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Bethlehem set for Christmas Mass


Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Fuad Twal, 24 DecThe Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Fuad Twal, will lead the Midnight Mass

Christian pilgrims and tourists from around the world have converged on Bethlehem for Christmas.

About 120,000 visitors are in the Palestinian West Bank town, 30% up on last year, officials said.

Crowds gathered early to sing carols around the 50ft (15m) Christmas tree in Manger Square.

Celebrations will culminate in Midnight Mass at the 1,700-year-old Church of the Nativity, built on the spot where it is believed Jesus was born.

'Unique Christmas'

The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Fuad Twal, has travelled from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, where he will later lead the Midnight Mass.

He passed through the massive gate in the controversial Israeli security barrier that separates Jerusalem from Bethlehem and arrived in Manger Square, where he was greeted with a bagpipe band.

Patriarch Twal, a Palestinian who is a Jordanian citizen, has expressed concern for Christians in the current upheavals in the Middle East and asked them to support the moves towards freedom and democracy.

His midnight homily will urge "the return of calm and reconciliation in Syria, in Egypt, in Iraq and in North Africa".

It will read: "O Child of Bethlehem, in this New Year, we place in your hands this troubled Middle East and, above all, our youth full of legitimate aspirations, who are frustrated by the economic and political situation, and in search of a better future."

Boy scouts with drums and bagpipes have taken part in the traditional afternoon procession through the town.

Restaurants and shops selling memorabilia such as olive wood-carved religious statues were doing brisk trade as habit-wearing monks rubbed shoulders with Father Christmas hat-wearing Filipino tourists.

American visitor Irma Goldsmith told Associated Press: "I watch Christmas in Bethlehem each year on TV, but to be here in person is different. To be in the spot where our saviour was born is amazing."

Bethlehem Mayor Victor Batarseh said he hoped the festivities would bring Palestinians closer to their dream of statehood.

"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," Mr Batarseh told the Associated Press news agency.

"That is why this Christmas is unique."

The BBC's Jon Donnison in Bethlehem says although this year has been a momentous one for the Middle East, there has been almost zero progress in terms of peace between the Palestinians and the Israelis.

Israel controls access to Bethlehem through checkpoints and the controversial barrier.

Residents say their livelihoods are imperilled by the barrier, which skirts around the edge of Bethlehem, surrounding it on three sides.

Once predominantly Christian, two-thirds of Bethlehem's 50,000 residents are now Muslim.

Some say the economic restrictions imposed by Israel are the main reason behind the exodus of Christians from the West Bank; others cite persecution by militant Muslims.



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