Thousands visit Bethlehem on Christmas Eve
Thousands visit Bethlehem on Christmas Eve
Visitors gathered near the 50-foot Christmas tree at Manger Square on Saturday morning taking pictures.

Bethlehem: Thousands of pilgrims, tourists and local Christians gathered in the biblical West Bank town of Bethlehem on Saturday to begin Christmas Eve celebrations in the traditional birthplace of Jesus.

Visitors gathered near the 50-foot (15-meter) Christmas tree at Manger Square on Saturday morning taking pictures and enjoying the sunshine.

The main event will be Midnight Mass at the Church of the Nativity, built over the location where Jesus is believed to have been born.

Israel's Tourism Ministry said it expected 90,000 tourists to visit the holy land for the holiday. Ministry spokeswoman Lydia Weitzman said that number was the same as last year's record-breaking tally, but was surprisingly high

considering the turmoil in the Arab world and the US and European economic downturns.

Bethlehem Mayor Victor Batarseh said he hoped this year's celebrations would bring Palestinians closer to their dream of statehood.

With peace talks stalled with Israel, Palestinians this year made a unilateral bid for recognition at the United Nations and were accepted as a member by UNESCO, the UN cultural agency.

"We are celebrating this Christmas hoping that in the near future we'll get our right to self-determination our right to establish our own democratic, secular Palestinian state on the Palestinian land. That is why this Christmas is unique," Batarseh told The Associated Press.

Bethlehem is today surrounded on three sides by a barrier Israel built to stop Palestinian militants from attacking Israel. Palestinians say the barrier damaged their economy.

The number of Christians in the West Bank is on the decline. While some leave for economic reasons, many speak of persecution by the Muslim majority, but always anonymously, fearing retribution.

Christians have even lost their majority in Bethlehem, where more than two-thirds of the some 50,000 Palestinian residents are now Muslim.

The biblical town was bustling on Saturday, however, with Christian tourists and pilgrims.

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