The Fiji Times

Christians look to Easter

- ■ REUTERS

JERUSALEM - Seen from the air, the fragility of humanity as it must have been in the Holy Land in centuries past is plain to see – ancient monasterie­s clinging to precipices, tiny fishing boats on the Sea of Galilee, deserts gnawing at the edges of towns.

For the Christian faithful, the biblical journey and legacy of Jesus are written in stonework and monuments across the landscape, straddling modern political faultlines.

But modern pandemics, like ancient plagues, are no respecters of political and belief systems. For a year the Christian sites of the Holy Land, like the sacred places of Judaism and Islam, were under varying degrees of lockdown or restrictio­n, and bereft of foreign pilgrims.

Bethlehem, the birthplace of Jesus, was the first area in the occupied Palestinia­n Territorie­s to be forced into lockdown just before Easter last year, closing the Church of the Nativity.

Other churches followed soon afterwards, including Jerusalem’s Holy Sepulchre, built over the sites where Christians believe Jesus was crucified, buried and resurrecte­d.

“Death is stalking a lot all over the world,” a despondent Apostolic Administra­tor Archbishop Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa told Reuters a year ago on Good Friday, known to Palestinia­n Christians as Sad Friday.

Throughout 2020 little changed and by Christmas Mr Pizzaballa, by then elevated to Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, still cut a glum figure as he arrived in a rain-soaked Bethlehem for a muted celebratio­n in front of a tiny congregati­on.

But on December 19 Israel had begun a rapid COVID-19 vaccinatio­n program that gradually brought hope of a freer 2021. At least for Israelis, if not Palestinia­ns, where the vaccine rollout has been slower.

But on both sides of the Holy Land, as the Christian calendar progressed from Christmas to Easter, the faithful began to turn out again in greater numbers.

Early hopes that this year’s Easter celebratio­ns might be completely free of restrictio­ns proved over-optimistic.

But at the start of Holy Week, the huge medieval doors of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre swung open to admit churchgoer­s.

On the spot in the southern courtyard where he had stood despondent­ly a year earlier, a more upbeat, though still masked, Latin Patriarch emerged from the church flanked by Catholic clerics and worshipper­s before heading to the Mount of Olives for the traditiona­l, albeit reduced, Palm Sunday procession.

“We feel more hopeful that things will become better,” Pizzaballa said. “The message of Easter is life and love, despite all the signs of death, corona, pandemic, whatever, we believe in the power of love and life.”

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