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In Wartime Bethlehem, Christmas Joy Hard To Find

Violence across the Israeli-occupied West Bank has surged since the war in Gaza broke out on October 7 last year.


A Christian worshipper visits the Church of the Nativity in the biblical city of Bethlehem, in the occupied West Bank, on December 17, 2024. (Photo by AHMAD GHARABLI / AFP)

 

On Bethlehem’s Manger Square, Christmas decorations and pilgrims are notably absent for a second wartime festive season in the Israeli-occupied West Bank city.

The Church of the Nativity that dominates the square is as empty as the plaza outside. Only the chants of Armenian monks echo from the crypt where Christians believe Jesus Christ was born.

“Normally on this day you would find 3,000 or 4,000 people inside the church,” said Mohammed Sabeh, a security guard for the church.

Violence across the Israeli-occupied West Bank has surged since the war in Gaza broke out on October 7 last year, but Bethlehem has remained largely quiet, even though the fighting has taken a toll on the now predominantly Muslim city.

A Muslim woman looks at a 14-pointed silver star, believed to be the exact spot where Jesus Christ was born, at the grotto in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, in the occupied West Bank, on December 17, 2024. – On Bethlehem’s Manger Square, Christmas decorations and pilgrims are notably absent for a second wartime festive season in the Israeli-occupied West Bank city. Violence across the Israeli-occupied West Bank has surged since the war in Gaza broke out on October 7 last year, but Bethlehem has remained largely quiet, even though the fighting has taken an overall toll on the now predominantly Muslim city. (Photo by AHMAD GHARABLI / AFP)

 

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Foreign tourists, on whom Bethlehem’s economy almost entirely relies, stopped coming due to the war. An increase in restrictions on movement, in the form of Israeli checkpoints, is also keeping many Palestinians from visiting.

“Christians in Ramallah can’t come because there are checkpoints,” Sabeh said, complaining that Israeli soldiers “treat us badly”, leading to long traffic queues for those trying to visit from the West Bank city 22 kilometres (14 miles) away, on the other side of nearby Jerusalem.

Anton Salman, Bethlehem’s mayor, told AFP that on top of pre-existing checkpoints, the Israeli army had set up new roadblocks around Bethlehem, creating “an obstacle” for those wanting to visit.

 

A man sits in the Church of the Nativity in the biblical city of Bethlehem, in the occupied West Bank, on December 17, 2024. – On Bethlehem’s Manger Square, Christmas decorations and pilgrims are notably absent for a second wartime festive season in the Israeli-occupied West Bank city. Violence across the Israeli-occupied West Bank has surged since the war in Gaza broke out on October 7 last year, but Bethlehem has remained largely quiet, even though the fighting has taken an overall toll on the now predominantly Muslim city. (Photo by AHMAD GHARABLI / AFP)

 

“Maybe part of them will succeed to come, and part of them, they are going to face the gates and the checkpoints that Israel is putting around”, Salman said.

– ‘Not Christmas as usual’ –

The sombre atmosphere created by the Gaza war, which began with Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, would make showy celebrations an insensitive display, said Salman.

“We want to show the world that Bethlehem is not having Christmas as usual”, he said.

Prayers will go on, and the Catholic Church’s Latin Patriarch will make the trip from Jerusalem as usual, but the festivities will be of a more strictly religious nature than the festive celebrations the city once held.

 

Palestinian Issa Kassissieh, dressed as Santa Claus, distributes Christmas trees in Jerusalem’s Old City on December 19, 2024, ahead of the upcoming Christmas holiday. (Photo by Menahem Kahana / AFP)

 

There will be no float parade, no scout march and no large gatherings on the streets this year.

“Bethlehem is special at Christmas. It is so special in the Holy Land. Jesus was born here”, said Souad Handal, a 55-year-old tour guide from Bethlehem.

 

A large billboard displaying a message to US President-elect Donald Trump is hung on the highway in the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv on December 18, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP)

 

“It’s so bad (now) because the economy of Bethlehem, it depends on tourism.”

Joseph Giacaman, owner of one of Bethlehem’s best-located shops right on Manger Square, said he now only opens once or twice a week “to clean up”, for lack of customers.

“A lot of families lost their business because, you know, there are no tourists”, said Aboud, another souvenir shopkeeper, who didn’t give his last name.

 

Palestinian Issa Kassissieh, dressed as Santa Claus, poses for a photo at Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem’s Old City on December 19, 2024, ahead of the upcoming Christmas holiday. (Photo by Menahem Kahana / AFP)

 

Similarly, in Jerusalem’s Old City, just eight kilometres (five miles) away but on the other side of the separation wall built by Israel, the Christian quarter has eschewed traditional Christmas decorations.

 

US Representative Pramila Jayapal, Democrat from Washington, attends a news conference on the death of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi outside the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on December 17, 2024. – Eygi was shot on September 6, 2024, while taking part in a demonstration against Israeli settlements in the northern part of the occupied West Bank. Her killing sparked international outrage, particularly from Ankara, further inflaming tensions over the war in Gaza. The Israeli army acknowledged opening fire in the area and said it was investigating the shooting. (Photo by Allison ROBBERT / AFP)

 

The municipality has forgone its traditional Christmas tree at the main entrance to the neighbourhood, New Gate, and nativity scenes have been restricted to private properties.

– Exodus –

The tightening of security around Bethlehem since the start of the war, combined with economic difficulties, has led many local residents to leave.

“When you can’t offer your son his needs, I don’t think that you are going to stop just thinking how to offer it”, said Salman, the mayor.

 

A Christian worshipper lights candles at the Church of the Nativity in the biblical city of Bethlehem ahead of Christmas, in the occupied West Bank, on December 17, 2024. (Photo by AHMAD GHARABLI / AFP)

Because of that, “a lot of people, during the last year, left the city”, he said, estimating that roughly 470 Christian families had moved out of the greater Bethlehem area.

However, the phenomenon is by no means restricted to Christians, who represented around 11 percent of the district’s about 215,000 inhabitants in 2017.

Father Frederic Masson, the Syrian Catholic priest for the Bethlehem parish, said that Christians and non-Christians alike had been leaving Bethlehem for a long time, but that “recent events have accelerated and amplified the process”.

In particular, “young people who can’t project themselves into the future” are joining the exodus, Masson said.

“When your future is confiscated by the political power in place… it kills hope”, he said.

 

People douse the flames on a car targeted in a reported Israeli strike in the Tulkarem camp for Palestinian refugees in the occupied West Bank on December 19, 2024. – The ministry of health in Ramallah announced on December 19 that four Palestinians were killed and three were injured “as a result of the (Israeli) bombing of a vehicle in Tulkarem camp”, in the northern West Bank. (Photo by AFP)

 

Echoing Father Masson, Fayrouz Aboud, director of Bethlehem’s Alliance Francaise, a cultural institute that provides language courses, said that in current times “hope has become more painful than despair”.

With Israeli politicians increasingly talking of annexing the West Bank, she said many young people come to her to learn French and build skills that would allow them to live abroad.

Even her own 30-year-old son has raised the idea, telling her: “Come, let’s leave this place, (the Israelis) will come. They will kill us”.

 

AFP