The Scotsman

Pilgrims converge on Jerusalem to retrace Good Friday journey

- By ISABEL DEBRE In Jerusalem

Thousands of Christian pilgrims and clergy members marched through the ancient stone alleys of Jerusalem’s Old City, retracing Jesus’ path to crucifixio­n in observatio­n of Good Friday.

The faithful carried wooden crosses on their shoulders and sang hymns to mark one of Christiani­ty’s most solemn and sacred days.

The confluence of Good Friday and the Jewish holiday of Passover this year led to flocks of tourists and a festive atmosphere in the holy city.

Worshipper­s from all over the world marched slowly along the Via Dolorosa, the cobbleston­e path that cuts through the Old City, where tradition says Jesus bore the cross to his crucifixio­n.

The pilgrims stopped at several points on the way, re-enacting symbolic moments from Jesus’ story.

The procession culminates at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where Catholic and Orthodox Christians believe Jesus was buried before his resurrecti­on on what is celebrated as Easter Sunday.

Meanwhile, Jewish residents were yesterday rushing to complete their preparatio­ns for the ritual Seder dinner as the first night of Passover approached.

Injerusale­m’smahaneyeh­uda outdoor market, a tumult of shoppers swarmed the stalls, filling their bags with ingredient­s for the holiday feast. Many observant Jews cleaned their homes of “chametz,” or leavened wheat, traditiona­lly forbidden during the eight days of Passover to commemorat­e the Jews’ flight from slavery in Egypt, which, thestorygo­es,didn’tallowtime for dough to rise into bread.

In religious neighborho­ods, controlled fires of burning chametz lit up sidewalks.

In the Old City, Israeli police said they detained ten Jewish suspects with “intentions to cause public disturbanc­es” by smuggling goats into Jerusalem’s most sensitive holy site for a ritual sacrifice. Police said they seized the goats and are questionin­g the suspects.

The site, revered by Jews as thetemplem­ountandbym­uslims as the Noble Sanctuary, is considered the holiest site in Judaism and third-holiest in Islam. Although Israel seized the holy plateau along with the rest of east Jerusalem in 1967, Muslim custodians­hip of the compound and a ban on Jewish prayer has long prevailed.

Such incidents occur every year ahead of Passover as zealots attempt to re-enact ancient animal sacrifices in the spot where the biblical Jewish Temple once stood.

At sundown, Jews gather around dinner tables to tell the story that celebrates their deliveranc­e from slavery in Old Testament times.

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