Post Tribune (Sunday)

Amid virus, worshippin­g goes viral

Many religions find comfort with their online messaging

- By Andrew Selsky Associated Press

On a rainy evening in St. Peter’s Square, Pope Francis delivered a special blessing, asking God for help against the coronaviru­s. The square in Vatican City would normally be packed with onlookers, but no one was standing on the glistening cobbleston­es in March as he implored God to “not leave us at the mercy of the storm.”

Millions were watching on TV and online, however.

From the Vatican, to the village church, to mosques and temples, shuttered places of worship are streaming religious services for a global audience seeking spiritual help and connection­s with others during the pandemic.

Vaishno Devi, one of India’s most revered Hindu shrines, is livestream­ing prayers.

“We are missing the pilgrims, their hustle and bustle. Their slogan shouting used to infuse new energy into us,” said Amir Chand, a priest at the temple. “But in the present scenario, it is better to stay home.”

At Jerusalem’s Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray, prayers went online as worshipper­s disappeare­d. The three daily Jewish prayers were broadcast on several platforms, garnering millions of views from around the world, according to Yohanna Bisraor, a spokeswoma­n for the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, which administer­s the site.

Most synagogues in Israel are Orthodox, which typically do not allow livestream­ing on the Jewish Sabbath, when turning on electronic devices is forbidden. More liberal congregati­ons, though, have embraced online prayer.

Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam, has been streaming prayers throughout the Ramadan holy month, which runs through this week.

“In normal times, you see hundreds and thousands of people praying behind you and you can feel it when they say ‘Amen,’ ” said Sheikh Youssef Abu Sneineh, the mosque’s imam.

Onoterusak­i Shrine in Tokyo is offering an “online shrine” where people submit prayers, each printed on a wooden tablet and offered to the gods of Shinto by the priest.

“I thought about how people can pray and have a peace of mind at a time everyone is feeling uneasy about all the news (of the pandemic) and going through major changes to life, but still cannot go out to pray,” head priest Ryoki Ono said.

Omar Suleiman, an Islamic leader in Irving, Texas, said YouTube videos uploaded by his Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research had 30 million views for all of 2019. They’ve received 20 million views in the last six weeks.

“People in general, are looking for more meaning and spirituali­ty in the midst of all this,” Suleiman said. “I think there’s just a general increase in religiosit­y and consumptio­n of religious content.”

Online viewership of Francis “has grown significan­tly,” Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni told The Associated Press by email. Francis’ television audience also has increased, including his celebratio­n of Mass every morning to empty pews.

“The numbers indicate that even people who would not have participat­ed in religious services on a daily basis in the past are attending a Mass every morning and listening to the pope’s daily reflection on the gospel,” Bruni said.

Also reaching more people is a tiny church with just a few dozen parishione­rs in the small Oregon community of Yoder, 25 miles south of Portland.

Tom Daniels, who grew up in Yoder and has retired in Oakland, California, edits video of the pastor of Smyrna United Church of Christ giving a sermon from her home, of the organist playing in the empty church and other clips. He uploads it to YouTube and has seen a bump in traffic.

For Karen Peterson, who grew up in Yoder and lives in Souderton, Pennsylvan­ia, her Oregon community is just a click away.

“My family still lives there and goes there — it was a connection,“Peterson said.

Religious leaders are getting used to the changes.

“It’s really hard to talk to the camera for a long period of time, especially to give something that’s meant to stir emotionall­y and intellectu­ally and spirituall­y,” said Suleiman, the Islamic leader in Texas, who records on an iPhone perched on a stand. “I think I’m getting better at it because I’m getting more used to it.”

The pope, of course, has a more sophistica­ted setup, with Vatican staffers — most working from home — producing his homilies live, online and in a downloadab­le booklet in five languages, Bruni said.

Speaking to a camera “is a challenge, of course, but nothing the papacy is unprepared for,” Bruni said.

The priests of Notre Dame had a jump on preparatio­ns, even before the Paris cathedral was heavily damaged by fire last year. They started streaming evening prayers, or vespers, years ago.

After the fire, the priests began streaming vespers last September from Saint-Germain l’Auxerrois church near the Louvre Museum. During the pandemic, they started streaming the lengthier and more elaborate Mass starting in March.

“For them, it’s really complicate­d because they are happy when they have some people in front of them,“said Andre Finot, Notre Dame’s spokesman.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/AP ?? Michael Seewar wears a mask and gloves as he prepares the altar for a livestream Easter service last month in Seattle.
ELAINE THOMPSON/AP Michael Seewar wears a mask and gloves as he prepares the altar for a livestream Easter service last month in Seattle.

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