‘Christmas cancelled’ in Bethlehem as pastor builds ‘rubble nativity’ for Gaza

Christmas celebrations have been cancelled in Bethlehem, the West Bank city the place Christians imagine Jesus was born.

It comes as British charity staff renewed calls on UK ministers to comply with Australia and concern short-term visas to youngsters and their households fleeing the conflict.

“I return to the UK not suggesting that we cancel Christmas, but that we take urgent action in the spirit of Christmas, extending compassion to those suffering before it is too late,” stated Dr Krish Kandiah, of the Sanctuary Foundation, who visited each Bethlehem and close by Jerusalem this week on a fact-finding mission.

“If our government were to start by providing a significant number of humanitarian temporary medical evacuation visas to children and their families, a few lives will be saved from the horrors of war.”

Bethlehem’s Manger Square, which usually sees a 20ft fir tree erected above an illuminated nativity scene, stands empty, locals say, in solidarity with folks enduring the battle simply 46 miles away within the Gaza strip. Instead, Dr Munther Isaac, a Palestinian pastor at Bethlehem’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, created a manger scene depicting child Jesus surrounded by rubble and concrete.






A pastor in Bethlehem, the birthplace of Jesus, constructed a nativity scene out of rubble

“We did this for ourselves to emphasise that Jesus is in Solidarity with those who suffered,” he advised Dr Kandiah.

“Jesus is with us in our pain, when we’re victims of marginalisation and injustice. This is Christmas to us. And I hope that you think of the true meaning of Christmas as you celebrate in your own ways in the UK.”

He added: “For there is a genocide taking place in our land. We’re broken. We’re praying every day for this to end. We’re heartbroken by images of children being pulled from under the rubble on a daily basis. So many people have died. Enough, enough, enough, we say. We urge you to pray that this war is over. We urge you to work, to lobby, to advocate. All we want this Christmas is a comprehensive ceasefire.”

Australia lately issued emergency visas to 800 Palestinians and 1,700 Israelis, granting them short-term customer standing and permitting them to remain within the nation for a yr.

In October, a coalition of charities and teams drew up proposals for a refugee scheme that might settle for hundreds of Palestinians from Gaza into the UK, based mostly upon the Ukraine refugee programme.

The UK authorities presently has no programme for accepting refugees from the battle in Gaza.

It’s no surprise no-one felt like celebrating Christmas

By Dr Krish Kandiah, Sanctuary Foundation

There isn’t any Christmas tree in Manger Square in Bethlehem this yr. The 20-foot fir tree bedecked with lights and the large, illuminated nativity scene that nestles beneath it are lacking. None of the celebs on Star Street are lit. The outlets which can be crammed with sweet and items crafted from olive wooden are all boarded up.

The folks of Bethlehem have cancelled Christmas celebrations this yr in solidarity with these struggling within the Israel-Gaza battle. Just 46 miles away, tens of hundreds of youngsters, ladies and men have been killed in simply 8 weeks.

I used to be within the Middle East to talk with these hoping for humanitarian responses that might alleviate the struggling. Yet everybody I met solely had tales of ever extra horrific conditions.

One of the medics I used to be travelling with had heard from a colleague in Gaza that was performing 25-30 amputations a day.

Another reported she had carried out a caesarean with out anaesthetic for the mom.

A seasoned employee with the International Red Cross stated to me that he had by no means seen something just like the devastation in Gaza wherever on the planet.

A senior member of the clergy described the scene as a catastrophic bloodbath of horrible proportions.

I spoke to at least one lodge proprietor whose household had lived in Bethlehem in the identical home for over 500 years. He advised me that he couldn’t sleep fascinated with the tragedy unfolding in his nation: “Sometimes I just sit and cry”, he stated, “I’ve misplaced my urge for food.”

It was no wonder no one felt like celebrating Christmas.

I also spoke by telephone to a Gazan lady who was desperate to get her children out of the country to safety. So far the only option open to her is to apply for some of the 800 visas offered by the Australian government. Her chances are slim.

I hope other countries will quickly follow the Australian precedent, or that of Qatar and Turkey, who have evacuated very sick and injured babies and children.

I return to the UK not suggesting that we cancel Christmas, but that we take urgent action in the spirit of Christmas, extending compassion to those suffering before it is too late.

If our government were to start by providing a significant number of humanitarian temporary medical evacuation visas to children and their families, a few lives will be saved from the horrors of war.

Christmas treesInternational Red CrossIsrael-Hamas warMiddle EastThe Sanctuary Group PLC