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Grieving and often overlooked, Palestinian Christians prepare for a somber Christmas amid war

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Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

People walk in Manger Square, adjacent to the Church of the Nativity, traditionally believed to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, in the West Bank town of Bethlehem, Saturday, Dec. 16, 2023. World-famous Christmas celebrations in Bethlehem have been put on hold due to the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

Itā€™s normally a moment of pure joy for the Rev. Khader Khalilia: the excitement, the giggles, the kisses, as his young daughters ā€” in their Christmas pajamas ā€” open their gifts. But this year, just the thought of it fills Khalilia with guilt.

ā€œIā€™m struggling,ā€ said the Palestinian American pastor of Redeemer-St. Johnā€™s Lutheran Church in New York. ā€œHow can I do it while the Palestinian children are suffering, have no shelter or a place to lay their heads?ā€

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Thousands of miles away, near Jesusā€™ biblical birthplace of Bethlehem, Suzan Sahori has been working with artisans to bring olive wood Christmas ornaments into homes in Australia, Europe and North America. But Sahori is in no mood for festivities: ā€œWeā€™re broken, looking at all these children, all this killing.ā€

In a traditional season of merriment, many Palestinian Christians ā€” in Bethlehem and beyond ā€” are gripped with helplessness, pain and worry amid the Israel-Hamas war. Some are mourning, lobbying for the war to end, scrambling to get relatives to safety or seeking comfort in the Christmas message of hope.

In the occupied West Bank, Sahori, executive director of Bethlehem Fair Trade Artisans, an organization selling crafts, will pray for peace and justice. Sheā€™s grateful sheā€™s safe ā€” but wonders if that could change. Sheā€™s also angry.

ā€œThe joy in my heart is stolen,ā€ she said. ā€œIā€™m saying, ā€˜God, how are you allowing all these children to die?ā€™ ... Iā€™m mad at God; I hope He forgives me.ā€

In better times, she finds the Christmas spirit in the Bethlehem area unmatched: Itā€™s in songs cascading into streets bedecked with lights, markets displaying decorations, and the enthusiasm of children, families and tourists snapping photos with towering Christmas trees.

Now, itā€™s all quieter, somber. Tree lighting ceremonies she attended last year have been scrapped.

The heads of churches in Jerusalem have urged congregations to forgo ā€œany unnecessarily festive activities.ā€ They encouraged priests and the faithful to focus on Christmasā€™ spiritual meaning and called for ā€œfervent prayers for a just and lasting peace for our beloved Holy Land.ā€

Thousands of Palestinians have been killed in Israelā€™s ongoing offensive in Gaza, launched after Hamasā€™ Oct. 7 killings and hostage-taking in Israel.

Days before Christmas, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem said two Christian women at a church compound in Gaza were killed by Israeli sniper fire. The Israeli military said troops were targeting Hamas militants in the area; it said it was investigating the incident and takes such reports very seriously.

Khalilia is striving to comfort the distraught amid his distress.

ā€œItā€™s hard to watch. Itā€™s hard to do your job,ā€ he said. ā€œPeople are looking for us to walk with them in their suffering.ā€

He worries about family in the West Bank; a brother lost his income working for a hotel as travel cancellations pummeled tourism.

Khalilia, whoā€™s from a town near Bethlehem, said his daughters will likely get fewer presents, with the savings going toward helping children in Gaza.

Many in the U.S., he said, donā€™t realize that Palestinian Christians exist ā€” some ask if he converted from Islam or Judaism.

He tells them, ā€œWhen you sing ā€˜O Little Town of Bethlehemā€™ on Christmas Eve, remember that Jesus was born in my hometown.ā€

There are 50,000 Christian Palestinians estimated to reside in the West Bank and Jerusalem, according to the U.S. State Departmentā€™s international religious freedom report for 2022. Approximately 1,300 Christians lived in Gaza, it said. Some Christians are also citizens of Israel. Many Palestinian Christians live in diaspora communities.

Susan Muaddi Darraj, a novelist in Baltimore, said Christians embody a diversity of Palestinians that gets erased. ā€œOur existence ā€¦ defies the stereotypes that are being used to dehumanize us.ā€

This Christmas, family gatherings have become more important for comfort, she said.

ā€œEspecially in the diaspora ... where, for us, life feels like itā€™s stopped but everyone else around us is going about their daily business."

Wadie Abunassar, a Palestinian Israeli in Haifa, said many in his Christian community are trying to balance the somber atmosphere with the Christmas message.

ā€œJesus came in the midst of darknessā€ and Christmas ā€œis about giving hope when thereā€™s no hope,ā€ said Abunassar, a former Catholic Church spokesperson. ā€œNowadays, more than ever, we need this Christmas spirit.ā€

It hasnā€™t been easy.

ā€œBeing Israeli citizens, we feel the pain of our Jewish compatriots,ā€ he said. ā€œBeing Palestinians, we feel the pain of our Palestinian brothers and sisters.ā€

In Bethlehem, the Rev. Munther Isaac, pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Christmas Church, said tears flow during Sunday services. Many are anxious; some have packed up and left.

Isaac was part of a group that traveled to Washington to advocate for a ceasefire.

ā€œA comprehensive and just peace is the only hope for Palestinians and Israelis alike,ā€ said a letter signed by several Christian pastoral leaders in Bethlehem. Addressed to President Joe Biden, it asked him to help stop the war.

The signatories said they lamented all deaths, Palestinian and Israeli.

ā€œWe want a constant and comprehensive ceasefire. Enough death. Enough destruction. ... This is our call and prayer this Christmas.ā€

Israel, whose forces have faced a ccusations by some of using excessive force, says it aims to destroy Hamas and accuses it of endangering civilians. Israel and its U.S. ally are also increasingly facing international alarm over the scope of deaths, destruction and displacement in Gaza.

Isaacā€™s church is displaying a nativity scene where a baby Jesus figure, wrapped in a back-and-white Palestinian keffiyeh, is lying in the rubble. Making the display was an emotional and spiritual experience, he said.

ā€œWe see Jesus in every child thatā€™s killed, and we see Godā€™s identifying with us in our suffering.ā€

This holiday season, longtime Gaza resident Suhair Anastas is wracked with guilt: Sheā€™s managed to escape the war in Gaza while others havenā€™t.

A Jordanian Palestinian, Anastas had been living in Gaza, where her late husband was from.

For more than a month, she and her 16-year-old daughter sheltered in a Catholic churchā€™s school there. Death felt particularly close when a deadly Israeli airstrike struck a Gaza Greek Orthodox Church compound housing displaced people. Israel's military said it had targeted a Hamas command center nearby.

ā€œYou go to sleep ... thinking, ā€˜Will I wake up the next morning?ā€™ā€ Anastas said.

Her trip to the border ā€” which involved driving, walking, taking a donkey-pulled cart and a cab ā€” was terrifying.

ā€œThe bombings were around,ā€ she said. A friendā€™s daughter, a child, kept asking: Are we going to die?

Anastas hopes to return to Gaza, but sheā€™s unsure whatā€™s ahead, or if her home will still be there.

Among the many questions over the future of Gaza and its more than 2 million people, is if its tiny Christian community will remain ā€” and for how long.

Those still inside include Sami Awadā€™s relatives. A Palestinian American, Awad said he failed to get U.S. help for his family members, who donā€™t hold U.S. passports, to leave.

They have moved repeatedly, their latest shelter a windowless cement structure shared with others, said Awad, who's in the West Bank. In sporadic communications, a cousin's told him they were running out of the canned tuna and beans theyā€™ve survived on.

He once told Awad, ā€œIf we die, donā€™t grieve too much for us, because it would have been mercy for us,ā€ Awad said. At other times, the cousin yelled, ā€œSave us. Get us out.ā€

ā€œI feel completely helpless,ā€ said Awad, dreading the prospect of bad news at any minute.

Hope came in the form of Australian visas for his relatives, including an elderly aunt and uncle, Awad said, but their names arenā€™t on lists needed to depart.

On Christmas, he said, ā€œWeā€™ll wake up, like every other day, to watch the news and to see what are the numbers of people that were killed.ā€

Awad wasnā€™t thinking about putting up a Christmas tree until his youngest daughter argued for one.

So now, a tree is up. On it, amid gold and red baubles, is a red, black, white and green Palestinian flag.

___

Associated Press writer Melanie Lidman in Jerusalem contributed.

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APā€™s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.


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