Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Muslims pray at Jerusalem mosque

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JERUSALEM — Tens of thousands of Muslim worshipper­s gathered at a sacred Jerusalem plaza for the first Friday prayers of Ramadan after coronaviru­s lockdowns kept the site off-limits last year.

About 70,000 faithful, most of them Arab citizens of Israel, prayed at al-Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam, said an official from the Islamic Waqf authority overseeing the Islamic section of the compound. Muslims know the area as the Noble Sanctuary, while Jews call it the Temple Mount.

In normal times, Ramadan Friday prayers usually draw larger crowds that can reach up to 200,000 at al-Aqsa.

Israeli police tightened security at the flashpoint site, but prayers passed peacefully.

This year, Israel also restricted entry of Palestinia­ns from the West Bank, allowing only 10,000 of those holding permits into Jerusalem and only if they were fully vaccinated.

Mohammed Barghouti, 65, said he was “very happy despite hot weather” to reach the al-Aqsa Mosque for the first time in more than a year. The retired resident of Ramallah noted he had received two vaccine doses.

Other Palestinia­ns prayed at Israeli checkpoint­s in the West Bank in protest after they were blocked from entering.

Israel is largely easing restrictio­ns after a rapid vaccinatio­n drive. In contrast, Palestinia­ns in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are scrambling with slow vaccine rollout amid limited supplies and raging infection rates that triggered tougher lockdowns.

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