From Reuters:
“'Christmas
will not be cancelled' says Bethlehem, amid little comfort or joy”
Bethlehem is
shaping up for a dismal Christmas: most of the inns are closed, the shepherds
are likely to be under lockdown and there are few visitors from the east, or
anywhere else. Just 12 months ago, the Palestinian town was celebrating its
busiest festive season for two decades, amid a sustained drop in violence and a
corresponding surge in the number of pilgrims and tourists. But hotels that
were adding new wings in 2019 are now shuttered because of the coronavirus
pandemic. Nevertheless, town leaders say the traditional birthplace of Jesus
will go ahead with its celebrations, aware that the world’s eyes are upon it at
this time of year. “Bethlehem is going to celebrate Christmas. And Christmas
will not be cancelled,” said Mayor Anton Salman, as workers behind him erected
a huge Christmas tree in Manger Square. “This Christmas from Bethlehem there
will be a message of hope to the whole world, that the world will recover from
this pandemic.”
The
newly-appointed Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, on
Monday sought to rally the Holy Land faithful, saying that preparations had
already started. His fellow Franciscan friar Father Francesco Patton, the
Custodian of the Holy Land, launched the seasonal celebrations on Saturday, presiding
over a service in a near-deserted Church of the Nativity. “This Christmas will
be less festive than usual as there will be restrictions, I suppose like any
other part of the world,” Pizzaballa said in an interview with a Catholic news
service. “Maybe the civil law will forbid us to celebrate as we want; the
pandemic will impose restrictions, but none will stop us from expressing the
true meaning of Christmas which is to make an act of love.”
ROOM AT THE
INN Rula Maayah, the Palestinian Authority’s tourism minister, said this
year was particularly challenging because it followed record tourism in 2018
and 2019, which then slumped to near-zero foreign tourism, and fewer Christian
Palestinians coming as pilgrims. A third factor, say tourist guides and
souvenir shop owners, is that the pandemic’s toll on the global economy has
devastated sales over the Internet – which typically spike during the holiday
season. At noon in Manger Square in what would normally be a frenetic
build-up to Christmas, the plaza was almost empty in November, with just a few
people milling around. Shop after shop was closed and market stalls were
selling just a few trinkets. In Nativity Street, Michael Canawati’s
souvenir store is a popular stop for tourist coaches that would typically buy
key chains engraved with images of Jesus or intricately carved Nativity scenes
made from Palestinian olive wood. But Canawati has not opened his shop
in weeks, is struggling to pay employees’ salaries and was forced to
permanently close his second store in Jerusalem. “We are at a dead end.
The shop is full of merchandise,” he told Reuters. “The whole world is in the
same problem that we are in. We put some promotions (online) for Christmas...and
still nothing,” Canawati said. Elias al-Arja, chairman of the Arab Hotel
Association, said the town and the world faced the same problem. “I have
worked in tourism for 30 years. We have had ups and downs because of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but never anything like this.” Additional
reporting by Zainah El-Haroun in Bethlehem and Stephen Farrell in Jerusalem;
Writing by Rami Ayyub and Stephen Farrell; Editing by Mike Collett-White
^ I’ve been to
Bethlehem and the Church of the Nativity. While it was very crowded and under
construction it was still good to see the place where Jesus was born (the above
picture.) ^
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