Bethlehem set to mark a second subdued Christmas

Jalal BwaitelAP
Camera IconFew people are expected to visit the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem this Christmas. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

Bethlehem is preparing to mark another sombre Christmas in the traditional birthplace of Jesus under the shadow of war in Gaza.

The excitement and cheer that typically descends on the Palestinian town in the occupied West Bank on Christmas is nowhere to be found.

The festive lights and giant tree that normally decorate Manger Square are missing.

Throngs of foreign tourists that usually fill the square aren't expected and youth marching bands that gather each year to mark the holiday are absent.

Palestinian security forces arranged barriers near the Nativity Church, built atop the spot where Jesus is believed to have been born.

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"Always the message of Bethlehem is a message of peace and hope," said Mayor Anton Salman.

"And these days, we are also sending our message to the world: peace and hope, but insisting that the world must work to end our suffering as Palestinian people."

The cancellation of Christmas festivities is a severe blow to the town's economy.

Tourism accounts for an estimated 70 per cent of Bethlehem's income — almost all of it from the Christmas season.

Salman said unemployment was hovering around 50 per cent, higher than the 30 per cent across the rest of the West Bank, according to the Palestinian Finance Ministry.

The number of visitors to the town plunged from a pre-COVID high of around two million each year in 2019 to fewer than 100,000 visitors in 2024, said Jiries Qumsiyeh, the spokesperson for the Palestinian Tourism Ministry.

Bethlehem is an important centre in the history of Christianity, but Christians make up only a small percentage of the roughly 14 million people spread across the Holy Land.

There are about 182,000 in Israel, 50,000 in the West Bank and Jerusalem and 1300 in Gaza, according to the US State Department.

While the war in Gaza has deterred tourists and pilgrims alike, it has also prompted a surge of violence in the West Bank, with more than 800 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire and dozens of Israelis killed in militant attacks.

Since the 2023, attack that sparked the war, access to and from Bethlehem and other Palestinian towns in the West Bank has been difficult, with long lines of motorists waiting to pass Israeli military checkpoints.

Restrictions have also prevented some 150,000 Palestinians from leaving the territory to work in Israel, causing the economy there to contract by 25 per cent.

More than 45,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, according to health officials there, while some 90 per cent of the territory's 2.3 million residents have been displaced.

In the October 7 assault on southern Israel, Hamas-led militants killed about 1200 people, most of them civilians, and took more than 250 hostages.

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