From:
"Albert
E. Hazbun"
Date:
November 25, 2007 8:27:17 AM PST
Subject:
Letter to the Editor
With the Christmas season coming upon us, I thought it might be
appropriate to quote a paragraph in an article called "Bethlehem 2007"
that appears in the December Issue of the National Geographic magazine,
written by MIchael Finkel:
"This is not how Mary and Joseph came into Bethlehem, but this is
how you enter now. You wait at the wall. It's a daunting concrete
barricade, three stories high, thorned with razor wire. Standing
beside it, you feel as if you're at the base of a dam. Israeli
soldiers armed with assault rifles examine your papers. They search
your vehicle. No Israeli civilian, by military order, is allowed in.
And few Bethlehem residents are permitted out?the reason the wall
exists here, according to the Israeli government, is to keep
terrorists away from Jerusalem.
Bethlehem and Jerusalem are only six miles apart (ten kilometers),
though in the compressed and fractious geography of the region, this
places them in different realms. It can take a month for a postcard to
go from one city to the other. Bethlehem is in the West Bank, on land
taken by Israel during the Six Day War of 1967. It's a Palestinian
city; the majority of its 35,000 residents are Muslim. In 1900, more
than 90 percent of the city was Christian. Today Bethlehem is only
about one-third Christian, and this proportion is steadily shrinking
as Christians leave for Europe or the Americas. At least a dozen
suicide bombers have come from the city and surrounding district. The
truth is that Bethlehem, the "little town" venerated during Christmas,
is one of the most contentious places on Earth.
If you're cleared to enter, a sliding steel door, like that on a
boxcar, grinds open. The soldiers step aside, and you drive through
the temporary gap in the wall. Then the door slides back, squealing on
its track, booming shut. You're in Bethlehem."
Albert Hazbun
|