, but Christians and Muslims have their own unique organizations.
israel (jerusalem)
Jerusalem
When the Temple was standing, the Torah (Deuteronomy 14:23) states that a visit there would make a person more God-fearing (aware of God). However, with the destruction of the second Temple in 70 CE, Jews have not gone on pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
Jerusalem is a holy city for three major religions:JewishChristianMuslim
They feel closer to God.
Jerusalem
if they have a chance they would go to Meka and Madina,not to Jerusalem.Hajj is done in Meka
Answer:If there is such a place, then it has no place in Islam. It would be unlawful to replace the pilgrimage to Mecca with a pilgrimage to anywhere else - even Jerusalem.
from assination coming back from jerusalem on a pilgrimage for repentance
In Modern times, a Jewish pilgrimage is generally a reference to visiting Israel. Other than that, Jews no longer make pilgrimages.(In ancient times, the Jews would make pilgrimages to the Temple in Jerusalem, which no longer exists.)Modern Jews do not go on pilgrimage.
While religious sites are assumed to be the objective of a pilgrimage it can also be used in other conotations. A pilgrimage assumes a great moral search, or at least the pilgrim is taking the journey to enlighten themselves or out of a sense of reverence. You can make a pilgrimage to "Strawberry Fields", "Graceland", "DeLay Plaza" or the "Vietnam Memorial Wall". It doesn't have to be to Jerusalem or Mecca or the Vatican.
Pietro Casola wrote a journal recounting his pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1494, titled "The Pilgrimage of the Venetian Pietro Casola to Jerusalem." It is an important historical account of a pilgrimage during the late Middle Ages.