Tag Archives: prayer

Toll from blast at Indian prayer meeting climbs to three after 12-year-old girl dies of burn injuries – The Independent

  1. Toll from blast at Indian prayer meeting climbs to three after 12-year-old girl dies of burn injuries The Independent
  2. Kerala Blast: Man Surrenders Before Cops; Says He Planted Bomb, Is Target ‘Jehovah’s Witness’ Member Hindustan Times
  3. Explosion hits Jehovah’s Witnesses prayer meeting in India’s Kerala Al Jazeera English
  4. Kerala Convention Centre blasts: ‘Had just closed eyes to pray, then there were blasts & fire’ Times of India
  5. Kerala Blast: Increase In Death Toll, Suspect Surrenders And Takes The Blame India Today
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Madonna’s canceled 1989 Pepsi ad airs during the MTV Video Music Awards… 34 YEARS after ‘Like A Prayer’ cont – Daily Mail

  1. Madonna’s canceled 1989 Pepsi ad airs during the MTV Video Music Awards… 34 YEARS after ‘Like A Prayer’ cont Daily Mail
  2. Madonna’s banned commercial airs during MTV VMAs, 34 years later: ‘Thank you, Pepsi, for finally realizing the genius of our collaboration’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Banned Madonna Pepsi Commercial Aired At VMAs 34 Years Later UPROXX
  4. Madonna’s Most High-Profile Brand Partnership Has Finally Earned Its Due Forbes
  5. Madonna Celebrates Release of Canceled Pepsi Commercial 34 Years After ‘Like a Prayer’ Video Controversy PEOPLE
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Salman Khan, Aamir Khan, Rani Mukerji And Others At Prayer Meet For Pamela Chopra – NDTV Movies

  1. Salman Khan, Aamir Khan, Rani Mukerji And Others At Prayer Meet For Pamela Chopra NDTV Movies
  2. Pamela Chopra prayer meet: Karan Johar, Abhishek Bachchan and other celebs assemble at Chopra family resi timesofindia.com
  3. Yash Raj Films pays tribute to late Pamela Chopra with a video, reminisce her memories Bollywood Hungama
  4. Hema Malini Visits Aditya Chopra’s House With Daughter Esha Deol After Pamela Chopra’s Death NDTV Movies
  5. Sunny Deol, Jackie Shroff, Hema Malini: Celebs spotted at Aditya Chopra’s house after Pamela Chopra passe timesofindia.com
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Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil – Fox News

  1. Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil Fox News
  2. Neil Gorsuch cast doubt on a group of atheists’ lawsuit over a Florida city’s prayer vigil, writing that everything done by the government ‘probably offends somebody’ Yahoo News
  3. Atheists avoid — for now — Supreme Court review of lawsuit on Florida shooting prayer vigil CNBC
  4. Supreme Court allows atheists’ lawsuit against Florida city over prayer vigil to continue CNN
  5. Supreme Court declines to hear Florida city’s challenge to atheists Yahoo News
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Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil – Fox News

  1. Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil Fox News
  2. Supreme Court rebuffs Florida city’s challenge to atheist lawsuit KSL.com
  3. Neil Gorsuch cast doubt on a group of atheists’ lawsuit over a Florida city’s prayer vigil, saying everything done by the government ‘probably offends somebody’ Yahoo News
  4. Atheists avoid — for now — Supreme Court review of lawsuit on Florida shooting prayer vigil CNBC
  5. High court turns down city whose post-shooting prayer vigil inspired suit Courthouse News Service
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Supreme Court declines to decide whether city-backed prayer vigil violated First Amendment – USA TODAY

  1. Supreme Court declines to decide whether city-backed prayer vigil violated First Amendment USA TODAY
  2. Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil Fox News
  3. Supreme Court rebuffs Florida city’s challenge to atheist lawsuit KSL.com
  4. Neil Gorsuch cast doubt on a group of atheists’ lawsuit over a Florida city’s prayer vigil, saying everything done by the government ‘probably offends somebody’ Yahoo News
  5. Supreme Court declines to hear Florida city’s challenge to atheists The Hill
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What’s the National Prayer Breakfast & why do presidents speak at it every year? : NPR

President Joe Biden speaks at the National Prayer Breakfast, Thursday, Feb. 3, 2022, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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President Joe Biden speaks at the National Prayer Breakfast, Thursday, Feb. 3, 2022, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Patrick Semansky/AP

Congress takes reins of prayer breakfast from secretive Christian evangelical group

On its face, the National Prayer Breakfast is a serene, bipartisan event full of spiritual reflection.

But over the years, the breakfast has also been a source of controversy — full of shadowy fundraising, behind-the-scenes lobbying and even infiltration by a Russian spy.

So lawmakers now have taken it out of the hands of the secretive Christian evangelical group that has run it for decades — the International Foundation, also known as the Fellowship Foundation or “The Family,” a name popularized in recent years by a book by the same name and a 2019 Netflix docuseries based on it.

It painted a picture of a clubby, closed-door group that had the ear of lots of Washington power players and bold-faced names without much transparency about their donors or agenda.

Rep. James Lankford, R-Okla., left, President Donald Trump, center, and Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., pray during the National Prayer Breakfast in 2019.

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Rep. James Lankford, R-Okla., left, President Donald Trump, center, and Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., pray during the National Prayer Breakfast in 2019.

Evan Vucci/AP

“When Sen. [James] Lankford, [R-Okla.], and I were co-chairs of the National Prayer Breakfast a number of years ago, there were a lot of questions raised about the finances, about who was invited, about how it was structured,” said Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., chairman of the Senate Ethics Committee and frequent participant in the prayer breakfast. “And we frankly had to admit, as co-chairs, we didn’t know as much as we felt we should have.”

With Coons’ and several others’ help, a new, nonprofit group was formed — the National Prayer Breakfast Foundation with the sole purpose of putting on the signature event. It’s headed by former Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor of Arkansas, who said the first big change, in addition to the new legal status, is it will be smaller and more controlled.

“We expect there to be maybe 300 people in attendance as opposed to like 3,500 in years past,” Pryor said. “So it’s going to be just members and plus-ones. … And hopefully it’ll be a smaller, more intimate gathering.”

The event is also being moved from a prominent Washington hotel to the U.S. Capitol complex. The changes will essentially wall off members of Congress from mixing with any unforeseen guests who present potential conflicts of interest — or worse.

But there are still questions about just how much the new group is a break from the old.

When did the National Prayer Breakfast begin and why?

It’s been happening annually for 70 years.

Dwight Eisenhower in 1953 was the first president to attend one. He was convinced to be there by Billy Graham, the Christian evangelist. Eisenhower, not known as particularly outwardly religious, at one point in his presidency said the country was in need of a spiritual renewal.

He is responsible for adding, “In God We Trust” to U.S. currency and “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance as ways to combat the “Red Scare,” or the perceived creeping rise of communism after World War Two with the United States jockeying for prominence with the Soviet Union.

From then on, presidents have attended annually. Billy Graham and then his son, Franklin, also an evangelist, were in the ear of presidents for decades and increased their influence in Washington — as did “The Family.”

What is “The Family”?

The group ran the prayer breakfast for decades, but the breakfast is just the tip of The Family’s influence. It has a wide and international reach of elite friends, and unlike the televangelists seen on TV screens on Sundays, the Fellowship is deliberately cloistered.

“I wish I could say more about it, but it’s working precisely because it is private,” Republican President Ronald Reagan said in 1985 of his work with Doug Coe, the longtime leader of the Fellowship. Coe died in 2017.

The group has ties reaching from the highest to the lowest rungs of the federal government. Senators and members of Congress huddle with representatives of the group in a townhouse on Capitol Hill, known as the “C Street Center,” among other places.

Members close to the group have said they reflect on the kind of week they are having and sometimes do Bible studies.

Much of what they discuss, though, by design, is not known.

And there have been concerns about The Family’s access and questions about its agenda. The group has paid for overseas trips for members, been close in particular to GOP members, is linked to anti-LGBTQ+ initiatives and, in recent years, the Prayer Breakfast ballooned from a relatively small event into a multi-day affair that drew thousands and went beyond just prayer.

It served as a recruitment and networking event for the Fellowship and included plenty of guests from outside the U.S.

That included Maria Butina.

In 2018, the Department of Justice charged Butina with “conspiracy to act as an agent of the Russian Federation within the United States without prior notification.”

In other words, the U.S. government said she was really a spy. She was arrested, convicted and served 15 months in federal prison. (When she got out, she began serving in the Russian parliament.)

The event had become unwieldy and it became difficult to keep tabs on who was coming and going and mixing with lawmakers.

Following some of the revelations, many Democrats stopped attending. Something had to change.

“I do think there were concerns raised and expressed by members of both parties, both houses, about a range of different issues,” Coons said. “Some involved who were the invited guests. Some involved the book and a Netflix documentary that you referenced. Some just involved a lack of clarity from an ethics perspective about how the event was structured and organized.”

It certainly doesn’t mean the Fellowship’s influence still won’t be entrenched in Washington. It will continue to hold its own event at a D.C. hotel and will beam in the speeches of the event for the gathered audience.

Besides, in the dark is mostly how the group has operated for years.

What about the new group?

The National Prayer Breakfast Foundation, headed by Pryor, will be more tightly controlled by Congress, though it’s not clear yet what the mechanism for that oversight will be exactly — or how or if the group will publicize its donors.

“We will be disclosing all of that once we get this one breakfast behind us,” Pryor vowed, “but right now we’re just not quite ready to do that, because first, we don’t even know who all has given or will be giving right now. So we’re still– that’s a work in progress. But transparency is our aim there.”

Pryor said to expect those disclosures in the next few weeks — after the breakfast — and that the group is “checking with [the] ethics [committees] constantly” to “make sure everything we do complies with all the ethical standards.”

There is also a question of just how much of a break from the past the new foundation is, considering several of its board members have ties back to the Fellowship Foundation. That includes Stan Holmes, who is a board member of the Core Fellowship Foundation and has been involved with not just the National Prayer Breakfast but the House and Senate prayer breakfasts, which are closed to the public, for more than 40 years.

“It seems a little bit de minimis,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which pushes for clear lines of separation of church and state. She’s been a chief critic of the breakfast. “The prayer breakfast planners decided they had to, quote unquote, separate it out from The Family, but it really isn’t separated too much.”

Pryor acknowledged “there are a handful of people who have been involved in the past, but the truth is, it’s a new day for the National Prayer Breakfast and everybody’s committed to continuing it, but continuing it with more transparency.”

There has also been criticism of the new iteration of the breakfast because, even though Pryor and others say people of all faiths are welcome, it still seems to be very much rooted in Christian evangelicalism.

The new foundation’s website, for example, notes in explaining the breakfast’s purpose:

“…[O]ur annual Breakfast is an opportunity for Members of Congress to pray collectively for our nation, the President of the United States, and other national and international leaders in the spirit of love and reconciliation as Jesus of Nazareth taught 2,000 years ago. Every president, regardless of party or religious persuasion, has joined since. All faiths are welcome.”

That doesn’t give the impression of a non-denominational, interfaith event – and the tradition continues in the vein at a time when a growing number of Americans – about 30% – are identifying as religiously unaffiliated. A little less than two-thirds identify as Christian, down from 90% 50 years ago.

“[W]hat about the rest of us?” Gaylor asked, adding, “it sends a message of exclusion to non-Christians and especially the majority of nonbelievers.”

Coons, though, said he is “confident” in Pryor’s leadership and believes he “will ensure that there is transparency” in this new configuration.

“I think they struck the right balance,” Coons said, “and that’s a balance that delivers transparency and accountability to the members of Congress for this new foundation for a much smaller event.”

The reforms put in place were enough for lawmakers like Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., who had boycotted the event for years in wake of the controversies, but will now attend.

A spokesperson for Kaine said in an emailed statement that the senator stopped going after 2016 because it had “become an entertainment and lobbying extravaganza,” but it has “now been completely reformed to be an opportunity for members of Congress to gather with the president and vice president once a year to reflect upon the deeper meaning of our work.”

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Texas inmate who fought prayer, touch rules to be executed

HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas death row inmate whose case clarified the role of spiritual advisers in death chambers nationwide is scheduled for execution Wednesday, despite efforts by a district attorney to stop his lethal injection.

John Henry Ramirez, 38, was sentenced to death for killing 46-year-old Pablo Castro, a convenience store clerk, in 2004. Prosecutors said Castro was taking the trash out from the store in Corpus Christi when Ramirez robbed him of $1.25 and stabbed him 29 times.

Castro’s killing took place during a series of robberies; Ramirez and two women had been stealing money following a three-day drug binge. Ramirez fled to Mexico but was arrested 3½ years later.

Ramirez challenged state prison rules that prevented his pastor from touching him and praying aloud during his execution, saying his religious freedom was being violated. That challenge led to his execution being delayed as well as the executions of others.

In March, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with Ramirez, saying states must accommodate the wishes of death row inmates who want to have their faith leaders pray and touch them during their executions.

On Monday, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles unanimously declined to commute Ramirez’s death sentence to a lesser penalty. According to his attorney, Ramirez has exhausted all possible appeals and no final request to the U.S. Supreme Court is planned.

The lead prosecutor at Ramirez’s trial in 2008, Mark Skurka, said it was unfair that Ramirez would have someone praying over him as he dies when Castro didn’t have the same opportunity.

“It has been a long time coming, but Pablo Castro will probably finally get the justice that his family has sought for so long, despite the legal delays,” said Skurka, who later served as Nueces County district attorney before retiring.

Ramirez’s attorney, Seth Kretzer, said while he feels empathy for Castro’s family, his client’s challenge was about protecting religious freedoms for all. Ramirez was not asking for something new but something that has been part of jurisprudence throughout history, Kretzer said. He said even Nazi war criminals were provided ministers before their executions after World War II.

“That was not a reflection on some favor we were doing for the Nazis,” Kretzer said. “Providing religious administration at the time of death is a reflection of the relative moral strength of the captors.”

Kretzer said Ramirez’s spiritual adviser, Dana Moore, will also be able to hold a Bible in the death chamber, which hadn’t been allowed before.

Ramirez’s case took another turn in April when current Nueces County District Attorney Mark Gonzalez asked a judge to withdraw the death warrant and delay the execution, saying it had been requested by mistake. Gonzalez said he considers the death penalty “unethical.”

During a nearly 20-minute Facebook live video, Gonzalez said he believes the death penalty is one of the “many things wrong with our justice system.” Gonzalez said he would not seek the death penalty while he remains in office.

He did not return a phone call or email seeking comment.

Also in April, four of Castro’s children filed a motion asking that Ramirez’s execution order be left in place.

“I want my father to finally have his justice as well as the peace to finally move on with my life and let this nightmare be over,” Fernando Castro, one of his sons, said in the motion.

In June, a judge declined Gonzalez’ request to withdraw Wednesday’s execution date. Last month, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals declined to even consider the request.

If Ramirez is executed, he would be the third inmate put to death this year in Texas and the 11th in the U.S.

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Follow Juan A. Lozano on Twitter: https://twitter.com/juanlozano70



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Alec Baldwin Among Celebrities Criticized for Sending Anne Heche Love, Thoughts, and Prayers After Car Crash

Alec Baldwin and Rosanna Arquette are among a number of celebrities who have been slammed for sending thoughts and prayers to Anne Heche after the A-lister’s high-speed crash into a Mar Vista house while allegedly drunk.

Baldwin took to Instagram on Saturday to send “my best wishes and all my love” to Heche, who is reportedly in stable condition in a hospital after suffering severe burns in the incident. According to a statement from the Los Angeles Fire Department, it took 59 firefighters more than an hour to access, confine, and extinguish the “stubborn flames” caused when Heche’s vehicle slammed into the two-story home, “causing structural compromise and erupting in heavy fire prior to LAFD arrival.” Heche was pulled out of the burning vehicle in critical condition.

She is now stable, according to a statement from Heche’s friend and podcast partner, Heather Duffy Boylston. “Anne is currently in stable condition. Her family and friends ask for your thoughts and prayers and to respect her privacy during this difficult time,” she said.

In his Instagram video, Baldwin says: “Anne is an old pal of mine. There’s not a lot of women I’ve worked with that are brave in the way that Anne is brave.

“I love you, Anne, I love you and I think you are such a talented person. I hope everything is OK, I hope you come through this. My heart goes out to you. I’m sorry you had this tragic thing happen to you, and I’m sending you all my love.”

He then asked: “’Everyone please join me please in sending their support and love to the wonderful Anne Heche. Thanks.”

In response, many took to the comments to suggest that the focus should be on the occupant of the house whose Heche’s car slammed into.

Footage taken by numerous doorbell cameras in the neighborhood on Friday showed the speed at which Heche’s car was traveling before the crash. Moments later she slammed into the home, which subsequently went up in flames. The Los Angeles Fire Department said the house is now “uninhabitable.”

The occupant of the home, identified as Lynne Mishele, told CBS LA reporter Tena Ezzeddine after the crash: “I’m a mess. We’re alive, but that’s about as far as it goes.”

Police have not charged Heche but said she was allegedly driving at twice the legal speed limit.

“What about the people that she almost killed?… Is she more important?” posted one user in reply to Baldwin’s video.

“Yes I hope she is okay but hey how about saying my thoughts are with those who were nearly killed also,” said another. “C’mon Alec.”

Actors Peter Facinelli, Rosanna Arquette, and Big Little Lies actor James Tupper, Heche’s ex with whom she shares a 13-year-old son, were also among the celebs who came in for criticism after posting tributes.

Political consultant Nathan Schneider tweeted in reply to Arquette, who asked people to “pray” for Heche: “She could have killed somebody. Heche needs some serious mental health counseling before she hurts someone.”

Mishele’s neighbor Lynne Bernstein told People that she “was extremely fortunate” to survive and that Heche’s car crashed “almost all the way through” the house and “almost immediately” caught fire.

A GoFundMe page set up by neighbors John and Jennifer Durand for Mishele has already raised close to $40,000.

“Lynne and her family very narrowly escaped physical harm, and for that we are very, very grateful,” the fundraiser reads. “The home, however, was completely burned. Even more distressing is that Lynne lost her entire lifetime of possessions, mementos, all equipment for her business including her laptop and iPad, all of her clothing and basic necessities, and all household items. With firefighters’ help, she was able to pull a few damaged sentimental belongings from the wreckage. Everything else is gone.”

They described Mishele as a “kind and generous person, Lynne is always first to offer help to others” and urged supporters to donate to the campaign.

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Clashes erupt at Jerusalem holy site, 152 Palestinians hurt

JERUSALEM (AP) — Palestinians clashed with Israeli police at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem before dawn on Friday as thousands gathered for prayers during the holy month of Ramadan. Medics said that at least 152 Palestinians were wounded.

The holy site, which is sacred to Jews and Muslims, has often been the epicenter of Israeli-Palestinian unrest, and tensions were already heightened amid a recent wave of violence. Clashes at the site last year helped spark an 11-day war with Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.

The clashes come at a particularly sensitive time. Ramadan this year coincides with Passover, a major weeklong Jewish holiday beginning Friday at sundown, and Christian holy week, which culminates on Easter Sunday. The holidays are expected to bring tens of thousands of faithful into Jerusalem’s Old City, home to major sites sacred to all three religions.

Hours after the clashes began, the police announced that they had put an end to the violence and arrested “hundreds” of suspects. They said the mosque was re-opened and that Friday’s midday prayers would take place as usual. Tens of thousands of people were expected.

Israeli authorities said they had earlier held negotiations with Muslim leaders to ensure calm and allow the prayers to take place, but that Palestinian youths hurled stones at police, triggering the violence. Palestinian witnesses, who spoke on condition of anonymity out of security concerns, said a small group of Palestinians threw rocks at police, who then entered the compound in force, setting off a wider conflagration.

Videos circulating online showed Palestinians throwing rocks and fireworks and police firing tear gas and stun grenades on the sprawling esplanade surrounding the mosque. Others showed worshippers barricading themselves inside the mosque.

Later in the morning, Israeli police entered the mosque and were arresting people. Israeli security forces rarely enter the building, and when they do it is seen by Palestinians as a major escalation.

The Palestinian Red Crescent emergency service said it treated 152 people, many of them wounded by rubber-coated bullets or stun grenades, or beaten with batons. The endowment said one of the guards at the site was shot in the eye with a rubber bullet.

The Israeli police said three officers were wounded from “massive stone-throwing,” with two evacuated from the scene for treatment.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry said that dozens of masked men carrying Palestinian and Hamas flags had marched to the compound before dawn on Friday and gathered stones and other objects in anticipation of unrest.

“Police were forced to enter the grounds to disperse the crowd and remove the stones and rocks, in order to prevent further violence,” it tweeted.

The police said they waited until prayers were over and the crowds started to disperse. In a statement, it said crowds started hurling rocks in the direction of the Western Wall, a nearby Jewish holy site, forcing them to act.

Palestinians view any large deployment of police at Al-Aqsa as a major provocation.

Israel’s national security minister, Omer Barlev, who oversees the police force, said Israel had “no interest” in violence at the holy site but that police were forced to confront “violent elements” that attacked them with stones and metal bars. He said Israel was committed to freedom of worship for Jews and Muslims alike.

The mosque is the third holiest site in Islam. It is built on a hilltop in Jerusalem’s Old City that is the most sacred site for Jews, who refer to it as the Temple Mount because it was the site of the Jewish temples in antiquity. It has been a major flashpoint for Israeli-Palestinian violence for decades and was the epicenter of the 2000-2005 Palestinian intifada, or uprising.

Israel captured east Jerusalem, home to Al-Aqsa and other major holy sites, in the 1967 war and annexed it in a move not recognized internationally. Palestinians want the eastern part of the city to be the capital of a future independent state including the West Bank and Gaza, which Israel also captured during the war nearly 55 years ago.

Tensions have soared in recent weeks following a series of attacks by Palestinians that killed 14 people inside Israel. Israel has carried out a wave of arrests and military operations across the occupied West Bank, setting off clashes with Palestinians.

The Palestinian Health Ministry said a 17-year-old died early Friday from wounds suffered during clashes with Israeli forces in Jenin, in the occupied West Bank, the day before.

At least 25 Palestinians have been killed in the recent wave of violence, according to an Associated Press count, many of whom had carried out attacks or were involved in the clashes, but also an unarmed woman and a lawyer who appears to have been killed by mistake.

Weeks of protests and clashes in Jerusalem during Ramadan last year eventually ignited an 11-day war with Hamas, the Islamic militant group that rules the Gaza Strip.

Israel had lifted restrictions and taken other steps to try and calm tensions ahead of Ramadan, but the attacks and the military raids have brought about another cycle of unrest.

Hamas condemned what it said were “brutal attacks” on worshippers at Al-Aqsa by Israeli forces, saying Israel would bear “all the consequences.” It called on all Palestinians to “stand by our people in Jerusalem.”

Earlier this week, Hamas and other militant groups in Gaza had called on Palestinians to camp out at the Al-Aqsa mosque over the weekend. Palestinians have long feared that Israel plans to take over the site or partition it.

Israeli authorities say they are committed to maintaining the status quo, but in recent years nationalist and religious Jews have visited the site in large numbers with police escorts.

In recent weeks, a radical Jewish group had called on people to bring animals to the site in order to sacrifice them for Passover, offering cash rewards for those who succeeded or even tried. Israeli police work to prevent such activities, but the call was widely circulated by Palestinians on social media, along with calls for Muslims to prevent any sacrifices from taking place.

Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, the rabbi of the Western Wall, issued a statement calling on Muslim leaders to act to stop the violence. It also noted that “bringing a sacrifice to the Temple Mount today is in opposition to the decision of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel.”

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