Christian faithful celebrate Holy Fire ceremony, Israeli police clash with worshippers over crowd limits

A view from above of candles glowing in a circle surrounding the church.
The crowd at the ceremony was capped to 1,800 people.(AP Photo: Tsafrir Abayov)

Christian worshippers thronged the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem on Saturday to celebrate the ceremony of the Holy Fire, an ancient ritual that sparked tensions this year with the Israeli police.

Key points:

  • The annual Greek Orthodox ceremony sees a flame taken from the tomb of Jesus, and used to light the candles of believers
  • Israel’s strict limit of 1,800 people forced some to miss out and watch from behind metal barricades
  • Footage showed Israeli police dragging and beating several worshippers

In the annual ceremony that has been observed for more than a millennium, a flame taken from Jesus’s tomb is used to light the candles of fervent believers in Greek Orthodox communities near and far.

The devout believe the origin of the flame is a miracle and is shrouded in mystery.

On Saturday, after hours of frantic anticipation, a priest reached inside the dim tomb and ignited his candle.

Each neighbour passed the light to another and, little by little, the darkened church was irradiated by tiny patches of light, which eventually illuminated the whole building.

People gathered together, with some holding large candles with are alight.
The Holy Fire ceremony was held a day before Easter at the church where many Christians believe Jesus was crucified, buried and resurrected.(AP Photo: Mahmoud Illean)

Bells rang out. “Christ is risen!” the multilingual worshippers shouted. “He is risen indeed!”

Many trying to get to the church — built on the site where Christian tradition holds that Jesus was crucified, buried and resurrected — were thrilled to mark the rite of the Orthodox Easter week in Jerusalem.

But for the second consecutive year, Israel’s strict limits on event capacity dimmed some of the exuberance.

A bright orange flame burns near a person's face as people stand together holding candles.
Israel’s strict limits on event capacity meant some people missed out on taking part. (AP Photo: Mahmoud Illean)

“It is sad for me that I cannot get to the church, where my heart, my faith, wants me to be,” said 44-year-old Jelena Novakovic from Montenegro. 

Like thousands of others, she was trapped behind metal barricades that sealed off alleys leading to the Christian Quarter in Jerusalem’s walled Old City.

In some cases, the pushing and shoving escalated into violence.

A view from above of people gathering inside holding candles which give off a bright orange glow around the old architecture.
Christian pilgrims hold candles during the Holy Fire ceremony.(AP Photo: Mahmoud Illean)

Footage showed Israeli police dragging and beating several worshippers, thrusting a Coptic Priest against the stone wall and tackling one woman to the ground.

At least one older man was whisked, bleeding, into an ambulance.

Israel has capped the ritual to just 1,800 people.

The Israeli police say they must be strict because they are responsible for maintaining public safety.

People gather together and hold out candles to be lit.
Christian pilgrims light candles during the Holy Fire ceremony.(AP Photo: Mahmoud Illean)

In 1834, a stampede at the event claimed hundreds of lives while two years ago, a crush at a packed Jewish holy site in the country’s north killed 45 people.

Authorities say they are determined to prevent a repeat of the tragedy.

Crowds of people stand together holding candles around a domed building.
Worshippers hold candles during a ceremony at the Ethiopian section of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.(Reuters: Ronen Zvulun)

But Jerusalem’s minority Christians fear Israel is using the extra security measures to alter their status in the Old City, providing access to Israeli Jews while limiting the number of Christian worshippers.

Two rows of people dressed in white uniforms stand behind a man dressed in black and wearing a cross.
Christian Orthodox clergy and nuns hold candles as they arrive for the Holy Fire ceremony.(AP Photo: Mahmoud Illean)

The Greek Orthodox patriarchate has lambasted the restrictions as a hindrance of religious freedom and called on all worshippers to flood the church despite Israeli warnings.

As early as 8am, Israeli police were turning back most worshippers from the gates of the Old City — including tourists who flew from Europe and Palestinian Christians who travelled from across the occupied West Bank — directing them to an overflow area with a live stream.

Angry pilgrims and clergy jostled to get through while police struggled to hold them back, allowing only a trickle of ticketed visitors and local residents inside.

More than 2,000 police officers swarmed the stone ramparts.

Three women stand together holding candles which glow with bright orange flames.
Ethiopian Orthodox worshippers hold candles during the ceremony at the Ethiopian section of the church.(Reuters: Ronen Zvulun)

Ana Dumitrel, a Romanian pilgrim surrounded by police outside the Old City, said she came to pay tribute to her late mother, whose experience witnessing the holy fire in 1987 long inspired her.

“I wanted to tell my family, my children, that I was here as my mum was,” she said, straining over the crowds to assess whether she had a chance.

After the ceremony, Palestinian Christians carried the fire through the streets and lit the tapers of the worshippers waiting outside.

Chartered planes will ferry the flickering lanterns to Russia, Greece and beyond with great fanfare.

People hold out candles with large orange flames.
The Greek Orthodox patriarchate has lambasted the restrictions as a hindrance of religious freedom.(AP Photo: Mahmoud Illean)

The dispute over the church capacity comes as Christians in the Holy Land — including the head of the Roman Catholic church in the region as well as local Palestinians and Armenians — say that Israel’s most right-wing government in history has empowered Jewish extremists, who have escalated their vandalism of religious property and harassment of clergy.

Israel says it’s committed to ensuring freedom of worship for Jews, Christians and Muslims.

Friction over the Orthodox Easter ritual has been fuelled in part by a rare convergence of holidays in Jerusalem’s bustling Old City.

A few hundred meters away from the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, Muslims fasting for the 24th day of the holy month of Ramadan were gathering for midday prayers at the Al-Aqsa mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam.

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Christian leaders warn that the rise of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government has made life worse for Christians in the birthplace of Christianity, as vandalism, hateful graffiti and violent attacks rise.

A statue of Jesus has damage to the face in a churhch in Jerusalem.

Earlier this week, tens of thousands of Jews flocked to the Western Wall during the Passover holiday.

Tensions surged last week, when an Israeli police raid on the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, Jerusalem’s most sensitive site, ignited Muslim outrage around the world.

The mosque is the third holiest site of Islam. It stands on a hilltop that is the holiest site for Jews, who revere it as the Temple Mount.

Israel captured the Old City, along with the rest of the city’s eastern half, in the 1967 Mideast war and later annexed it in a move not internationally recognised.

Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as the capital of their hoped-for state.

In its limestone passageways on Saturday, Christians pushed back by police were trying to cope with their disappointment.

Cristina Maria, 35, who travelled from Romania to see the light kindled from the holy fire, said there was some consolation in the thought that the flame was symbolic, anyway.

“It’s the light of Christ,” she said, standing between an ice cream parlour and a dumpster in the Old City.

“We can see it from here, there, anywhere.”

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