Arabs is not a religion. Muslims venerate Mecca as a Holy City. All Arabs are not Muslim. All Muslims are not Arabs.
Arabs are an ethnicity, so they do not have any holy cities per se. However, as over 90% of Arabs are Muslims, it would be safe to say that Mecca, Medina, and Jerusalem, the three most holy cities in Islam, are holy to most Arabs.
Arabs are an ethnicity with many religions and individual beliefs. You can no more ask what Arabs believe about the supernatural than ask what Germans believe about the supernatural.As most Arabs are Muslims, it may be helpful to see: What do Muslims believe about angels and judgment?
Bedouins are Arabs and Muslims. They celebrate most Muslim holy days such as Eid.
Most Arabs share the will to form a united Arab state (but many also just want an alliance to unite Arabs which is what the purpose of the Arab League is). The majority of Arabs also want to put an end to foreign intervention and foreign presence in their nations which has continued ever since the formation of the European empires in Arab territories. In addition, most Arabs are resentful of the Jewish presence in Israel which used to be settled mostly by Arab Palestinians. They believe that their holy lands should belong to them as opposed to the Jews.
The most Holy city for Muslim is Mecca where our Holy Prophet was born.
The "Holy Land" of Judaism is Canaan - known by most as Israel. The Holy City would be considered as Jerusalem.
Arabs are an ethnicity with many religions and individual beliefs. You can no more ask what Arabs believe about the supernatural than ask what Germans believe about the supernatural.As most Arabs are Muslims, it may be helpful to see: What do Muslims believe about angels and judgment?
Holy days belong to religions, not to ethnic groups and "Arab" is an ethnic group. There are Sunni Muslim Arabs, Shiite Muslim Arabs, Christian Arabs, and Arabs of other minority religions all of whom have their own unique holidays. Since most Arabs are either Sunni or Shiite Muslims, the holidays that they share are commonly practiced by Arabs, like Eid al-Fitr or Eid al-Adha. Additionally, the day of long prayer every week for all Muslims (Arab or not) is Friday, but unlike among Jews and Christians, the day is not a holy day, just one of communal prayer.
Most, if not all, bedouins are Muslims. The most holy place for them is Mecca, with the holy city of Meddinah second.
The first and most important holy city is Makkah (or Mecca) in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Most Holy Crucifix Church - New York City - was created in 1925.
We believe that they are all one and is most commonly referred to as the Holy Trinity.