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Thousands celebrate Orthodox Easter "holy fire" ceremony inJerusalem

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  • Thousands celebrate Orthodox Easter "holy fire" ceremony inJerusalem

    Thousands celebrate Orthodox Easter "holy fire" ceremony in
    Jerusalem's Old City

    AP Worldstream; Apr 22, 2006
    LAURA RESNICK

    A flame, believed by some faithful to be miraculously ignited,
    illuminated thousands of worshippers' torches and candles at
    Christianity's holiest site on Saturday, as tense hours of waiting
    and shoving culminated in the celebration of the Orthodox Easter
    "holy fire" rite.

    With pilgrims from all over the world attending the ceremony, security
    was extremely tight in and around the Church of the Holy Sepulcher,
    where tradition says Jesus was crucified and buried.

    Tempers flared as thousands of worshippers waited to pass through
    security barricades into Jerusalem's Old City, with priests and
    pilgrims shoving and punching police. Inside the church, people
    scuffled with each other and with officers as they waited for the
    ceremony to begin.

    Believers see the passage of the flame among worshippers as connecting
    many of the 200 million Orthodox Christians worldwide to their
    spiritual roots.

    The ritual dates back at least 1,200 years. The precise details of
    the flame's source are a closely guarded secret, but some believe it
    appears spontaneously from the burial area, as a message from Jesus on
    the eve of the Orthodox Easter that he has not forgotten his followers.

    The strains of the long wait on Saturday receded as the Greek
    and Armenian Orthodox patriarchs in the Holy Land descended into
    the church's underground tomb to bring out the flame. Worshippers
    clutching bundles of unlit tapers and torches waited in the darkened
    church for the church leaders to emerge.

    When the church leaders reappeared with lighted torches, church bells
    pealed. Worshippers cheered, shrieked "Christ, Christ," and ululated.
    The flames were then passed around to the thousands of faithful
    who packed that area of the church. Light _ and smoke _ filled the
    cavernous church within seconds.

    Jeanette Gennetian, 66, of Watertown, Massachusetts, said the
    experience brought her greater religious strength.

    "My connection to Jesus is stronger, my connection to Jerusalem is
    stronger now," said Gennetian, a member of the Armenian Apostalic
    church.

    Police, she said, knocked down her 68-year-old husband, Sarkis
    Gennetian, a church deacon.

    "I'm very disappointed with the whole Israeli setup," he said. "This
    is not the spirit of Christianity."

    Religious observations historically have touched off clashes among
    the different Orthodox denominations, who have argued over protocol.
    Just a day earlier, screaming Coptic priests threw punches over
    where and how long different sects would stand during the Good
    Friday service.

    The sectarianism was also in evidence Saturday as groups of people
    shouted, "Armenia, Armenia" in Armenian, and "Greece, Greece"
    in English.

    The holy fire ceremony took place without incident despite talk that
    the ousted Greek Orthodox patriarch of the Holy Land, Irineos I,
    might put in an appearance.

    An attempt by Irineos to directly challenge the authority of his
    successor, Theofilos III, at the flame ceremony would have almost
    irreparably ruptured the already splintered Greek Orthodox church in
    the Holy Land.

    Church officials deposed Irineos last year over accusations he leased
    prime church properties in east Jerusalem to Jews seeking to bolster
    Israel's claim to that largely Arab section of the city. Irineos
    has refused to recognize his dismissal and still commands a band
    of loyalists.

    Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state,
    and the church's mostly Palestinian flock in the Holy Land denounced
    the leases as weakening the Arab presence in the disputed city.

    Israeli security was heightened last year because of showdowns over
    the land deal. This year, police said the heavy security was standard
    practice at large public events.

    Dimitri Diliani, who leads a coalition of Palestinian Christians,
    said Israeli police blocked Palestinian Christians from entering the
    Old City, allowing only foreign worshippers in.

    "We're not going home," he vowed.

    Orthodox churches use a different calendar from Roman Catholics and
    Protestants, who celebrated Easter last week.
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