The Bakersfield Californian

Jesus’ traditiona­l birthplace gearing up for subdued Christmas

- BY JULIA FRANKEL AND JALAL BWAITEL

BETHLEHEM, West Bank — Bethlehem is gearing up for a subdued Christmas, without the festive lights and customary Christmas tree towering over Manger Square, after officials in Jesus’ traditiona­l birthplace decided to forgo celebratio­ns due to the Israel-Hamas war.

The cancellati­on of Christmas festivitie­s, which typically draw thousands of visitors, is a severe blow to the town’s tourism-dependent economy. But joyous revelry is untenable at a time of immense suffering of Palestinia­ns in Gaza, said Mayor Hana Haniyeh.

“The economy is crashing,” Haniyeh told The Associated Press on Friday. “But if we compare it with what’s happening to our people and Gaza, it’s nothing.”

More than 18,700 Palestinia­ns have been killed and more than 50,000 wounded during Israel’s blistering 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.

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

City leaders fret about the impact the closures have on the small Palestinia­n economy in the West Bank, already struggling with a dramatic fall in tourism since the start of the war. The Palestinia­n tourism sector has incurred losses of $2.5 million a day, amounting to $200 million by the end of the year, the Palestinia­n minister of tourism said Wednesday.

The yearly Christmas celebratio­ns in Bethlehem — shared among Armenian, Catholic and Orthodox denominati­ons — are major boons for the

city, where tourism accounts for 70% of its yearly income. But the streets are empty this season.

With most major airlines canceling flights to Israel, over 70 hotels in Bethlehem have been forced to close, leaving some 6,000 employees in the tourism sector unemployed, according to Sami Thaljieh, manager of the Sancta Maria Hotel.

“I spend my days drinking tea and coffee, waiting for customers who never come. Today, there is no tourism,” said Ahmed Danna, a Bethlehem shop owner.

Haniyeh said that while Christmas festivitie­s have been cancelled, religious ceremonies will take place, including a traditiona­l gathering of church leaders and a Midnight Mass.

“Bethlehem is an essential part of the Palestinia­n community,” the mayor said. “So at Midnight Mass this year, we will pray for peace, the message of peace that was founded in Bethlehem when Jesus Christ was born.”

George Carlos Canawati, a Palestinia­n journalist, lecturer, and scout leader, called his city “sad and heartbroke­n.” He said his Boy Scout troop will conduct a silent march across the city, in mourning of those killed in Gaza.

“We receive the Christmas message by rejecting injustice and aggression, and we will pray for peace to come to the land of peace,” said Canawati.

The enthusiasm of Bethlehem’s Christmas festivitie­s have long been a barometer of Israeli-Palestinia­n relations.

Celebratio­ns were grim in 2000 at the start of the second intifada, or uprising, when Israeli forces locked down parts of the West Bank in response to Palestinia­ns carrying out scores of suicide bombings and other attacks that killed Israeli civilians.

Times were also tense during an earlier Palestinia­n uprising, which lasted from 1987-1993, when annual festivitie­s in Manger Square were overseen by Israeli army snipers on the rooftops.

The sober mood this year isn’t confined to Bethlehem.

Across the Holy Land, Christmas festivitie­s have been put on hold. There are 182,000 Christians in Israel, 50,000 in the West Bank and Jerusalem and 1,300 in Gaza, according to the U.S. State Department. The vast majority are Palestinia­ns.

In Jerusalem, the normally bustling passageway­s of the Old City’s Christian Quarter have fallen quiet since the war began. Shops are boarded up, with their owners saying they are too frightened to open — and even if they did, they say they wouldn’t have much business.

The heads of major churches in Jerusalem announced in November that holiday celebratio­ns would be canceled. “We call upon our congregati­ons to stand strong with those facing such affliction­s by this year foregoing any unnecessar­ily festive activities,” they wrote.

At the altar of Bethlehem’s Evangelica­l Lutheran church, a revised nativity scene is on display.

A figure of baby Jesus wrapped in a Palestinia­n keffiyeh is perched atop a pile of rubble. The doll lies underneath an olive tree — for Palestinia­ns, a symbol of steadfastn­ess.

“While the world is celebratin­g, our children are under the rubble. While the world is celebratin­g, our families are displaced and their homes are destroyed,” said the church’s Pastor, Munther Isaac. “This is Christmas to us in Palestine.”

 ?? MAHMOUD ILLEAN / AP FILE ?? An installati­on of a scene of the Nativity of Christ with a figure symbolizin­g baby Jesus lies amid the rubble, in reference to Gaza, inside the Evangelica­l Lutheran Church in the West Bank town of Bethlehem on Dec. 10.
MAHMOUD ILLEAN / AP FILE An installati­on of a scene of the Nativity of Christ with a figure symbolizin­g baby Jesus lies amid the rubble, in reference to Gaza, inside the Evangelica­l Lutheran Church in the West Bank town of Bethlehem on Dec. 10.

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