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Praying for lockdown to end: French Catholics want mass back

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French Catholics protesting a ban on large church gatherings during a month-long partial lockdown held street prayers in several cities over the weekend.

Praying for lockdown to end: French Catholics want mass back
A Catholic believer kneels to pray during a gathering to call for the reopening of places of worship during a national lockdown in France to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus, Covid-19, in Nantes, western France on November 15, 2020. AFP

While places of worship remain open during the second nationwide lockdown, which began on October 30, regular prayer services are banned.

Over 300 worshippers gathered outside the cathedral in the south-western city of Bordeaux on Sunday to demand that mass be reinstated.

Some said prayers or sang hymns, despite the gathering being billed as a protest, prompting the police to call in the organisers for questioning.

On Saturday, some 250 faithful gathered outside Rennes cathedral, where they also prayed. Similar protests were also held in the northeastern city of Strasbourg and Nantes in the west.

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Most of the protesters wore masks.

In Paris, however, authorities banned a gathering outside Saint-Sulpice church, citing health concerns over the spread of the coronavirus and fears that some would illegally pray on the street following a smaller prayer gathering Friday at the site.

Under France's latest measures to fight the virus, churches can celebrate funerals and weddings, with a maximum of 30 people and six people present respectively, but larger gatherings are banned.

France's highest administrative court, the Council of State, on Saturday rejected an appeal by Catholic groups against the ban.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin had warned he would not tolerate a second weekend of protests following 

"Life is more important than anything else, and life is about battling the coronavirus," he told France Info radio on Friday.

Opponents of the ban argue that people are more at risk of contracting the virus in supermarkets, which remain open, than in a church where social distancing is enforced.

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