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Holy Fire reaches Athens as Orthodox Christians prepare for Easter

The “Holy Fire” arrived in Athens from Jerusalem on Saturday evening ahead of Orthodox Christians in Greece and elsewhere celebrating Easter.

It arrived on a Greek government airplane at around 7.30 p.m. The light is distributed across Greece so churches can hold nightime ceremonies marking Christ’s resurrection. Churches in Attica take their flames from a church in Plaka, central Athens.

Throngs of Orthodox Christians filled Jerusalem’s ancient Church of the Holy Sepulchre and surrounding streets on Saturday for the Holy Fire ceremony on the eve of Orthodox Easter.

Believers hold that a divine fire from heaven ignites candles held by the Greek Orthodox patriarch, in an annual rite dating back to the 4th century AD symbolising the resurrection of Christ.

Israeli police deployed in large numbers to secure an estimated 10,000 faithful packed into the church, with a similar number in the streets around the site where Christians believe Jesus was crucified, buried and resurrected.

The event, the highlight of the Eastern Christian calendar, was attended by pilgrims from around the world — predominantly Eastern Europe — as well as Arab Israelis, all carrying unlit candles.

Greek Patriarch Theophilos III made his traditional grand entry at the head of a procession of monks, chanters and dignitaries with red and gold banners bearing icons.

After circling the shrine in the heart of the church three times, he entered along with the Armenian Patriarch what Orthodox, Roman Catholics and many other Christians believe is Jesus’s burial site, emerging minutes later with a lit candle.

The holy flame was swiftly passed from candle to candle between ecstatic believers, most of whom had waited for several hours for the ceremony which filled the air with light and smoke.

Some pilgrims passed their hands through the fire, saying it does not burn them.

The Holy Fire was passed outside to the crowds who watched the ceremony on huge screens, and was then taken to nearby Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity, where Jesus is believed to have been born, and also flown out to Orthodox countries.

While the Church of the Sepulchre is one of Christianity’s holiest sites, it is shared uneasily by six denominations — the Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholics, Armenian Orthodox, Egyptian Copts, Syrian Orthodox and Ethiopian Orthodox.

In the past, fist fights have broken out among monks from the different denominations over perceived changes to the fragile status quo hammered out down the centuries.

Roman Catholics in Jerusalem and Bethlehem celebrated Easter on March 31, according to the Gregorian calendar.

But this year other Catholics in the Holy Land, including those from Nazareth, decided for the first time to mark Easter this Sunday under the Orthodox calendar, in an act of ecumenical unity.

[Kathimerini English Edition & AFP]

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