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Catholic clergy walk in procession from the Church of the Nativity, traditionally believed to be the birthplace of Jesus, during Christmas festivities in Bethlehem on Monday. The West Bank town's tourism workers handed out sweets and flowers to visitors from around the world.
Catholic clergy walk in procession from the Church of the Nativity, traditionally believed to be the birthplace of Jesus, during Christmas festivities in Bethlehem on Monday. The West Bank town’s tourism workers handed out sweets and flowers to visitors from around the world.
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BETHLEHEM, West Bank — Encouraged by renewed peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians, Christian pilgrims from around the world converged on Jesus’ traditional birthplace Monday to celebrate Christmas — a palpable contrast to the sparse crowds of recent years.

The diverse mix of people included festive American tourists, clergymen in brown flowing robes and Palestinian scouts wearing kilts and playing bagpipes.

“I’m Catholic. I always wanted to see the beginning of Christianity, the whole history. It’s something you grow up with,” said Kristin Obeck, a 37-year-old schoolteacher from Richmond, Va.

Despite the festive atmosphere, a heavy police deployment, the presence of Israel’s massive separation barrier and unease among Bethlehem’s ever-shrinking Christian population served as reminders of lingering tensions.

In the years following the 1993 Oslo peace accord, Bethlehem attracted tens of thousands of tourists for Christmas. But the number of visitors plummeted after the outbreak of the second Palestinian uprising in 2000.

Tourism has begun to recover in recent years as fighting has slowed. This year, it got a boost from the renewal of peace talks last month at a summit in Annapolis, Md.

Israeli tourism officials said they expected some 20,000 visitors to cross from Jerusalem into neighboring Bethlehem, an increase of about 50 percent over last year. Tourism workers handed out sweets and flowers to pilgrims, and smiling Israeli soldiers posed for pictures with travelers.

Bethlehem’s governor, Saleh Tamari, said all of the town’s 5,000 hotel rooms were booked.

“If you can’t be with family, it’s good to be here where it all went down,” said 23-year-old David Collen of Hickman, Neb., who is studying the Middle East at Tel Aviv University in Israel.

“The idea that it’s a Christian city makes me more calm, and I think going to the West Bank is more comfortable since Annapolis,” said Tiago Martins, 28, of Curitiba, Brazil.

Priests and monks, tourists, Palestinian families and police mingled in Manger Square outside the Church of the Nativity, the site where tradition holds Christ was born.

Vendors hawked beads, inflatable Santas, roasted peanuts, cotton candy, steamed corn and Turkish coffee while city residents watched the festivities from balconies and rooftops.

A four-story cypress tree, strung with lights and red and gold ornaments and topped with a yellow star, towered outside the church.

Palestinian scouts, some wearing kilts and berets adorned with pompons, marched through the streets playing drums and bagpipes.

Throughout the evening, choirs and orchestras performed hymns and Christmas carols in many languages.

Latin Patriarch Michel Sabbah, the top Roman Catholic official in the Holy Land, began Christmas celebrations with his annual procession from Jerusalem to Bethlehem.

Sabbah could enter Bethlehem only after passing through a massive steel gate in Israel’s separation barrier — a stretch of concrete slabs built to keep suicide bombers from reaching Israel.

Israeli mounted policemen escorted Sabbah, in his flowing magenta robe, to the gate, and border police clanged it shut behind him.

Inside Bethlehem, Sabbah delivered a politically charged appeal for peace and love in the Holy Land and independence for the Palestinian people.

The Holy Land “is a land of war and conflict, and a land of humiliation of one people at the hand of another,” said Sabbah, the first Palestinian to hold his position.

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