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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews from Around the Americas | April 2007 

Christians Remember Good Friday with Pilgrimage, Prayers for Peace
email this pageprint this pageemail usSteve Weizman - Associated Press


In Mexico City, more than 500,000 people turned out for the annual Passion play in the capital’s working class Iztapalapa neighborhood. Thousands participated in the procession, many lugging heavy crosses through the streets.
Jerusalem — Some in agony, others in ecstasy, Christians around the world marked Good Friday with prayer, processions and pleas for peace.

Thousands of pilgrims, some carrying large wooden crosses and others holding candles, wound their way through the narrow lanes of Jerusalem’s Old City on Friday, retracing the route the Bible says Jesus took on the way to his crucifixion.

And in Rome, Pope Benedict XVI carried the cross at the beginning of the traditional Way of the Cross procession at the Colosseum.

He described the procession as, “a journey into pain, solitude and cruelty, into evil and death.”

“But it will also be a path trod in faith, hope and love, because the tomb which is the final stop on our way will not remain sealed forever,” the pope said of Easter Sunday, when Jesus is believed to have risen from the dead.

Benedict handed over the cross to Rome Cardinal Camillo Ruini, his vicar for Rome. Other faithful, including a young Congolese woman and a family from Rome, took turns carrying the cross for a few steps.

In Mexico City, meanwhile, more than 500,000 people turned out for the annual Passion play in the capital’s working class Iztapalapa neighborhood. Thousands participated in the procession, many lugging heavy crosses through the streets.

Officials said it was the 164th year that the Passion play has been enacted in the neighborhood, although there are references to earlier performances in Mexico City going back to the 16th century.

In the Mexican silver-mining town of Taxco, hooded men belonging to a Catholic brotherhood slapped their backs bloody with nail-studded whips and dragged their shackled bare feet across rough cobblestone streets. Others carried thorny blackberry branches tied across their outstretched arms.

On Jerusalem’s Via Dolorosa — or Way of Sorrows — visitors from the United States, India, South Korea, the Philippines, Russia and many other countries followed the traditional route of Jesus’ final walk, stopping at 14 stations, each marking an event that befell him on the way to his death.

The final five stations are inside the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, where tradition says Jesus was stripped, crucified, and finally laid to rest before being resurrected on Easter Sunday.

In the Philippines, seven penitents in the northern village of San Pedro Cutud were nailed to crosses in an annual rite that is frowned upon by religious leaders but has become a major spectator attraction.

Easter this year falls during the weeklong Jewish festival of Passover, which brings thousands of Jews into the cramped Old City to worship at the Western Wall, Judaism’s holiest site.



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the included information for research and educational purposes • m3 © 2008 BanderasNews ® all rights reserved • carpe aestus