The Phnom Penh Post

Bethlehem drawing crowds for holidays

- Shatha Yaish

CHRISTMAS celebratio­ns were in full swing at the site of Jesus’s birthplace, as Bethlehem shops, hotels and church officials dealt with more visitors than in 2015, when violence put a damper on celebratio­ns.

At Manger Square next to the Church of the Nativity, built on the site where Christians believe Jesus was born, the annual giant Christmas tree covered in gold ornaments is in place.

Only a handful of Palestinia­ns could be seen taking pictures near the tree last week while a number of tourists were walking around the city, located a short drive from Jerusalem in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Crowds filed into the Palestinia­n city on Saturday for Christmas Eve, when celebratio­ns culminated with midnight mass at the Church of the Nativity – with the grotto where Jesus is believed to have been born underneath.

Some 2,500 tickets are usually given out for the mass and those wishing to attend must register in advance.

Beyond that, the tens of thousands of tourists present also were expected to visit sites including Bethlehem, Jerusalem and Nazareth over the holidays, tourism officials say.

Israel’s Tourism Ministry said that overall, some 120,000 visitors were expected in December, half of them Christians.

Christians make up less than 2 percent of the population­s of both Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s, though they account for some 28 percent of Bethlehem’s 32,000 people.

Palestinia­n officials said they were expecting more visitors than last year, with major hotels in Bethlehem booked.

“There is more stability this year and the numbers coming out of the tourism ministry are showing that there will be growth between 2015 and 2016,” said Sami Khoury, who runs the Visit Palestine online tourism portal.

“There are more bookings this year. A lot of people are coming this month and the hotels are booked.”

Khoury was unable to provide specific figures.

Hotel bookings up

There is more optimism this year in Israel and the West Bank after a wave of violence and protests that erupted in October 2015 sharply reduced visits for Christmas.

The violence saw knife, gun and car-ramming attacks by Palestinia­ns targeting Israelis.

Many of the Palestinia­n assailants were killed by Israeli forces while others were shot dead during clashes and protests.

The violence has greatly subsided in recent months, though tourists will still have to cross Israel’s West Bank separation barrier to reach Bethlehem.

Israel has occupied the West Bank for nearly 50 years.

For Wahid al-Laham, a Bethlehem shop owner selling Christmas memorabili­a and decoration­s, shopping has been better than last year but still falls short in comparison to previous years.

Christmas shopping “was half the rate of previous years, but 80 percent higher than compared to 2015,” he said.

The 2014 war between Israel and Palestinia­n militants in the Gaza Strip also decreased tourism that year.

But while Israel and the West Bank have seen less violence, Christians across the wider Middle East were facing a “tragedy,” a leading church figure said in Jerusalem last week.

Archbishop Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa, apostolic administra­tor of the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem and who will celebrate Bethlehem’s midnight mass, pointed specifical­ly to Syria and Iraq.

The Latin Patriarcha­te of Jerusalem heads the Roman Catholic Church in the Holy Land.

Pizzaballa said up to twothirds of Christians have left in Iraq and Syria.

Christians in the Gaza Strip, the Palestinia­n enclave separated geographic­ally from the West Bank, also face another grim year.

The impoverish­ed strip run by Islamist movement Hamas has seen three wars with Israel since 2008.

It has been under an Israeli blockade for around a decade, while Egypt’s border has also remained largely closed.

The vast majority of the two million population are Muslim, though some 3,000 Christians live there.

Nasser and Renee Jildeh are planning to have a quiet Christmas at their house near the Saint Porphyrius Greek Orthodox church in Gaza City, with only a small tree as a decoration.

“We used to get a big Christmas tree decorated with beautiful things and put it near the entrance of the house,” Renee Jildeh said.

“But now we don’t buy anything because of the bad economic situation.”

 ?? HAZEM BADER/AFP ?? Archbishop Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa (center), apostolic administra­tor of the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, is welcomed by clergymen during Christmas Eve celebratio­ns on December 24 outside the Church of the Nativity, revered as the site of Jesus...
HAZEM BADER/AFP Archbishop Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa (center), apostolic administra­tor of the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, is welcomed by clergymen during Christmas Eve celebratio­ns on December 24 outside the Church of the Nativity, revered as the site of Jesus...

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