Hartford Courant

No Christmas cheer this year

Businesses suffer while virus keeps thousands of pilgrims from Bethlehem

- By Jelal Hassan

BETHLEHEM, West Bank — The coronaviru­s has cast a pall over Christmas celebratio­ns in Bethlehem, all but shutting down the biblical town revered as Jesus’ birthplace at the height of the normally cheery holiday season.

Missing are the thousands of internatio­nal pilgrims who normally descend upon the town. Restaurant­s, hotels and souvenir shops are closed. The renowned Christmas tree lighting service will be limited to a small group of authorized people, as will church services on Christmas Eve.

“Bethlehem is dead,” said Maryana al-Arja, owner of the 120-room Angel Hotel on the outskirts of Bethlehem.

The hotel was the site of the West Bank’s first coronaviru­s outbreak in March.

She kept her 25 workers on staff for several months but ultimately couldn’t continue to pay them. Al-Arja, who was infected with the virus, said she has been forced to close the hotel and lay off the entire staff because there is no sign of the pandemic ending or tourists visiting anytime soon.

“We had 351 tourist groups booked in our hotel this year, each one 150 people,” she said. “But they all canceled.”

Elyas al-Arja, the head of the city’s hotel associatio­n, said Bethlehem received some 3 million tourists in 2019. With Israel, the main entry point for internatio­nal visitors to the region, banning tourists because of the coronaviru­s crisis, and the West Bank’s border crossing with Jordan closed to foreigners, that number is close to zero this year, he said.

“Sixty percent of the city relies on tourism, and their income disappeare­d when the tourists disappeare­d,” said alArja, a cousin of the Angel Hotel owner.

The Ambassador Hotel, which is located near the Church of the Nativity, built on the site where Christians believe Jesus was born, has reopened one floor in hopes that some local visitors may want to come celebrate in the coming weeks.

Mahmoud Tarman, the hotel’s receptioni­st, said the Ambassador has brought back eight of its 60 workers to serve local guests. But with the West Bank’s economy devastated by repeated lockdowns, it remains unclear how many people will come.

“At this time of the year, this empty hotel would be bustling with life. But as you see, there is no life, not even a Christmas tree yet,” he said.

The Palestinia­n Authority, which administer­s parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, this week imposed a new nighttime lockdown to help contain a spike in coronaviru­s cases. People must remain indoors from 7 p.m. until 6 a.m., and Bethlehem is included in the lockdown.

Officials say the lockdown could be extended through Christmas and into the new year if the infection levels don’t come down. The Health Ministry has reported a total of about 65,000 coronaviru­s cases in the West Bank, and over 620 deaths.

Bethlehem’s mayor, Anton Salman, said the city had planned to receive 3,000 invited guests, including local scout troops and musical bands from around the world that normally entertain visitors during Christmas Eve festivitie­s.

He said the famed Christmas tree lighting, scheduled on Thursday, will be limited to just 15 guests, including local mayors, the district governor and the Latin Patriarch and other clergy.

Midnight Mass, a solemn event led by the Latin Patriarch that is usually attended by religious leaders, local VIPs and hundreds of pilgrims from around the world, has also been scaled back, Salman said.

 ?? MAJDI MOHAMMED/AP ?? Worshipper­s at the Church of the Nativity, traditiona­lly believed to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, Monday in Bethlehem.
MAJDI MOHAMMED/AP Worshipper­s at the Church of the Nativity, traditiona­lly believed to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, Monday in Bethlehem.

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