Source:
https://scmp.com/lifestyle/travel-leisure/article/2178894/jesus-christs-birthplace-bethlehem-app-born-ease-swelling
Lifestyle/ Travel & Leisure

At Jesus Christ’s birthplace in Bethlehem, an app is born to ease swelling crowds

  • The site where Jesus is believed to have been born is enjoying its best season in years, with more tourists expected to visit over Christmas
  • To deal with growing crowd numbers to the Church of the Nativity, authorities are planning to release a reservation system
A group of tourists and pilgrims visit the Church of the Nativity. Photo: AFP

Bethlehem is buzzing, with more tourists expected this Christmas than have visited the Biblical city in years.

Such are the crowds at the church built on the site where Jesus is believed to have been born that the authorities are planning to introduce an advance reservation system through an app.

The app, which will be introduced early next year, is aimed at ensuring a regular flow of tourists at the Church of the Nativity, where at busy times visitors wait hours to see the underground grotto where Christians believe Jesus was born in a manger.

Details of the app, which will be in English to start, are still being worked out.

A group of tourists and pilgrims visit the Grotto, believed to be the exact spot where Jesus Christ was born. Photo: AFP
A group of tourists and pilgrims visit the Grotto, believed to be the exact spot where Jesus Christ was born. Photo: AFP

One priest says it will only apply to tour groups visiting the site in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, but the Palestinian tourism ministry say it will be for everyone.

While there are concerns visits could become unnecessarily complicated, the three churches that share control of the site – the Catholics, Greek Orthodox and the Armenian Church – say such an app is needed.

“There are times when for us there are specific prayers, celebrations, or masses, or with all the sects praying,” Orthodox priest Issa Thaljieh says outside the church.

Tourists and Christian pilgrims take pictures outside the Church of the Nativity, revered as the site of Jesus Christ's birth. Photo: AFP
Tourists and Christian pilgrims take pictures outside the Church of the Nativity, revered as the site of Jesus Christ's birth. Photo: AFP

“So of course there is a huge squeeze. With the app, everyone will know what time to enter and which groups are there, so it will become more organised.”

The first church was built on the site in the fourth century, though it was replaced after a fire in the sixth century. Its mosaics were recently restored in a major project.

Palestinian deputy tourism minister Ali Abu Srour says the app will also provide information about the church. “We are going digital with this issue,” he says.

Barbora Salyova, a 29-year-old tourist visiting Israel and Jordan from Slovakia, says the app could be useful for pilgrims like herself.

Tourism in Bethlehem is enjoying its best season in years, with hotels reporting especially high occupancy rates for the Christmas period. Photo: AFP
Tourism in Bethlehem is enjoying its best season in years, with hotels reporting especially high occupancy rates for the Christmas period. Photo: AFP

“This is a step we definitely planned to make,” she says. “We also came for religious reasons so this was an automatic stop.”

Tourism in Bethlehem is enjoying its best season in years, with hotels reporting especially high occupancy rates for the Christmas period, says Elias Al-Arja, chairman of the Hotels Association Palestine.

“We had occupancy rates of 74 or 72 per cent in 2018,” he says, adding that it is expected to rise later in December.

In total, around 2.8 million tourists have visited the Palestinian territories this year, up from 2.5 million last year, according to the tourism ministry.

Abu Srour says the primary reason is a decrease in violence in Jerusalem and the West Bank this year.

The ministry has reached out to new tourists in locations across the globe, he says.

Israel is also enjoying record tourism figures and many visitors take day trips to Bethlehem and other West Bank sites from Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and elsewhere in the Jewish state.