Christian pilgrims march through Jerusalem for Good Friday | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Christian pilgrims march through Jerusalem for Good Friday

Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men and children burn leavened items in final preparation for the Passover holiday in the ultra-Orthodox Jewish town of Bnei Brak, Israel, Friday, April 19, 2019. Jews are forbidden to eat leavened foodstuffs during the Passover holiday that celebrates the biblical story of the Israelites' escape from slavery and exodus from Egypt.
Image Credit: AP Photo/Oded Balilty

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 high 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 Friday, Jewish residents were rushing to complete their preparations for the ritual Seder dinner as the first night of Passover approached. In Jerusalem's Mahane Yehuda 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, the story goes, didn't allow time for dough to rise into bread. In religious neighbourhoods, controlled fires of burning chametz lit up sidewalks.

In the Old City, Israeli police said they detained 10 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 the Temple Mount and by Muslims 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. The Chabad-Lubavitch movement, one of the world's largest Jewish religious organizations, has arranged Passover Seders in over 100 countries for Jews who seek them, even in some far-flung corners of the globe, such as Congo and rural Australia.

News from © The Associated Press, 2019
The Associated Press

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