Through the Old City's narrow alleyways, pilgrims and Palestinian Christians carried wooden crosses, icons and flags of their respective countries in a procession under heavy surveillance from Israeli police.
Like every year in the runup to Easter, they retraced the 14 Stations of the Cross and walked to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre where Jesus Christ is believed to be buried.
Inside the church, Egyptian Coptic Christian pilgrim Sameera Haleem, 52, prayed for protection for her family after deadly church bombings in her country on Palm Sunday.
"Copts being targeted and killed only serves to strengthen our belief," she said, as she stood by the shrine surrounding what is believed to be the tomb of Jesus, clutching a piece of paper with the names of relatives she wanted to protect.
"This sacred place is blessed beyond all sacred places," she said, tears glistening in her eyes as she tried to keep her place next to the shrine as pilgrims poured into the church.
A group of Catholic pilgrims from India wore red hoods.
Lara, an Australian Christian pilgrim, described the procession as "an amazing experience".
"We can't be any happier, it's like a dream," she said.
The "Via Dolorosa" -- or "Way of Suffering" -- includes points where Jesus is said to have met his mother, fallen several times, been helped in carrying the cross, and met the lamenting women of Jerusalem.
The route is situated in east Jerusalem, which Israel occupied in 1967 and later annexed in a move never recognised by the international community.
They are mostly Orthodox Christians.
Police were on high alert as Christian commemorations were under way for Good Friday and as Jews marked the week- long Passover holiday.
On Friday, a 23-year-old British tourist was stabbed to death on a tram close to the Old City, and her Palestinian attacker arrested, police said.
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