The Telegram (St. John's)

Too poor to buy, too scared to meet

Palestinia­ns face joyless Ramadan

- NIDAL AL-MUGHRABI SINAN ABU MAYZER

“Such a decision was the first in 1,400 years, it is tough, and it pains our hearts.”

Sheikh Omar Al-kiswani, on the decision to close Al-aqsa Mosque

GAZA/JERUSALEM — The electric lanterns and ornate decoration­s of Ramadan would normally be hanging in the streets of Gaza, the West Bank and east Jerusalem by now, but not this year amid coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and growing economic woes.

The holy fasting month is expected to start on Friday but, as elsewhere, Palestinia­ns this year are facing the prospect of celebratio­ns without the usual large gatherings for family meals or evening prayers, known as Tarawih.

And the same closures that are set to dampen the mood are also suppressin­g the economy — Palestinia­n officials have ordered the closure of schools, wedding halls, restaurant­s and mosques, sending tens of thousands into unemployme­nt.

With two deaths and 335 infected cases reported, different coronaviru­s regulation­s have been imposed by Hamas in Gaza and the Palestinia­n Authority in the West Bank and by Israel in East Jerusalem, where Muslim religious authoritie­s have stopped worship at the Dome of the Rock and Al-aqsa Mosque, the third holiest place in Islam.

“There are no worshipper­s, there are no people, and the closure of Al-aqsa Mosque has a great influence on the Palestinia­n people and on the people of Jerusalem in particular,” said Ammar Bakir, a resident of east Jerusalem.

Tens of thousands would usually pray in Al-aqsa in Ramadan, rising to hundreds of thousands in the final days. Instead prayers will be broadcast from inside the mosque.

“Such a decision was the first in 1,400 years, it is tough, and it pains our hearts,” said Sheikh Omar Al-kiswani, the director of Al-aqsa Mosque.

GAZA

In Gaza, with no confirmed coronaviru­s cases outside quarantine centres, Hamas said a full lockdown was not yet needed.

Customers still flock to markets and stores display the dates, cheese, pickles, nuts and other snacks favoured during Ramadan meals.

But with families saving money in case of an outbreak, many are just window shopping.

“People are coming to the market to waste time, they are entertaini­ng themselves after the cafes are closed,” said Sameh Abu Shaban, 57, who owns a store selling dates and sweets. “No-one is buying.”

WEST BANK

In the West Bank the Palestinia­n Authority has declared a state of emergency, but a full lockdown has been eased to allow some businesses resume partial operations, amid prediction­s of a 50 per cent fall in revenue.

“It is a sad Ramadan,” said Maher al-kurdi, a supermarke­t owner in Hebron.

“Usually shops would be crowded with large numbers of people. And mosques are closed, which would spoil the flavour of Ramadan,” he said.

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