During
Easter, people of faith will be among those supporting the COVID-19 emergency
measures imposed by politicians on the advice of scientists.
All
places of worship in Portugal will remain closed at least until April 17 – and
longer should the present state of emergency be extended.
Catholics,
by far the largest religious denomination in this country, are having to make
do with services on television instead of attending Mass in their local
churches. Pope Francis has said that the pandemic represents a chance for
creativity and positive change and urged people to reconnect with the real
world and reject what he called “throwaway culture.”
Jehovah’s
Witnesses, well-known among all other religious and non-religious sections of
the community for their door-to-door preaching visits, have suspended all such
activity and are adhering to self-isolation and social distancing. They quote
the Bible in saying that response to the pandemic should be measured and based
on fact not fear.
Passover,
which is being celebrated between April 8 and 16, will not be quite the same
joyous occasion for Orthodox Jews this year because of the inability of
extended families and friends to
gather together.
Portuguese
police are on duty to stop the small minority of city dwellers, religious and
non-religious, who are hoping to drive south and spend the weekend in the
Algarve. Fortunately the weather for the weekend in the Algarve is forecast to
be not nearly so sunny and inviting as during most of last month.
In
an especially stringent regulation, citizens have been banned from moving out
of the municipal area in which they reside unless they have precise and
important reasons for doing so.
All
this is in contrast to the attitude of some preachers in the former Portuguese
territory of Brazil who insist COVID-19 is divine punishment – the work of
Satan – and that the virus is powerless against those who are not afraid of it.
Similarly,
some evangelical pastors in the United States are urging congregations to
mingle over Easter and ignore any lockdown rules.
American
far-right evangelicals, who make up a substantial section of President Donald
Trump’s supporters, are heavily into the blame game. They want China to be held
accountable for allowing the virus to spread.
They believe the
fundamental cause of this pandemic has been incompetence, corruption and malice
on the part of the non-religious Chinese scientific and political establishment.
A
reliable analysis of who has been responsible for the spread of the pandemic is
probably still some time away, but it seems probably that Portugal, unlike the
UK and the US, will be regarded as one of the countries that took
sufficient decisive action at the right time.
Meanwhile,
the notion that COVID-19 is not what scientists and medical experts are making
it out to be is rife on social media. Disinformation is adding to the fears
among those who are accessing the Internet in far greater numbers than ever
before.
Crazy conspiracy theories amounting to blatant false news are being
circulated to the detriment especially of vulnerable people in self-isolation.
This is being done despite the monitoring efforts of Facebook and other social networking
platforms.
Certain elements within the mainstream media are far from innocent in adding confusion among
viewers and readers. Some TV reporters have been blathering on and on and on about data
revealing not only the number of COVID-19 deaths in various countries, but lots
of other bewildering numbers and percentages. Least reported are statistics on
those who have contracted coronavirus but survived it without hospitalisation
or any significant problems.
The
economics of this pandemic are something else, of course. The longer COVID-19
lasts, the greater the ordeal of mass unemployment and collapsing
companies.
Greater
clarity on the many coronavirus uncertainties that still exist today in
Portugal will have to wait until after
Easter.