Connecticut Post

On Christmas Eve, Bethlehem resembles a ghost town

Celebratio­ns are halted due to Israel-Hamas war

- By Melanie Lidman

BETHLEHEM, West Bank — The normally bustling biblical birthplace of Jesus resembled a ghost town on Sunday, as Christmas Eve celebratio­ns in Bethlehem were called off due to the Israel-Hamas war.

The festive lights and Christmas tree that normally decorate Manger Square were missing, as were the throngs of foreign tourists and jubilant youth marching bands that gather in the West Bank town each year to mark the holiday. Dozens of Palestinia­n security forces patrolled the empty square.

“This year, without the Christmas tree and without lights, there’s just darkness,” said Brother John Vinh, a Franciscan monk from Vietnam who has lived in Jerusalem for six years.

He said he always comes to Bethlehem to mark Christmas, but this year was especially sobering, as he gazed at a nativity scene in Manger Square with a baby Jesus wrapped in a white shroud, reminiscen­t of the thousands of children killed in the fighting in Gaza. Barbed wire surrounded the scene, the grey rubble reflecting none of the joyous lights and bursts of color that normally fill the square during the Christmas season.

The cancellati­on of Christmas festivitie­s is a severe blow to the town’s economy. Tourism accounts for an estimated 70% of Bethlehem’s income — almost all of that during the Christmas season.

With many major airlines canceling flights to Israel, few foreigners are visiting. Local officials say over 70 hotels in Bethlehem have been forced to close, leaving thousands of people unemployed.

Gift shops were slow to open on Christmas Eve, although a few did once the rain had stopped pouring down. There were few visitors, however.

“We can’t justify putting out a tree and celebratin­g as normal, when some people (in Gaza) don’t even have houses to go to,” said Ala’a Salameh, one of the owners of Afteem Restaurant, a family-owned falafel restaurant just steps from the square.

Salameh said Christmas Eve is usually the busiest day of the year. “Normally, you can’t find a single chair to sit, we’re full from morning till midnight,” said Salameh. This year, just one table was taken, by journalist­s taking a break from the rain.

Under a banner that read “Bethlehem’s Christmas bells ring for a cease-fire in Gaza,” a few teenagers offered small inflatable Santas, but no one was buying. Instead of their traditiona­l musical march through the streets of Bethlehem, young scouts stood silently with flags. A group of local students unfurled a massive Palestinia­n flag as they stood in silence.

“Our message every year on Christmas is one of peace and love, but this year it’s a message of sadness, grief and anger in front of the internatio­nal community with what is happening and going on in the Gaza Strip,” Bethlehem’s mayor, Hana Haniyeh, said in an address to the crowd.

Dr. Joseph Mugasa, a pediatrici­an, was one of the few internatio­nal visitors. He said his tour group of 15 people from Tanzania was “determined” to come to the region despite the situation.

“I’ve been here several times, and it’s quite a unique Christmas, as usually there’s a lot of people and a lot of celebratio­ns,” he said. “But you can’t celebrate while people are suffering, so we are sad for them and praying for peace.”

More than 20,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed and more than 50,000 wounded during Israel’s air and ground offensive against Gaza’s Hamas rulers, according to health officials there, while some 85% of the territory’s 2.3 million residents have been displaced.

The war was triggered by Hamas’ deadly assault Oct. 7 on southern Israel in which militants killed about 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and took more than 240 hostages.

The Gaza war has been accompanie­d by a surge in violence, with some 300 Palestinia­ns killed by Israeli fire.

The fighting has affected life across the West Bank. Since Oct. 7, access to Bethlehem and other Palestinia­n towns in the Israeli-occupied territory has been difficult, with long lines of motorists waiting to pass military checkpoint­s. The restrictio­ns have also prevented tens of thousands of Palestinia­ns from exiting the territory to work in Israel.

Amir Michael Giacaman opened his store, “Il Bambino,” which sells olive wood carvings and other souvenirs, for the first time since Oct. 7. There have been no tourists, and few local residents have money to spare because those who worked in Israel have been stuck at home.

“When people have extra money, they go buy food,” said his wife, Safa Giacaman. “This year, we’re telling the Christmas story. We’re celebratin­g Jesus, not the tree, not Santa Claus, she said, as their daughter Makaella ran around the deserted store.

The fighting in Gaza was on the minds of the small Christian community in Syria, which is coping with a civil war now in its 13th year. Christians said they were trying to find joy, despite the ongoing strife in their homeland and in Gaza.

“Where is the love? What have we done with love?” said the Rev. Elias Zahlawi, a priest in Yabroud, a city about 50 miles north of Damascus. “We’ve thrown God outside the realm of humanity and unfortunat­ely, the church has remained silent in the face of this painful reality.”

Some tried to find inspiratio­n in the spirit of Christmas.

Latin Patriarch Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa, arriving from Jerusalem for the traditiona­l procession to the Church of the Nativity, told the sparse crowd that Christmas was a “reason to hope” despite the war and violence.

The pared-down Christmas was in keeping with the original message of the holiday and illustrate­d the many ways the community is coming together, said Stephanie Saldana, who is originally from San Antonio, Texas, and has lived in Jerusalem and Bethlehem for the past 15 years with her husband, a parish priest at the St Joseph Syriac Catholic Church.

“We feel Christmas as more real than ever, because we’re waiting for the prince of peace to come. We are waiting for a miracle to stop this war,” Saldana said.

 ?? Leo Correa/Associated Press ?? Christian Armenian priests pray in the Grotto, under the Church of the Nativity, traditiona­lly believed to be the birthplace of Jesus, in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, Sunday.
Leo Correa/Associated Press Christian Armenian priests pray in the Grotto, under the Church of the Nativity, traditiona­lly believed to be the birthplace of Jesus, in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, Sunday.
 ?? Leo Correa/Associated Press ?? Latin Patriarch Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa, the top Catholic clergyman in the Holy Land arrives at the Church of the Nativity, Sunday..
Leo Correa/Associated Press Latin Patriarch Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa, the top Catholic clergyman in the Holy Land arrives at the Church of the Nativity, Sunday..
 ?? Mahmoud Illean/Associated Press ?? Catholic clergy walk in procession next to the Church of the Nativity, Sunday.
Mahmoud Illean/Associated Press Catholic clergy walk in procession next to the Church of the Nativity, Sunday.
 ?? Leo Correa/Associated Press ?? People visit the Grotto under the Church of the Nativity.
Leo Correa/Associated Press People visit the Grotto under the Church of the Nativity.

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