No more room in the inns of Bethlehem

All beds booked in the birthplace of Jesus for first time in seven years 

By Dan Wooding
Founder of ASSIST Ministries

BETHLEHEM, WEST BANK (ANS) A British journalist has revealed that all the beds for tourists in Bethlehem are booked for the first time in seven years – and there is no now more room in the inns.  

Eric Silver, in a story filed from Bethlehem for the British Independent newspaper (http://news.independent.co.uk) said, “After seven lean, intifada years, Joseph Canavati, owner of the modern Alexander Hotel on Manger Street, the snaking main road leading to the Church of the Nativity, is dusting off his “No vacancies” sign. The pilgrims are coming back.”

 

Silver quoted Canavati as saying, “This is the best year we’ve had since the uprising. There are peace talks. There’s no violence in the Bethlehem area, no violence in Jerusalem. Our business depends on tranquility. If there is no violence, there is business.”

The guests for his 44 rooms come from the United States, Italy, Lithuania, and South Korea.

“All 2,000 beds in Bethlehem hotels and hostels are booked for Christmas for the first time since 2000.” Said Silver. “Victor Batarseh, the West Bank city’s Roman Catholic mayor, expects 40,000 pilgrims to visit Jesus’s birthplace for the holiday.

“Despite the bleak welcome of Israel’s concrete security wall at the entrance to the city, there is renewed buoyancy in the streets: more colored lights and decorated trees, few if any political slogans or portraits of Chairman Arafat.”

The roads… are swept and repaired.”

“God bless this bus station” reads a sign in the underground coach park built for the Millennium. The Muslim feast of Id al-Adha shades this year into Christmas. Every one of Bethlehem’s 32,000 residents has something to celebrate. Israel is trying to help.

“We all share the same economic interest,” said Shaul Tzemach, director general of the Tourism Ministry. Procedures have been streamlined for pilgrims at checkpoints between Bethlehem and Jerusalem, 10 minutes’ drive to the north.

Tourism is Bethlehem’s main source of income. The figures are up throughout the year. “We had an excellent summer,” Mr. Canavati reported, “followed by a good October and November. The hotels in Jerusalem were so full that we got the overflow.”

Silver went on to say, “The Israeli Tourism Ministry logged one million Christian visitors to the Holy Land in 2007, at least half of them pilgrims. The mayor said the number of visitors to Bethlehem was back to 60-70 per cent of pre-intifada trade.

“But the recovery is fragile. Unemployment is down from 60 per cent a year ago to 45 per cent now. The gift shops are open; the factories carving olive wood and mother of pearl nativity tableaux are back in production. But thousands of laborers who used to work in Jerusalem are barred from entering Israel, though Israel is allowing Palestinian Christians and Muslims to visit relatives across the de facto border for their respective holidays.

“It is small comfort for hundreds of Bethlehem families whose kin have settled much further afield. The pilgrims are coming, but the Christians are leaving. Before the creation of Israel in 1948, 92 per cent of the city’s population were Christian. The mayor, a retired ear, nose and throat surgeon, puts the current ratio at 35 per cent Christians to 65 per cent Muslims and says that at least 400 Christian families have emigrated from Bethlehem in the past three to four years.”

He concluded by saying that Samir Qumsieh, who runs Nativity, a private Christian television station, had stated “Emigration is deadly. In 15 years you will not find Christians here.”

He said that three of his four brothers live abroad, adding, “There is no life here.”

 



 

Sponsored Links:




 

Search



AddThis Feed Button


Author: editor editor's website editor's email
Post Date: Monday, December 24th, 2007
Categories: Christianity
Trackback: Trackback
 







[Valid RSS feed]

Add to My Yahoo!  Add to Google

Add to My MSN   Add to My AOL

Subscribe in NewsGator Online  

Add to Technorati Favorites!   Subscribe with Bloglines