Thousands of Polish pilgrims were making their way to the holiest site in the staunchly Catholic country on Thursday, shrugging off record COVID-19 infection data that has forced authorities to tighten restrictions in some counties. The health ministry reported 811 infection cases across Poland on August 13.
Daily recorded cases have topped 800 three times in the past week, far above earlier levels, leading authorities to cancel big events and urge Poles taking advantage of the sunshine to follow social distancing and sanitary guidelines.
Singing songs and carrying banners, people converged on the Jasna Góra monastery in the southern city of Częstochowa, where the Black Madonna of Częstochowa icon has been venerated by pilgrims since the Middle Ages.
The feast of Assumption, marked by Catholics as the day when Jesus' mother Mary rose into heaven, falls on August 15.
Extra measures in place this year include volunteers disinfecting surfaces and stalls offering free hand sanitizer.
"Pilgrims can come to us and get a free mask if they have forgotten to take one, they can drink water and they can measure their temperature," Marta, a volunteer standing at a stall next the road in Częstochowa told TVN24.
An estimated 16,000 pilgrims will visit the monastery in August, according to Polish state-run news agency PAP.
Some have split into smaller groups, each walking a section of the route for a day before heading home and leaving another group to take up the journey, to avoid crowding.
However, some fear that this year's event could lead to an increase in cases in the city of over 220,000 people. Outbreaks in Malaysia, South Korea and the United States have followed religious gatherings.
"The mayor made an appeal to pilgrims to visit Częstochowa, but next year," said Rafał Kusal, head of Częstochowa's Crisis Management Department.
"They are welcome, but the recent increase in the number of cases may cause outbreaks of infection in the city."
Źródło: TVN24 News in English, Reuters