Marin Independent Journal

Holy days arrive across nation with new hope

- By David Crary and Mariam Fam

For Christians across the United States, Easter services on Sunday will reflect an extra measure of joy as the nation experience­s rising optimism after a year of pandemic. Even if still observing restrictio­ns, many churches may draw the largest numbers of in-person worshipper­s in months.

It’s a season of major holy days for other faiths as well, occurring in a brighter mood than a year ago. Jews are observing Passover this week, and Muslims will enter the holy month of Ramadan in about two weeks.

In Houston, the Rev. Meredith Mills is eagerly anticipati­ng a return to in-person worship Sunday in the sanctuary of Westminste­r United Methodist Church.

Except for a few Christmast­ime services that drew a handful of people, the church has been worshippin­g on its front lawn since October.

“Many of our people are two weeks past their second shot of vaccine, so the comfort level is a lot higher now,” said Mills, who had her own bout of COVID-19 in January. “It almost feels like we’ve been in Lent for a year, and we are ready for Easter.”

Mills recently made a video of herself walking through the empty sanctuary and reflecting on a year of realizatio­n that God is everywhere — in people’s homes and “even over Zoom” — but sacred spaces remain vital.

“So this space is about to reopen,” she said. “On Easter Sunday we are going to be masked and distanced ... but we’re going to gather and we’re going to sing, ‘Christ the Lord is risen today, Alleluia, Alleluia.’ We’re going to let the ‘Alleluia’ ring off of these walls.”

At St. Barnabas Lutheran Church in the Chicago suburb of Cary, attendance inside will be limited to 50, but there also will be an outdoor service.

The Rev. Sarah Wilson said that during the past year, the congregati­on has endured “fear, exhaustion, change, confusion, irritation, disappoint­ment, doubt.”

But “now that more of us are getting vaccinated, we’re also experienci­ng some hope,” she said via email. “Each time a parishione­r tells me they’ve gotten a shot, I’m so happy.”

Similarly, the Rev. Bob Stec of Saint Ambrose Catholic Church in Brunswick, Ohio, said his parish’s theme for this Easter is “Alive in Christ,”

“Across our world we have all experience­d a year of dying,” he said. “After a difficult and challengin­g year, we are ready to walk into a future full of hope.”

Stec’s church will be open for in-person worship, but for those still wary about gathering inside there will be drive-through confession and Communion, and a depiction of the Stations of the Cross visible from the parking lot.

At Mary, Queen of the Rosary Catholic Church in Spencer, Massachuse­tts, there will be an indoor service Sunday for up to 200 worshipper­s — 40% of capacity — and an outdoor service that can be heard over parishione­rs’ car radios.

“Everyone wants to be back ... but some chose not to out of caution,” said the Rev. William Schipper, the pastor.

Rabbi Jonathan Perlman of New Light Congregati­on in Pittsburgh said the Passover holiday has strong parallels to the pandemic in that “it was first celebrated in quarantine,” after God ordered Israelites in Egypt to shelter in their homes through the night.

“Now we know that many of us took shelter in homes for an entire year; travel was forbidden; meeting in person in large groups violated basic principles of health,” Perlman said via email. “For me, like my Israelite ancestors, there was something transforma­tive about the entire experience . ... The vaccinatio­n felt like a gift from God.”

Perlman has been offering services virtually and in person at a chapel in the Beth Shalom synagogue. New Light formerly worshipped at the Tree of Life synagogue, where three members of its congregati­on were among 11 Jews killed by a gunman in 2018.

Rabbi Motti Seligson of the Hasidic organizati­on Chabad-Lubavitch said many U.S. Jews held Passover Seders in small groups due to the pandemic. There was unexpected­ly large demand online for the Chabad. org Haggadah, a new instructio­nal version of the sacred text for the start of Passover — that was designed for small Seders, with about 300,000 downloads instead of the expected 100,000, he said.

Ramadan, a time for fasting and worship, is typically centered on togetherne­ss as Muslims congregate for prayers and iftars, or evening meals to break the daily fast. Last year the pandemic forced Muslims to re-imagine some rituals, and some will continue to do so this Ramadan.

Salima Suswell, founder and executive director of the Philadelph­ia Ramadan & Eid Fund, said it is partnering with mosques to provide “grab-and-go” iftars three days a week. For the feast at the end of Ramadan, it will distribute toys and decoration­s to help families celebrate privately.

“We want to make families aware that there is a way to still enjoy the benefits of the holy month of Ramadan, while safely social distancing at home,” Suswell said.

It’s a far cry from 2019, when the group hosted an iftar dinner at a museum and an end-of-Ramadan celebratio­n in a park drew about 15,000, Suswell said.

At the Muslim Associatio­n of Puget Sound in Redmond, Washington, worshipper­s may again gather to perform Ramadan’s taraweeh prayers after being unable to do so in 2020.

“A lot of people are really excited,” said Sheikh Adam Jamal, assistant imam. “There’s people, seniors, who probably have been doing taraweeh (at a mosque) every year since they were young. ... They’ve missed it for a year — that was just devastatin­g.”

However, capacity will be limited at the mosque, which during Ramadan is typically packed with people standing shoulder-to-shoulder for prayers. People can also drive by to pick up boxed iftar meals.

“It’ll be different from before,” Jamal said, “but it’ll be closer than it was last year.”

In Spanish Fork, Utah, about 25,000 Hindus traditiona­lly converge at the Sri Sri Radha Krishna Temple to throw colored powder for the Holi celebratio­n marking the advent of spring. This year the gathering has been reschedule­d for late September in hopes that all may join safely instead of drasticall­y curtailing attendance.

“We want to have it at a time when everybody can come, ... If things continue on track and everyone gets vaccinated, we should be OK for September,” festival coordinato­r Charu Das said.

Das said he loves the festival because it celebrates diversity: “It acknowledg­es that we complement each other — different ethnicitie­s, different nationalit­ies, different genders. God creates in unlimited varieties.”

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