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Birkat Hakhama: Jews bless the sun in a once-in-28-year prayer
Updated: 08/Apr/2009 11:07
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JERUSALEM (AFP)---Tens of thousands of Jewish faithful turned out before sunrise on Wednesday in front of the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem and elsewhere in the country to bless the sun in a prayer said once every 28 years.  

Dressed in white prayer shawls, men and women, adults and children filled the plaza in front of the wall, Judaism's holiest site, and crowded onto nearby rooftops to catch a glimpse of the sun rising over the Holy City.
  
As the faithful swayed back and forth in prayer, the area filled with the din of the Birkat Hakhama prayer.
  
Elsewhere around Israel and in the world observant Jews sought out hilltops and rooftops to catch the first rays of the sun to recite the prayer.
  
Birkat Hakhama is said as the sun comes up to mark what according to Jewish tradition is the sun's return to its position at the moment that the universe was created 5,769 years ago.
 
It returns to the spot once every 28 years.
  
The prayer has special significance this year because it coincides with the start of Pessah, the Passover holiday, one of Judaism's most important, at sundown on Wednesday.
  
 
 
 
 

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