From Reuters:
“Last Christmas was grim,
Bethlehem hopes this year will be better”
(A foreign tourist visits the
Church of Nativity in Bethlehem in the West Bank November 18, 2021. Picture
taken November 18, 2021.)
The trickle of tourists is
sometimes scarcely enough to fill a manger, let alone an inn, but Bethlehem's
Palestinians are hopeful that numbers will rise in the month before Christmas. The
traditional birthplace of Jesus was all but shuttered by the pandemic last
year, ravaging the tourism-dependent economy and leading some hoteliers to
consider selling up. But this year Israel has eased curbs on foreign tourists
in time for Christmas, although everyone remains wary of a winter coronavirus
wave. While grateful for the return of some foreign tourists and Christian
Palestinians from the West Bank and Israel, it is a far cry from the 3.5
million visitors who came in winter 2019, just before the pandemic. “Of course
the numbers are very few, but as a start, as a beginning, I think it’s good,”
Palestinian tourism minister Rula Maayah told Reuters. “Hopefully very soon
these few hundreds will be a few thousand.”
(Picture inside the overly crowded
the Church of the Nativity I took when I was in Bethlehem, the West Bank on October
9, 2017.)
The reduced numbers have at least
improved the experience for those who are there. One of just three wise
tourists standing in an otherwise-deserted Manger Square on Nov. 17, Danish
pilgrim Trina Dybkjaer said their timing seemed ideal. “I came to see where
Jesus was born," she said, looking up at the half-decorated Christmas tree
outside the Church of the Nativity. “I can almost feel the history of how it
was back then. It hasn’t been, at least today, destroyed by a lot of tourists.”
Bethlehem's municipality scaled back the town's Christmas market last year and
banned most spectators from the tree-lighting ceremony. But Mayor Anton Salman
said this year's celebration will proceed as normal on Dec. 4, with visitors
asked to wear masks. He expected around 15,000 people, mostly Palestinians. Across
Bethlehem, souvenir-sellers and hoteliers say they are struggling to make a
living. “We have Christmas reservations from Britain, Colombia, the U.S., all
over, we can't complain about that,” said Joey Canavati, manager of Nativity
Street's Alexander Hotel. “We just don't know what will happen next week, or
next month - will there be another COVID wave? Will everything shut down
again?”
^ This is A Tale of 2 Bethlehems:
The first picture is the Church of Nativity (where Jesus was born) in Bethlehem,
the West Bank from November 18, 2021 (with limited Visitors due to Covid) and
the second picture I took at the Church of Nativity on October 9, 2017 (with
pushing and shoving crowds and constant waiting.) There needs to be a middle ground between no
Visitors and too many Visitors year-round and especially at Christmas. ^
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