Taken from The The Jerusalem Post, 06.04.07
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Christian pilgrims from around the world filled the narrow cobblestone streets of Jerusalem's Old City on Good Friday, some carrying large wooden crosses as they followed the route Jesus took on the way to his crucifixion.
Pilgrims from the United States, India, South Korea, the Philippines, Russia and many other countries retraced Jesus' final walk through Jerusalem on the day of his death. Many held candles and sang hymns in languages including English, Latin and Hindi.
"I can imagine Jesus walking here with the cross," said Alex Kim, an 18-year-old pilgrim from Seoul, South Korea.
And Dragan Petrodic, wearing a Serbian flag on his shoulder, said, "I'm here to see and kiss all the places where God has been."
Nearby, an Arab vendor shouting in Russian hawked small crosses for $10 apiece.
Clergymen in colorful robes, representing different Catholic and Orthodox denominations, filed early Friday into the ancient Church of the Holy Sepulcher, where many believe Jesus was crucified and buried. In a yearly tradition, the church's doors were unlocked by a member of the Muslim family that has held the key for centuries.
Inside the church, pilgrims pressed their heads to the long, smooth stone where Jesus' body is believed to have been washed after being removed from the cross.
The calendars of five major Christian sects coincide this year, a convergence that happens only once every four years, and crowds were expected to be larger than usual.
Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said hundreds of police were deployed around the Old City to maintain order as thousands of pilgrims retrace the route that Jesus took as he carried his own cross to the site of his crucifixion.
There are 14 stations along the route, known as the Via Dolorosa, or Way of Sorrows, each marking an event that befell Jesus on his final walk. The final five stations are inside the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, where many Christians believe Jesus was stripped, crucified, and finally laid to rest before being resurrected on Easter Sunday.
The proprietor of a pizzeria near the Via Dolorosa's fourth station, giving his name only as Nasser, said he remembered bigger crowds before Israeli-Palestinian violence erupted in 2000. While Asian and African pilgrims were well represented, he said, western Europeans had yet to return in large numbers.
"Many tourists are still scared. They're still keeping away," he said.
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Below are two good talkbacks taken from the Haaretz website (who also published the same article) regarding this event.
"Christians should, on this Good Friday, reflect on conditions throughout the "holy land". Let them know the suffering of the inhabitants of Bethlehem; let them know the real reasons why so many Palestinian Christians have had to leave that city. Let them wonder IF, in future years, they will be able repeat their treck along the Via Dolorosa if Israel has its way and makes all of Jerusalem Jewish." - David James Vickery, Canada
"It is a very Christian sentiment to think that quotas based on religious belief, as exists in Jerusalem, are wrong. Jerusalem is a city which was designated, by the same UN resolution that created Israel, to be shared by two states and two peoples. However, one state has taken it and refuses to allow Christians or Muslims living six miles to the south in Bethlehem free access of worship to holy sites. That is flagrantly wrong. " - Katie, Ohio, USA
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