Walled in by Zionist ugliness

The grim horror now surrounding our “Little Town of Bethlehem”

By Stuart Littlewood

London’s Christmas was made gloomier this year – and rightly so – by the appearance in the courtyard of St James’s Church, Piccadilly, of a replica of the hated Israeli annexation wall that threads its thieving way around the Palestinian West Bank.

It’s a life-size representation of the actual 8-metre high wall surrounding Bethlehem and imprisoning its inhabitants. The project, called Bethlehem Unwrapped, is a response to a call from the united churches of the Holy Land pleading with churches and communities around the world to “help us get our freedom back”.

The Israelis claim that the monstrous wall, also known as the Apartheid Wall, is to protect it’s citizens from terrorist attack. But in reality it is carefully routed to bite deep into Palestinian territory in order to steal choice agricultural land and water resources, as well as to seize strategic landscape and communication features and disconnect Palestinian communities from their livelihoods and from each other.

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This is not the first time the evil barrier has been replicated by a British church. Over Christmas 2006 at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in my home town of St Ives in Cambridgeshire, instead of enjoying the usual live sheep, cow, donkey and newborn babies at a Nativity scene, visitors were greeted by a grim grey replica of the wall and photos of the real thing.

The parish priest wanted to draw attention to the plight of the Palestinian people and replace the romantic idea of a manger crib with the ugly reality of the brutal occupation strangling his congregation’s “Little Town of Bethlehem”. He said he could understand Israel’s need for security but it was wrong to build the wall on Palestinian land:

The lives of the ordinary citizens of Bethlehem have been devastated… It affects every aspect of their lives: friends and family are separated, earning a living becomes more and more difficult, and access to health care is severely restricted in the town of Bethlehem, which we sing about at this time of the year. If we can provide these people with a few extra basic provisions and give them a little financial support, we can help make their lives more bearable.

He was confident that the people of St Ives would want to express their support for those oppressed people at Christmas.

A spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in London called it a cheap public relations stunt, and the enterprising priest took a lot of flak from others who thought there was nothing wrong with Israel’s thuggish ways.

The St Ives parish is twinned with the parish of Aboud in the West Bank. Aboud, once called the City of Flowers, is a historic town of about 2,000 people, half Christian, half Muslim, not far from Ramallah. On a hill above is the ancient monastery of St Barbara, blown up by the hooligan Israeli army in 2002. Throughout its long history Aboud is believed to have had no fewer than nine churches. The priest had made regular visits and watched local circumstances grow worse. His replica wall had the support of his bishop, who said: “It is a dramatic way of highlighting the fact that in Bethlehem today, in particular the ordinary people, still suffer in all kinds of ways as they did in Jesus’s day.”

I’ve been to Aboud myself on a couple of occasions. It is a place one could easily fall in love with, but even here in this one-time Arab paradise the wretched wall threatens to separate the townspeople from much of their land and olive groves and their water supply. The same goes for many more such lovely places in the Holy Land. In the case of Aboud, massive protests have caused the Israelis to adjust the route of the wall but it will still steal valuable property, restrict personal movement and rob the inhabitants of their freedom.

Billboard shows Mary, pregnant with Jesus, being led on a donkey towards Bethlehem by her husband Joseph and is confronted by Israeli occupation forces

Billboard shows Mary, pregnant with Jesus, being led on a donkey towards Bethlehem by her husband Joseph and is confronted by Israeli occupation forces

Condemned as illegal by the International Court of Justice, and ordered to be dismantled, the annexation wall, with its sinister “goon” towers, continues to be built in utter disregard of international law and other people’s human rights. It is symbolic of all that’s hateful and disgusting about the Israeli mentality. Because of its despicable purpose, and its sheer cruelty, the wall contains the seeds of its own destruction. It is only a matter of time.

Meanwhile campaigners would do well to maximize the potential of the wall to shock and shame. And it is the Americans who are showing the way. As Finian Cunningham explains, one thing often missing from the Christmas celebrations is a connection between the original historical event – some 2,000 years ago – and how this story relates to present reality. A new billboard campaign now running in the US gives the traditional Christmas story realistic, contemporary meaning. In Cunningham’s words,

Massive public hoardings, currently on display in various cities across the US, show Mary, pregnant with her soon-to-be-born baby son, Jesus, being led on a donkey towards the ancient Palestinian town of Bethlehem by her husband Joseph. Confronting this weary family is not the occupying forces of the Roman Empire, as in ancient accounts of the nativity, but rather it is the occupying forces of the Zionist Israeli regime.

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