The Day

With Passover, Easter and Ramadan looming, clergy scramble to create holidays at a distance

- By SARAH PULLIAM BAILEY and RUTH EGLASH

The Rev. Richard Mosson Weinberg canceled the Boston ferns and the yellow daffodils for the Easter service ordered for his Episcopal church in Washington’s affluent Kalorama neighborho­od. Rabbi Levi Shemtov scrapped plans for the 200-person Seder dinner for Passover in his Chabad synagogue nearby. And Imam Yahya Luqman called off the Ramadan dinners at his mosque down the street.

These three faith leaders, who normally lead worship within walking distance from each other in Northwest Washington, are all scrambling to find socially distant ways to celebrate major religious holidays this month. They are joined by clergy and the faithful around the world, including at well-known Christian, Jewish and Muslim sites in Jerusalem and beyond.

On Sunday, Christians will launch Holy Week with Palm Sunday, preparing to recount the biblical story of Jesus’s death and resurrecti­on. Since St. Margaret’s canceled services, including for Easter on April 12, Weinberg has been working on a sermon about the life and message of Jesus that he will post on YouTube.

“People are dealing with profound loss, so we have to adapt,” Weinberg said.

He knows his religious peers are in the same boat.

“We collegiall­y greet one another because we share an alley,” Weinberg said of Shemtov and Luqman, whose houses of worship are located around the corner from his Connecticu­t Avenue church, on Leroy Place NW. “There’s a beauty in that we’re in this together.”

At TheSHUL of the Nation’s Capital, Shemtov has personnel arranging boxes that include matzoh and the other traditiona­l elements of a Seder meal to be distribute­d to the Jewish community. The rabbi, who avoids the use of electronic­s on holy days, will lead a live-stream demonstrat­ion of the Seder before Passover begins at sundown Wednesday.

“Being alone is antithetic­al to the spirit of Passover,” said Shemtov, whose synagogue is attended by President Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner.

For many families, the multigener­ational aspect will especially be missing because older people are in isolation, Shemtov said, and Jewish families often invite people who have no place to go to join them for the Seder meal.

“People are doing the absolute best they can,” Shemtov said. “It’s different and not as joyous as other years have been, but people are focusing inward on their family and personally as opposed to outward.”

The synagogue shares the same tiny, one-way street as the American Fazl Mosque, a stately converted rowhouse that is the oldest Muslim house of worship in the nation’s capital. Luqman said his mosque, establishe­d by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in 1950, would normally host about 50 people each night of Ramadan for an iftar, the evening meal when Muslims break their Ramadan fast, starting on April 23. Instead, this year, families will break fast in their homes.

“I wouldn’t say it’s a blessing in disguise because there’s a pandemic, but there are all these distractio­ns in people’s lives that disrupt their religious duties” Luqman said, citing the obligation to pray five times a day as one such duty. “When people are at home, they can turn their attention to these prayers.”

In Jerusalem, the strict coronaviru­s social distancing regulation­s that have been in place for most of March look set to continue through April, upending traditiona­l holiday plans for Jews, Muslims and Christians and threatenin­g the country’s tourism industry.

Passover, Easter and Ramadan typically draw hundreds of thousands of internatio­nal visitors and pilgrims of all faiths to Israel, but this year Christian and Muslim leaders have accepted that flagship events will be carried out with only essential clergy and, in many cases, streamed online for followers.

Israeli Jews, who spend the first night of Passover recounting the exodus from Egypt during the festive Seder meal, were instructed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to hold a “lockdown Seder” this year.

“I request that you hold in it in the context of the nuclear family that lives with you,” he urged in a televised address.

He also shared a public service announceme­nt urging Jews not to gather in groups. “We outlasted and overcame Pharaoh, we’ll outlast and overcome this.”

Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan said police patrols would be stepped up to enforce the social distancing restrictio­ns and ensure people adhere to all the regulation­s.

For all Christians groups, the restrictio­ns mean annual parades are canceled and the number of people at the main prayer ceremonies will be vastly reduced. The Holy Fire Ceremony, an Orthodox tradition that takes place in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the site in Jerusalem’s Old City where many Christians believe Jesus was crucified, buried and later resurrecte­d, typically draws 25,000 the day before Easter.

This year, only key clergy and a camera crew will be present. The fire, which is flown to churches in Greece, Russia, Ukraine, Georgia, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Serbia and Cyprus, will be transferre­d with a police escort to the country’s airport. Clergy, sent from Orthodox churches to guard and collect the flame, will not be permitted to leave their planes.

Wadie Abu Nasser, director of the media committee of the Catholic Church in the Holy Land, estimated that the majority of the estimated 180,000 Arab Christians living in Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s would pray at home with the vast majority of churches live-streaming events. “It is very sad but we believe health comes first,” Abu Nasser said.

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