HOLY LAND CHRISTMAS: Jerusalem and Bethlehem seek visitors
By LAURIE COPANS, Associated Press Writer
The Associated Press
December 6, 2004, Monday, BC cycle
JERUSALEM — For the first Christmas season in five years, Israel
and the Palestinians are cooperating to boost tourism to encourage
Christian pilgrims to visit the Holy Land during the holiday.
The Israeli and Palestinian tourism ministers announced in a meeting
last month – their first since fighting broke out in 2000 – that
they intended to guarantee easy access for visitors traveling between
Jerusalem and nearby Bethlehem, simplifying security checks.
Christmas celebrations in the land Jesus walked once attracted tens
of thousands of tourists. But in the last few years, violence has
kept pilgrims away.
Tourism has recently begun to rise again due to a marketing push and
a renewed effort to maintain relative calm after Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat’s death on Nov. 11.
“We are telling everyone that they can come more freely to the Holy
Land,” Palestinian Tourism Minister Mitri Abu Aitah said in the
meeting with his Israeli counterpart, Gideon Ezra.
Ezra said he expected the new procedures to help. “I think this meeting
between us will lead to a lot of people to come visit the Holy Land,”
he said.
If you make the trip this season, here are some recommendations.
One of my favorite things to do in Jerusalem – where I have lived
for 10 years – is to walk the ramparts of the Old City, where you
can view the minarets and steeples from every angle. You may even see
a relative of the peregrine falcon, the lesser kestrel, who prefers
the stone holy places when it nests in the area from February to July.
After visiting the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, built in the fourth
century by Emporer Constantine to mark the traditional site of Jesus’
crucifixion and burial, enter the small door to the left as you come
out the main entrance.
Climb the stairs through three tiny Ethiopian chapels to the roof.
Passing through the archway, you can enter the Coptic Patriarchate.
Find the stairs leading down into a dark cistern whose acoustics are
wonderful for singing your favorite Bible hymn.
For a spectacular view in every direction, climb the tower at the
Lutheran Church a few steps away from the Holy Sepulcher.
One of the most difficult challenges for tourists in Jerusalem is
finding out when it’s possible to visit the walled Al Aqsa Mosque
compound (known to Jews as the Temple Mount). The compound, home to the
Dome of the Rock mosque, is closed twice daily, during prayers, but it
is worth the effort to get inside and view the rock from which Muslims
believe the prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven on his white stallion.
To the left of the plaza of the Western Wall, a retaining wall of
the Second Jewish Temple and the holiest site for Jews, you will see
the entrance to an archaeological tunnel. Here you can see stones,
cisterns and a Hasmonean water channel used 2,000 years ago.
The Old City’s Arab market shops are a must. You can buy vests
decorated with traditional Palestinian embroidery, hand-painted
Armenian pottery and fresh sesame and pistachio brittle. Haggling
is an art you must master quickly. In most cases it’s best to offer
half the price you are first quoted and work your way up to about
two-thirds of what the seller asks. Try not to show you really want
the item or the shop owners won’t budge much.
Traveling from Jerusalem just a few miles away to the West Bank town
of Bethlehem can seem somewhat daunting since tourists must pass
through an Israeli military checkpoint.
But don’t mind the M-16 guns held by the Israeli soldiers. This area
has not seen clashes in more than a year and they are unlikely here
since both Israelis and Palestinians are eager to facilitate the
travel of pilgrims.
Manger Square is not the quaint, calm scene depicted in the Christmas
carol “O Little Town of Bethlehem.” Although it has been transformed
in recent years, it is often still full of tour buses.
The stone Church of the Nativity is dank and cold, but filled with
fragrant incense and a wonderful sight when full of worshippers at
the midnight Mass on Christmas Eve. Bring warm clothes if you come
for the holiday season; temperatures around Christmas in Bethlehem
average in the 40s.
If you’re lucky, it might even snow.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress