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Thousands gather for Easter Sunday celebrations in Jerusalem

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  • Thousands gather for Easter Sunday celebrations in Jerusalem

    Thousands gather for Easter Sunday celebrations in Jerusalem

    AP Worldstream
    Mar 27, 2005

    Thousands of Christians from around the world gathered at Jerusalem
    holy sites to celebrate Easter Sunday, marking the day with prayer
    and hymns.

    The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Michel Sabbah, the top Roman Catholic
    official in the Holy Land, celebrated Mass at the Church of the Holy
    Sepulcher, built over the skull-shaped rocky mount believed to be
    the place where Jesus was crucified.

    More than 20 Armenian priests cloaked in black gowns and head dress
    followed Sabbah into of the candle-lit church singing the Lord's
    Prayer. The Catholic priest emerged from the Sepulcher with a flame
    and lit worshippers' candles that gradually illuminated the painted
    dome ceiling erected in the Crusader era.

    The Easter services underlined one of Christianity's doctrinal
    differences: Roman Catholics believe Jesus Christ was buried in the
    Holy Sepulcher, while many Protestant denominations believe he was
    buried in the nearby Garden Tomb. Karen Abel, 39, a secretary from
    Eclectic, Ala., was among the Protestants gathered at sunrise to mark
    the day at the site of the Garden Tomb.

    The recent calm in Israeli-Palestinian fighting has attracted many
    more foreign pilgrims to Jerusalem this year for the Holy Week
    than in recent years. But the numbers were still a far cry from the
    several thousand who used to come before the outbreak of violence in
    September 2000.

    Abel said she had not been hesitant to make her first trip to the
    Holy Land.

    "Christ died here for our sins," she said. "I feel mighty protected
    by that."

    Bix Baker, 53, and his wife Becky, 51, came from Minnesota to spend
    the Easter holiday with their daughter, who does consulting work for
    city officials in Ramallah.

    Sitting inside Christianity's holiest church with his wife and
    daughter, the high school science teacher said his students told him
    he was crazy to travel to Israel.

    "We weren't afraid to come," Baker said. "Things seem to be different
    now, but we would have come anyway because this is where our daughter
    lives."

    Catholics arriving in missionary groups from Spain and France said
    they had included the ailing Pope in their prayers Sunday.

    As part of ongoing efforts to ease travel restraints on the Palestinian
    population, the army announced Sunday that up to 8,200 Palestinians
    from the West Bank and 250 from Gaza would be granted daily permits
    into either Jerusalem or Nazareth _ on a day-to-day basis _ during
    the Easter celebration.

    However, with this year's celebrations coinciding with the Jewish
    Festival of Purim, the Israeli military imposed general travel
    restrictions on Palestinians in West Bank and Gaza from Wednesday
    through Sunday, steering many Christians away from requesting
    permission to travel to Jerusalem.

    In Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity, hundreds of worshippers prayed
    and lit candles. A few Palestinians inside the church called for
    the resignation of Patriarch Irineos I, the highest Greek Orthodox
    cleric in the Holy Land, to protest alleged property deals the Greek
    Orthodox church has made with Jewish groups trying to expand their
    hold on Palestinian neighborhoods in the disputed city.
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