Some Catholic penitents flagellated themselves and prayed outside closed churches in the Philippines to commemorate Good Friday yesterday, despite strict government orders for people to stay indoors to contain the coronavirus.
The capital, Manila, and many parts of the Catholic-majority Southeast Asian country have been in “enhanced community quarantine”, but that did not stop some devotees from doing their annual penitence for Lent.
“We are here because we want the spread of Covid-19 to end and we pray that things in our country will go back to normal,” said Edward Degusano, who joined a self-flagellation ritual outside a church in Manila.
Covid-19 is the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, which emerged in central China late last year and has spread around the world, infecting some 1.6mn people and killing nearly 100,000 of them.
The Philippines has recorded 4,195 coronavirus cases, with its death toll reaching 221 yesterday.
Bishops in Manila suspended services for the Holy Week due to the lockdown, which began in mid-March.
The Catholic church has expressed disapproval of the self-punishments, saying prayers and sincere repentance are enough. But many Catholics in the Philippines perform religious penance during the week leading up to Easter as a form of worship and supplication.
A man dries fish along a street in San Pedro in Cutud, San Fernando in Pampanga on Good Friday.