Reuters-In scenes very different from last year, Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulchre was open to the public on Sunday (March 28).
With the church doors open, Christians could attend mass on Palm Sunday, the start of Holy Week, on the site where they believe Jesus was crucified and resurrected.
With more than half the population of Israel having received two vaccine doses, coronavirus restrictions have been eased to the point that small congregations can gather with social distancing measures in place.
The mood was celebratory as scores of Roman Catholics passed through the huge wooden doors of the church that is the global focus of the most important festival in the Christian calendar.
"Last year was a terrible Easter, without people, closed doors. This year is much better, the door is open, we don't have a lot of people but we feel more hopeful that things will become better," the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, told Reuters as he emerged from the church flanked by clerics and worshippers carrying palm fronds.
"The message of Easter is life and love, despite all the signs of death, corona, pandemic, whatever, we believe in the power of love and life," Pizzaballa said.
Palm Sunday commemorates the day the gospels say Jesus rode into Jerusalem and was hailed by the people, only to be crucified five days later, on Good Friday.
This year Roman Catholics celebrate Easter on April 4 and Orthodox Christians nearly a month later, on May 2.
Later he was expected to take part in a Palm Sunday procession from the Mount of Olives to the Old City.
With almost no foreign pilgrims, the procession will take place under Israeli COVID-19 restrictions with a limited number of participants.