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Millions Celebrate Christmas Day

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  • Millions Celebrate Christmas Day

    MILLIONS CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS DAY

    BBC
    KarabakhOpen
    25-12-2007 15:20:37

    Millions of Christians around the world are marking Christmas Day -
    the traditional day of Christ's birth.

    In the West Bank town of Bethlehem, the Biblical site of Jesus' birth,
    thousands of worshippers gathered to celebrate midnight Mass.

    Local officials in Bethlehem say double the number of pilgrims have
    visited this year compared to last.

    In Rome, Pope Benedict XVI celebrated a special Mass in St Peter's
    Basilica, watched by thousands of pilgrims.

    Those who were unable to join the congregation filling the church
    watched the Mass on giant video screens in the square instead.

    Nazareth Nativity

    A new floodlit Nativity scene was officially unveiled in the square
    in front of the basilica.

    This year the larger-than-life-size statues of the baby Jesus and his
    family have been placed in a Nativity scene set not in a Bethlehem
    stable, but in a room in Joseph's house in Nazareth.

    Vatican officials say the change was made to illustrate the notion
    that Jesus was born everywhere, not just in Bethlehem.

    In his sermon Pope Benedict urged people to find time and space for
    God, the needy and the suffering.

    On Tuesday at noon (1100 GMT) the Pope will deliver his traditional
    "Urbi et Orbi" Christmas message to the world from a balcony
    overlooking St Peter's Square.

    Tourist revival

    In Bethlehem fears about security and Israel's West Bank barrier -
    an imposing eight-metre (24-foot) concrete wall separating the town
    from Jerusalem - have discouraged potential visitors in recent years.

    During the second Palestinian uprising, which started in September
    2000, tourism collapsed.

    But with the relative stability of the last two years, tourists and
    pilgrims are returning to the town in larger numbers.

    "Between 25 to 35,000 pilgrims and tourists are going to be around
    today and tomorrow - twice as much as last year... Today we have
    about 60 to 70% of the normal tourism and pilgrimage to the city,"
    Victor Batarseh, the mayor of Bethlehem said.

    "This year is much better than the last seven years for tourism,"
    local shopkeeper Jacques Aman told Associated Press. "The atmosphere
    is better in general. There is relative calm, from the security
    standpoint," he added.

    But the BBC's Bethany Bell says there are still far fewer tourists
    than there used to be before the uprising and that many of those
    celebrating outside the Church of the Nativity were local people.

    There was still a heavy police presence, and before worshippers
    arrived bomb squads swept cars and buildings for explosives.

    Message of peace

    Christmas carols played to a crowded Manger Square, in front of the
    Church of the Nativity - built on the site of the stable where Jesus
    is said to have been born.

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, a Muslim, joined the midnight Mass
    in Bethlehem and emphasised that not only Christians were celebrating
    the festival.

    "The new year, God willing, will be a year of security and economic
    stability," he said.

    "We pray next year will be the year of independence for the Palestinian
    people," he added.

    Latin Patriarch Michel Sabbah, the Catholic leader in the Holy Land,
    called for peace in the Middle East as he led the Mass.

    "This land belongs to God. It must not be for some a land of life and
    for others a land of occupation and a political prison," he said in
    a sermon delivered in his native Arabic.
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