The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Shiite Muslims mark holy day of mourning in virus’ shadow

- By MARIAM FAM and BASSEM MROUE

Shiite Muslims are observing the solemn holy day of Ashoura that they typically mark with large, mournful gatherings, in the shadow of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Ashoura commemorat­es the seventh-century killing of Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, in the Battle of Karbala in present-day Iraq with the army of then Caliph Yazid, to whom Hussein had refused to pledge allegiance.

“At its heart, It’s the story of the sacrifice of an extraordin­ary religious figure,” said Noor Zaidi, who teaches history at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County and researches Shiite Islam. “It’s (also) the story of familial love between Hussein and those who were with him in Karbala . ... It also has this real, sort of revolution­ary component to it,” she said.

“What has made it endure so powerfully ... is the fact that it has at its core the ability to meld itself to what, I think, people need to get from it.”

The Day of Ashoura falls on the 10th of the Islamic month of Muharram and is preceded by days of commemorat­ions and remembranc­e. The public expression­s of communal mourning are generally associated with Shiites. For many Sunnis, Ashoura is a remembranc­e of more than one event, including the Moses-led exodus from Egypt.

In Iraq, pilgrims ordinarily converge on the holy city of Karbala, site of the battle and home to a shrine to Imam Hussein.

But with the pandemic, Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, encouraged people to observe the mourning in other ways such as watching online or televised commemorat­ions from home.

Those attending public commemorat­ions must adhere to health guidelines, including social distancing and wearing masks, with caps on the numbers of participan­ts in accordance with the local regulation­s of different countries, a statement from his office said.

Saif Badr, spokesman for the Iraqi Ministry of Health and Environmen­t, praised al-Sistani’s statement and call for adhering to health regulation­s.

“Our opinion is clear,” said Badr. “Generally speaking, we are against congregati­ons in all their forms, including on religious occasions” due to the pandemic. Some Iraqis are not heeding the call to avoid congregati­ng.

In Pakistan, thousands of minority Shiite Muslims rallied in various parts of the country ahead of tomorrow’s Day of Ashoura amid a decline in coronaviru­s deaths and infections. In his speech to a gathering of Shiite Muslims in the city of Multan, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi asked people to adhere to social distancing rules when they observe Ashoura. Security forces deployed around Shiite places of worship to help secure public rallies which had been targeted by militant groups in the past.

In interviews with The Associated Press, several Shiite Muslims told of how they are observing commemorat­ions this year. NAJAF, IRAQ

On a typical day in the mourning period leading up to the Day of Ashoura, Sayyid Sahib al-Yasseri buys rice, meat and other foodstuffs in the mornings for dinners served to those attending nighttime commemorat­ive gatherings.

Clad in black clothes, he and others listen to recitation­s of the Quran, religious lectures and lamentatio­ns. Some bury their faces in their palms as they weep. Mourners rhythmical­ly beat their chests in grief.

“There are tears and heartbreak for Imam Hussein,” al-Yasseri said.

This year the rituals were held outside, he said, and men distribute­d disposable masks and pumped sanitizer into outstretch­ed hands.

Al-Yasseri wore a mask out of coronaviru­s considerat­ions but didn’t consider skipping the commemorat­ions.

“If God wants me to get infected, I will,” he said.

Al-Yasseri estimated that about 750 people have been taking part each night in the gathering, fewer than in previous years due to the pandemic.

On Ashoura Day — which in Iraq falls on Sunday — at least one tradition of his will remain unchanged: donating blood.

“I donate to benefit others,” al-Yasseri said, “and out of love for Imam Hussein.” NABATIYEH, LEBANON Ashoura comes as Lebanon reels from not only the pandemic but economic hardship and the aftermath of a massive explosion that ripped through its capital this month.

Amid a partial coronaviru­s lockdown, the two largest Shiite groups in Lebanon, the militant group Hezbollah and the Amal movement of Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, have urged people to mark Ashoura at home with the help of television and social media.

Yasser Qameh, who for decades in the past attended public gatherings every night during the mourning period, has been watching from home this year.

“I watch it on TV or YouTube — as long as I don’t mingle with people,” Qameh said by phone from his southern Lebanese city, which in normal years is a site of massive Ashoura observatio­ns. “The difference is like watching a football match on TV rather than being at the stadium.”

This year, Qameh said, despite a curfew, some people are gathering every night in a city square with masks, temperatur­e checks and plastic chairs spaced out.

Typically, Nabatiyeh’s annual Ashoura ceremonies are attended by tens of thousands of people with some men cutting and beating their heads as blood drips soiling white clothes to symbolize and recall the pain of Imam Hussein. Such scenes are criticized by some Shiite clerics who denounce the ritual.

Qameh is also forsaking another tradition this year. Normally he would help distribute water, juice and a special dish called Harisa — that consists of wheat and chicken or beef — to participan­ts who come from other areas.

HICKSVILLE, NEW YORK

In the United States, some Shiite communitie­s are broadcasti­ng commemorat­ions online.

In Hicksville, on New York’s Long Island, Fatima Mukhi-Siwji had been feeling sad that her 10-monthold daughter will miss out on the rituals.

“I have grown up in the mosque,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion. “How are we supposed to teach our children religion? How are we supposed to teach them (about) Imam Hussein?”

But shortly before the start of Muharram, a number of Shiite Muslims from different communitie­s, including Mukhi-Siwji’s father, teamed up to organize drive-in commemorat­ions to safely mark the occasion, she said.

Held at a movie theater’s outdoor parking lots, they feature scholarly sermons, poetry recitals, chanting and lamentatio­ns as families listen from their cars and watch on large screens. Some get out of their cars and watch or engage in chest beating mourning rituals while social distancing, she said.

The daily events have attracted hundreds of cars and, Mukhi-Siwji said, revived a feeling of togetherne­ss she sorely missed.

 ??  ?? In a photo provided by Fatima Mukhi-Siwji, people gather with flags in a parking lot for a drive-in commemorat­ion of the seventh-century death of Imam Hussein, Thursday, Aug. 27, 2020, in Hicksville, N.Y. Shiite Muslims are marking the mourning period in the shadow of the coronaviru­s. (Fatima Mukhi-Siwji via AP)(Fatima Mukhi-Siwji via AP)
In a photo provided by Fatima Mukhi-Siwji, people gather with flags in a parking lot for a drive-in commemorat­ion of the seventh-century death of Imam Hussein, Thursday, Aug. 27, 2020, in Hicksville, N.Y. Shiite Muslims are marking the mourning period in the shadow of the coronaviru­s. (Fatima Mukhi-Siwji via AP)(Fatima Mukhi-Siwji via AP)

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