Easter service outside the Kashveti church, April 19, 2025; Photo: Guram Muradov/Civil.ge
Activists and members of the Orthodox community gathered in front of the Kashveti Church, across from the parliament building-now the heart of ongoing protests-where they lit candles, sang Easter hymns, and prayed together during the holiday service, The Caspian Post reports citing Civil.Ge.
Easter is one of the most important and widely observed religious holidays in Georgia, when the streets of the capital are usually less congested as many head to the countryside to spend the long weekend with their extended families. It is also the second major religious holiday, after Christmas, whose celebration has become part of the ongoing non-stop protests.
Earlier in the evening, protesters and families of political prisoners marched to the Heroes’ Memorial to repeat the protest oath sworn by young activists exactly one year ago, which was read by Zviad Tsetskhladze- a student and one of the leaders of last spring’s anti Foreign Agents’ law and post-2024 election pro-European rallies, who remains in prison after being arrested during the December protests.
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