Arab News

From Jeddah to Jerusalem, the faithful return to their mosques

Doors open again after virus lockdown Internal flights resume from Saudi airports

- Rawan Radwan Jeddah Daoud Kuttab Amman

It began at dawn. As the first light appeared on the horizon and the call to Fajr prayer rang out, Muslims from Riyadh to Madinah and Jeddah to Jerusalem returned to their mosques on Sunday after a twomonth break that for many was unbearable.

More than 90,000 mosques throughout Saudi Arabia were deep cleaned and sanitized in preparatio­n for the end of the coronaviru­s lockdown. Worshipper­s wore face masks, kept a minimum of two meters apart, brought their own prayer mats and performed the ablution ritual at home. “My feelings are indescriba­ble. We are so happy. Thank God we are back in His house,” said Abdulrahma­n, 45, at Al-Rajhi mosque in Riyadh, where worshipper­s had their temperatur­es checked before entering.

Television screens inside the mosque displayed written instructio­ns, including the need to maintain a safe distance from others to prevent the spread of COVID-19. In Jerusalem, at 3:30 a.m. thousands crowded outside three gates assigned to be opened to allow Muslims to enter Al-Aqsa Mosque. Young and old, men and women, many with their phone cameras on, chanted religious songs as they waited to return for the first time since the virus lockdown began. “Those wishing to pray were checked for their temperatur­e and those without a mask were given one by Waqf staff. All were asked to stay a safe distance from each other when they prayed,” Mazen Sinokrot, a member of the Islamic Waqf, told Arab News.

Wasfi Kailani executive director of the Hashemite Fund for the Restoratio­n of Al-Aqsa Mosque told Arab News that enabling Muslims to pray in large numbers and according to health requiremen­ts had gone smoothly.

“People cooperated with the local Muslim authoritie­s and followed the regulation­s.” The people of Jerusalem had shown a high degree of responsibi­lity, he said.

Israeli police spokesman Miky Rosenfeld told Arab News that extra police units had been mobilized in the old city of Jerusalem for the reopening of Al-Aqsa.

“People arrived in the areas scheduled according to health and security guidelines,” he said. Khaled Abu Arafeh, a former Minister for Jerusalem in the Ismael Haniyeh government in 2006, said people were happy to be able to pray once more at Islam’s thirdholie­st site.

“It is time to open a new page in cooperatio­n with local institutio­ns and with Jordan to regain all that has been lost over the years,” he told Arab News.

“The Waqf council has done a good job in dealing with the contradict­ions and pressures that they are under, which is like walking on a knife’s edge as they deal with the occupiers on the one hand and the health situation on the other, while also trying to be responsive to the desires of worshipper­s.”

Elsewhere in Saudi Arabia, commercial flights took to the air again, office staff returned to work and restaurant­s resumed serving diners as life began a gradual return to normal after the coronaviru­s lockdown. Eleven of the Kingdom’s 28 airports opened on Sunday for the first time since March 21. “The progressiv­e and gradual reopening aims at controllin­g the crowds inside airports because we want to achieve the highest health efficiency,” civil aviation spokesman Ibrahim bin Abdullah Alrwosa told Arab News. No one without an e-ticket will be allowed into an airport, face masks must be worn and safe distancing observed, and children under 15 may not travel unaccompan­ied.

INSIDE

•Security

forces’ role praised •Saudi

Railway resumes trips •SMEs

vital for recovery •Protocol

for restaurant­s •Kids

say goodbye to lockdown •Anti-virus

drive in Mideast •Philippine­s

reboots economy •Indonesian,

100, recovers

 ?? Supplied ?? Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound reopened on Sunday after a more than two-month lockdown aimed at containing the coronaviru­s crisis.
Supplied Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound reopened on Sunday after a more than two-month lockdown aimed at containing the coronaviru­s crisis.

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