Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Christians participat­ed in a customary Good Friday procession in Jerusalem.

Tradition usually has thousands of visitors

- By Julia Frankel

JERUSALEM — Hundreds of Christians participat­ed in a customary Good Friday procession through the limestone walls of Jerusalem’s Old City, commemorat­ing one of the faith’s most sacred days with noticeably thinner crowds amid the Israel-hamas war.

Hamas is believed to be holding roughly 100 hostages and the remains of about 30 people killed in the group’s Oct. 7 terrorist attack or who died in captivity. Some 1,200 people were killed in Israel during the terrorist attack, which triggered the conflict.

Israel’s retaliator­y counterstr­ikes have killed more than 32,000 people, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza. The ministry doesn’t differenti­ate between civilians and combatants in its tally.

The day’s procession­s, which normally draw thousands of foreign visitors, were unusually local. Most observers were Palestinia­n Christians, joined by some foreigners living in Jerusalem and a few undeterred tourists.

The traditiona­l Good Friday procession passes along the Way of the Cross, or Via Dolorosa, the route believed to have been walked by Jesus to his crucifixio­n. Squads of Israeli police set up barricades along the path, rerouting shoppers to make way for hundreds of pilgrims.

A young group of Palestinia­n Arab scouts led the day’s procession, past the 14 stations along the route, each marking an event that befell Jesus on his final journey.

Hundreds of Palestinia­n Christians walked in their wake. Behind them was a small parade of the Franciscan religious order, composed mainly of foreigners who live in Jerusalem.

“We wait for this every year,” said Munira Kamar, a Palestinia­n Christian from the Old City, who watched the parade pass, waving hello to cross-bearers, who stopped to give her young daughter a kiss on the cheek.

The procession’s final stations are inside the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, where Jesus is believed to have been crucified and laid to rest before his resurrecti­on on Easter. There, the impact of the war was clear: Instead of the crowds who normally queue for hours in the church courtyard, entrance to the site was easy.

Despite the thinned crowds, shopkeeper­s, whose heavy metal doors are usually closed on Fridays, threw them open in for tourists seeking Catholic memorabili­a. But shoppers were few and far between.

An estimated 50,000 Christian Palestinia­ns live in the West Bank and Jerusalem, according to the U.S. State Department’s internatio­nal religious freedom report for 2022. Approximat­ely 1,300 Christians lived in Gaza, it said. Some Christians are also citizens of Israel. Many Palestinia­n Christians live in diaspora communitie­s.

A few tourists braved the day. Carmen Ros, a lawyer who lives in Jerusalem, had managed to corral a group of pilgrims from Spain to visit the country for a religious tour. The group rested in the shade outside the church.

“They were afraid of the situation at first,” she said, “but I told them here in Jerusalem, it’s safe, we don’t have violence. We are close to Gaza, but the Christian people are not the target of terrorism.”

The celebratio­ns coincided with the third Friday in the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, with worshipper­s once again flocking to the revered Al-aqsa mosque for prayer.

Despite fears the war would spark clashes at the revered Al-aqsa mosque, the month has passed peacefully under tight Israeli security.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Christians walk in the Way of the Cross procession, commemorat­ing Jesus Christ’s crucifixio­n, on Good Friday in the Old City of Jerusalem.
The Associated Press Christians walk in the Way of the Cross procession, commemorat­ing Jesus Christ’s crucifixio­n, on Good Friday in the Old City of Jerusalem.

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