A picture of a Christian man praying alongside Muslim worshippers in Jerusalem has been praised as a positive example of how different faiths can co-exist despite recent tensions over one of the city’s holiest sites.

Footage of Palestinian Nidal Aboud was captured by CNN during Friday prayers in a neighbourhood just outside the walls of the contested Old City. In the clip, Mr Aboud stands quietly reading from his Bible while Muslim men around him kneel to pray.

The young man said he had never attended Muslim prayers before, but was moved to do so after two police officers were killed at the site known as Temple Mount in Judaism and the Noble Sanctuary in Islam by Arab gunmen, triggering a wave of fresh violence in the contested capital.

Since then, three Palestinians have been killed and one injured in street clashes, and three Israeli settlers have been killed in their West Bank home.

“My motivation was to stand in solidarity with my Muslim brothers and in solidarity with our Palestinian issue against the (Israeli) occupation and its policies against our holy sites, whether it's the mosque or the church,” Mr Aboud told CNN.

“I had a dream since I was a child. I wanted to spread the world with love. I wanted to be the one who plants love in people's hearts.”

The Jerusalem Quartet: Should classical music really be a legitimate target for political demonstration? Show all 2 1 /2 The Jerusalem Quartet: Should classical music really be a legitimate target for political demonstration? The Jerusalem Quartet: Should classical music really be a legitimate target for political demonstration? Strings attached: the Jerusalem Quartet were targeted at a lunchtime concert this week The Jerusalem Quartet: Should classical music really be a legitimate target for political demonstration? The Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign in 2008 NICK GARDNER

Screenshots and a video clip of Mr Aboud have been widely shared by local media and internet users, most praising his simple act

Jerusalem's Temple Mount hill is the holiest site in Judaism and is also revered by Muslims, who pray at the hill’s al-Aqsa mosque. It is believed to have been where the First Temple of Judaism once stood, and also where the Prophet Mohammed ascended to heaven.

The area has been under Israeli jurisdiction since the 1967 Six-Day War, but is administered by Muslim authorities under the auspices of Jordan.

Israeli authorities have limited Muslim access to the al-Aqsa mosque since the gun attack earlier this month, a move which has been met with widespread protests from Palestinians.