Christians in Holy Land pray on Easter Saturday
Associated Press
JERUSALEM
Thousands of Christians gathered near Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulcher for Easter Saturday and marched in processions brimming with tradition, taking turns to pray in the site where they believe Jesus was slain and buried.
Easter Saturday is a day of reflection and waiting for many Christians, who believe Jesus was crucified on Friday and rose from the dead on Sunday.
“This day is very important for us. It’s the waiting for the great celebration of the resurrection,” said Father Ibrahim Shomali, a Palestinian Christian priest from the nearby town of Beit Jala.
Thousands marched through Jerusalem’s cobbled old city Saturday morning.
They were led by Palestinian guards in black costumes richly embroidered with gold, topped with scarlet, rimless hats. They rhythmically pounded their staffs on the cobblestone ground, providing a beat for believers to march. The guards, “Qawwasin” in Arabic or “Marksmen” in English, are a leftover vestige from when Ottoman Muslims ruled the Holy Land, Father Shomali said.
According to a series of traditions established over hundreds of years of accommodation between different Christian sects and the region’s ever-changing rulers, the Qawwasin march at the head of the Easter Saturday procession. Their job formerly was to protect Jerusalem’s Catholic patriarch. Now, it is a ceremonial role.
They were followed by Franciscan monks in plain, brown robes, clerics in black garb and then laymen.
The believers congregated for prayer in the Holy Sepulcher, which many Christians believe was built on the site where Jesus was crucified and buried.
“This is the place where Jesus is in his tomb; this is the place, a magnet of the world,” said worshipper Jim Carnie of New York City.
“The power of this place, to be here, it has to be experienced.”
Catholic and Protestant groups that observe the Gregorian calendar took turns praying in the Holy Sepulcher on Saturday.
Eastern Orthodox churches and others who follow the older Julian calendar will mark Easter a week from now.
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