MIFTAH
Tuesday, 2 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 



Bethlehem’s place in history began with a journey. It was to Bethlehem that Mary and Joseph travelled, two centuries ago, to find a safe harbour in which to give birth to their baby son. It was to Bethlehem that the three wise men travelled, to meet and welcome to the earth the Christ child who had been born to save them. And it was to Bethlehem that pilgrims from around the world travelled, through the centuries, to remember and honour that birth. Today, on Christmas Eve, Christians and non-Christians alike will remember and honour the town that sheltered the baby and his parents, and all those who have travelled there through the centuries, to pray and offer thanks. If they wish to travel personally to the city however, to retrace the steps of the wise men and the shepherds and Mary and Joseph, they will find their passage blocked.

For Bethlehem today is no longer a sheltering harbour for voyagers or pilgrims of shepherds of wise men of any sort; its entrance is blocked by a military crossing erected by Israeli authorities; the town is surrounded by a monstrous concrete wall that is 26 feet high; and anyone wishing to enter must pass individually through two sets of X ray machines and tense gun-wielding and frightening corridors equipped with cameras and other high-tech devices that are ostensibly there to preserve the security of the state of Israel but that are more obviously intended to intimidate, harass and deter foreigners and local Palestinians from entering Bethlehem.

The security argument breaks own on several counts: first, if it really is about security, then why does Israel check people going in to Bethlehem and not only those going out, towards Jerusalem? Second, there are several other, albeit more circuitous, ways of getting to Jerusalem from the neighbouring town of Beit Sahour. These roads are rarely ever patrolled by Israeli authorities, and would presumably be the preferred route of any “terrorists” wishing to enter Israel. Why then does Israel not station soldiers along these roads? Third, the Israelis that are theoretically most at risk of terrorism in the Bethlehem area are those who live in the neighbouring settlements. If Israel’s concern really is about preserving the safety of its citizens, why does it take no steps to remove from harm’s way these settlers?

Christmas has always been an occasion for joy in Palestine, where the Christ is considered, by Muslim and Christian Palestinians alike, to be one of their own. And Bethlehem, for obvious reasons, has always been the focal point for Christmas festivities in Palestine. But each successive Christmas is sadder in Bethlehem, which is a dying city that has lost, it seems forever, the tourist revenues on which it once thrived and, worse, the Christian inhabitants – some of whose families have been resident in Bethlehem for centuries – who leave by the droves for foreign shores and easier lives if they have the means to do so.

Today, as we join our voices in chorus to mark the birth of the Christ in Bethlehem, we must also raise our voices to join the chorus – sadly muted though it is – that protests the present-day tragedy that is Bethlehem. As we sing Christmas carols this evening around the world, let us keep in our thoughts and prayers the city that was once a haven for travellers and pilgrims and shepherds, and that is now a desolate ghost-town that has a big, empty, crumbling church at its center, and ugly concrete walls at the periphery.

Merry Christmas to you all; remember Palestine, and the little town of Bethlehem, in your prayers.

 
 
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