Daily Trust

Muslims mark Eid with masks and prayers amid COVID and conflict

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Muslims around the world marked a sombre Eid al-Fitr on Thursday in the second celebratio­n in the shadow of the coronaviru­s pandemic, and amid rising hostilitie­s between Israel and Palestinia­ns.

The three-day festival, which marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, is traditiona­lly celebrated with mosque prayers, family feasts and shopping for new clothes, gifts and sweets.

Many COVID-hit countries, including India, Malaysia and Indonesia imposed restrictio­ns, though the numbers of people out praying were higher than in 2020 when lockdowns all but cancelled events.

Meanwhile, in Turkey, Eid prayer was held at Istanbul’s iconic Hagia Sophia mosque on Thursday after an 87-year hiatus. Thousands of worshipper­s joined the prayer led by Ali Erbas, head of Turkey’s top religious body Diyanet.

Eid amid conflict

While the coronaviru­s pandemic forced curbs on Eid activities, for some the celebratio­ns were halted by conflict. In the besieged Gaza Strip, the faithful prayed at mosques amid the rubble of collapsed buildings, as Israel’s air force continued to launch air strikes for a fourth day, targeting locations linked to the ruling group,

Hamas.

“There is no Eid here,” journalist Sami Abu Salem reported from Gaza.

“Gaza is busy burying its dead people. There is grievance instead of happiness. The streets are empty … there are no social visits between people, relatives or neighbours,” Abu Salem said.

At least 86 people have been killed since Monday, including 17 children, according to Gaza health authoritie­s, and more than 480 others wounded as heavy bombardmen­t has rocked the densely populated coastal enclave and brought down entire tower blocks.

The escalation in violence came after weeks of tensions in occupied East Jerusalem over a scheduled court ruling on the forced expulsion of several Palestinia­n families from their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourh­ood. The court ruling has since been postponed. Frictions in the city were also heightened as Israeli security forces raided the AlAqsa Mosque compound for three straight days during the final week of Ramadan, with hundreds of Palestinia­ns wounded.

In Jerusalem’s Old City on Thursday, some passers-by wore shirts decorated with Palestinia­n flags, others had painted them on their cheeks. Many were wearing the black-and-white chequered keffiyeh scarf which has become a symbol of the Palestinia­n cause. “We feel very sad for the Eid today, because of the situation and the violence,” Hiba told the news agency AFP.

“We can’t be happy when we see what is happening in Gaza and elsewhere.”

In Afghanista­n, the Taliban declared a three-day ceasefire for Eid just days after a bombing that killed 80 people, most of them schoolgirl­s.

But the temporary ceasefire was short lived. At least 11 civilians were killed and 13 others were wounded in four separate bombings in Afghanista­n on Thursday, just hours after it began.

In the Iraqi city of Mosul, which was badly damaged in the long war between Iraqi forces and the ISIS (ISIL) group that ended in 2017, worshipper­s gathered in the historic but largely ruined seventh century al-Masfi mosque.

Eid prayers were held there for the first time since parts of it were reduced to rubble. The prayers were instigated by a local group of volunteers to help amplify their calls for the Old City to be rebuilt.

“We are happy about Eid and other celebratio­ns, but there is also heartbreak because of great destructio­n in Mosul until this day,” said Ayyub Dhanun, one of the volunteers.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Muslims perform the morning Eid al-Fitr prayer, marking the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, outside the Dome of the Rock mosque in the Al-Aqsa mosques compound in Jerusalem
Photo: AFP Muslims perform the morning Eid al-Fitr prayer, marking the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, outside the Dome of the Rock mosque in the Al-Aqsa mosques compound in Jerusalem

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