Gaza Christians mark Palm Sunday with hope amid ongoing hardships

Most read

A young altar server raises a palm frond during Palm Sunday Mass at Gaza City’s Holy Family Church March 29, 2026. (OSV News photo/Dawoud Abu Alkas, Reuters)

In an unexpected sign of hope in the Holy Land, Gaza City Christians of Holy Family Parish were able to celebrate Mass with the blessing of palms and a procession for Palm Sunday 29 March.

The event garnered an unexpectedly large turnout, despite rain and nearby gunfire.

“We had a very beautiful celebration,” said Father Gabriel Romanelli, pastor, in a video update posted on YouTube, noting that earlier concerns about safety and mobility nearly disrupted the day.

- Advertisement -

“At one point we thought … many would not be able to participate or that they would also be afraid,” he said.

He said fears were mounting “not only … because we are close to the famous yellow line, but also because it is very difficult to find vehicles to move around,” mentioning the Israeli yellow line, which serves as a boundary in the Gaza Strip created as an effect of the October 2025 ceasefire.

The line splits the territory into two parts: one controlled by Palestinians and the other by Israel. It has forced most Palestinians to move to the western side, and the line has been gradually pushed farther into Gaza by Israel.

The Palm Sunday difficulties were also compounded by conditions on the ground. “There was a lot of rain … and there was a lot of shooting. Both things at the same time,” Father Romanelli said in the update.

Father Gabriel Romanelli, pastor of Gaza City’s Holy Family Parish, celebrates Palm Sunday Mass at the church March 29, 2026. (OSV News photo/Dawoud Abu Alkas, Reuters)

Five months after the ceasefire was announced in Gaza, the humanitarian situation remains dire in the enclave, and airstrikes still cause civilian deaths, with shelling and gunfire experienced daily.

Despite this, attendance exceeded expectations for the Palm Sunday procession. “Against all forecasts many people came, and Christians here in general in the Middle East love this celebration very much,” Father Romanelli said.

The Palm Sunday celebration extended beyond worship, with aid distributed to those in need.

“We shared a coffee with sweets, and aid was distributed to the families of the refugees … some flashlights and a bag of food,” he said.

The priest described the gesture as modest but meaningful amid shortages.

The priest framed the observance within the broader suffering in Gaza and the region, calling for peace as Holy Week begins.

“Let us offer our sufferings, each in our own way, for the glory of God, for the salvation of souls, for the forgiveness of our sins and so that the Lord may grant the world and this part of the world – which is the Holy Land – peace, his peace, and a just and lasting peace for everyone,” asking “that we may come to see a new period that gives true hope of life to people to live in a humane way.”

Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, holds a prayer service to mark Palm Sunday, following the cancellation of the traditional Palm Sunday procession from the Mount of Olives, amid restrictions on gathering in large groups and the U.S. and Israel-Iran war, in Jerusalem, March 29, 2026. (OSV News photo/Ammar Awad, pool via Reuters)

The Palm Sunday celebration in Gaza happened while, in Jerusalem, the Palm Sunday procession was canceled, and the patriarch of the Holy Land, along with the custos, were stopped from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulcher.

The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem said 30 March that an agreement has been reached with Israeli authorities to allow Holy Week and Easter celebrations to take place undisturbed.

- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -