The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bethlehem hotels teem with tourists, defying tensions

- By Fadwa Hodali and Gwen Ackerman

In the West Bank town revered as Jesus’s birthplace, hotels are at full capacity for Christmas despite simmering Israeli-Palestinia­n tensions over President Donald Trump’s labeling of nearby Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

“We have not witnessed any cancellati­on since the Trump announceme­nt and are 100 percent booked for Christmas Eve,” said Palestinia­n Tourism Ministry public relations director Jeries Qumsieh.

Trump’s Dec. 6 announceme­nt on Jerusalem outraged the Palestinia­ns, who claim the sacred city’s eastern sector — home to sites holy to the three monotheist­ic religions — for a future capital. It sparked demonstrat­ions across the broader Muslim world as well. The United Nations General Assembly voted Thursday on a resolution critical of the step after the U.S. vetoed a similar one in the Security Council earlier this week.

The Palestinia­n Authority is anticipati­ng a record 2.7 million tourists this year, a jump from 2.2 million in 2016. Qumsieh attributed the rise to active marketing in Islamic countries like Indonesia and Turkey as well as cultural draws such as street artist Banksy’s Walled Off Hotel in Bethlehem, which faces the 26-foot-high concrete security barrier, topped with barbed wire, that Israel built along and inside the West Bank. Qumsieh said interest in the three-story guesthouse drove up tourism numbers. The hotel addressed Trump’s Jerusalem move on its website.

“Ever since President Trump’s announceme­nt about moving the U.S. embassy, there has been potential for unrest in the region,” it says. “The situation is currently perfectly fine.”

Italian Mario Ricci, 38, is visiting Bethlehem for the first time this year. He said he didn’t fear for his safety, but regretted that frictions had been aggravated by the U.S. declaratio­n.

“I chose Christmast­ime to be here because I wanted to live and feel the Christmas spirit,” he said. “It’s sad what’s happening in this part of the world. This is the city of peace, and what Trump did is only going to ignite the region and not bring peace.”

 ?? NASSER SHIYOUKHI / AP ?? Tourists walk in Manger Square on Tuesday outside the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. Palestinia­n tourism officials say hotels are at full capacity for Christmas despite simmering Israeli-Palestinia­n tensions.
NASSER SHIYOUKHI / AP Tourists walk in Manger Square on Tuesday outside the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. Palestinia­n tourism officials say hotels are at full capacity for Christmas despite simmering Israeli-Palestinia­n tensions.

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