Christians mark grim Easter as pilgrims shun Jerusalem amid Gaza war
As Christians observed Easter amidst Israel's ongoing war, the Catholic community in Gaza held a somber vigil service at the Holy Family Church while bombings happened nearby.
Christians celebrated a grim Easter in Gaza and Jerusalem, with the tiny Catholic community in the war-torn Palestinian territory holding their vigil service as Israel continued with its bombing of the enclave.
Around 100 people gathered by candlelight on Saturday night at the Holy Family Church in Gaza City in the famine-threatened north to mark the resurrection, when Christians believe Christ rose from the dead.
The church is a short drive from al-Shifa hospital where the Israeli military has been carrying out attacks.
The atmosphere in Jerusalem was equally heavy, with few people at the sacred sites which are usually crowded at Easter.
Even the main Catholic Easter Sunday service at the Holy Sepulchre Church — built on what is said be the tomb of Jesus — was not full.
Easter is Christianity's earliest and most important celebration but the survival of one of the oldest Christian communities in the world is under threat in Gaza.
— TRT World (@trtworld) March 30, 2024
Christians living in the occupied West Bank have had their access to holy sites in occupied East Jerusalem blocked pic.twitter.com/amsgF6n2n6
'People are afraid'
Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, led worshippers who bowed down and kissed the marble slab where Christians believe Christ's body was anointed after he was taken down from the cross.
Sister Angelica, an Italian nun from Perugia, said she was heartbroken to see so few people at the ancient church, regarded as Christianity's holiest shrine.
"We were so few. It breaks my heart. But we are like the first Christians, they were few too."
She said pilgrims were staying away because of the "suffering and death (in Gaza)".
With pilgrims prostrating themselves on the marble stone, she said most years there was a crush even to get into the square in front of the Holy Sepulchre Church.
"Look, how (this year) it is empty, even inside," she said.
Mother and daughter Kasia, 33, and Ewa, 60, from Warsaw in Poland — veterans of 10 Holy Land pilgrimages — said they had never seen the sacred shrines so quiet.
"It is no wonder with the war," said Kasia, who spoke on condition her full name not be published. "It is terrible. They are killing children (in Gaza). It is so wrong."
A Nigerian Pentecostal pastor from Agege near Lagos said the war would had not put him off staying for a month.
But he admitted that in 30 years of visits he had never seen "the Holy City so empty. There were more priests than people in the Holy Sepulchre Church on Holy Thursday. People are afraid".
Shopkeeper George Habib in the Old City said Easter — usually his busiest period — "is a disaster".
"There is no one here. It is worse than Covid... It feels that this war is never going to end."