I did a brief
overview of my Christmas in Bethlehem in my most recent newsletter (if you didn’t get it and want to…let me
know, gastal01@luther.edu) but I
wanted to share a few more pictures and some video. If you want to see more pictures you can check out my Facebook album.
When I agreed to come to the West Bank for the year, I
knew I would be missing a lot of things: birthdays, family gatherings, friend’s
weddings and other important events.
Most of these things I have come to terms with missing but I hadn’t quite
come to terms with spending Christmas away from my family, away from friends,
away from familiar traditions and away from snow. However, if I couldn’t spend Christmas at home with all that
is familiar had home, I couldn’t think of a better place to be than amidst what
has become so familiar here.
But without the Christmas music on the radio, frantic buying of presents and snowy cold weather(however, it sounds like Iowa has been missing that too), it took a while to begin to feel like Christmas. However, when Christmas arrived here, it arrived in full swing, starting on Thursday, December 15th, 9 days before Christmas day.
Kate, Matt and I |
That Thursday afternoon brought an exciting re-connection as I headed into Jerusalem to pick up two dear friends, who I worked with at Camp EWALU, Kate and Matt. They are currently traveling around the world, and decided to be in the area for Christmas. After we dropped their stuff at my house, we headed to Beit Sahour church for some caroling and church decorating and Papa Noel even made an appearance to bring chocolate to the children, and adults too!
Lit Christmas tree |
Saturday night, Beit Sahour kicked off their Christmas
celebrations by lighting their Christmas tree. The celebration started with a parade of the area
scout groups (kind of like a combination of marching band, youth group and
boy/girl scouts), which included a lot of bagpipes. After the parade, we
gathered with 3,000 plus people in the city center. As people gathered, a band sang Christmas carols.
Before the lighting of the tree we heard a speech from the Palestinian Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad. While we
didn’t understand much of the speech, we did catch the words “Newt
Gringrich" and could only assume
he was addressing the comments Newt Gringrich made about Palestinians being a made-up people. After the speech,
there was a countdown, the band sang “Angels We Have Heard on High” (or however
that translates into Arabic) and with the chorus of “Gloria in Excelsis Deo”
the tree was lit.
Peanut packing |
Tuesday brought two of the most interesting new Christmas
experiences of the year. At the
school on Tuesday afternoon, we gathered with the teachers to fill a bunch of
bags with peanuts and chocolate.
Initially, I didn’t know what to expect but we gathered in a common room
and while the purpose was to gather to fill the bags, it seemed to be more of
an excuse to gather together to joke, laugh and eat peanuts.
Tueseday evening, 3 fellow YAGM’s and I went to a concert
by a group called Shibat, a Palestinian rock ‘n’ roll group that gets together
for a series of Christmas concerts every year. This year’s concert included a variety of traditional
English and Arabic Christmas carols including Little Drummer Boy and Mary,
Did You Know as well as songs like Sound
of Music, Pinball Wizard and Jailhouse
Rock. The concert concluded with a dance party to medley of Christmas songs
starting with Feliz Navidad (I apologize
for the quality of the video but I was dancing too…):
Teachers dancing at Christmas party |
Adorable KG at program |
Nativity Set |
Saturday, Christmas Eve brought a series of parades, in and around Manager Square, by the local scouts groups, aka lots of drums and bagpipes! We then spent most of the day hanging around Manager Square listening to concerts, including a group that sang John Lenon’s Imagine. The day concluded with a tri-lingual (Arabic, English and German) worship service at Christmas Lutheran Church, where I sang in the choir and we sang in Spanish (so I guess that makes it a quad-lingual service). The service finished with a candlelight singing of Silent Night.
In a time when I was missing my community back home, the
numerous opportunities to gather with a variety of communities here was a great
reminder of the communities that I have become a part of in the past four
months. In a time where I didn’t
expect to find much of the familiar, I was grateful to find myself surrounded
by the familiar in the newness.
Candlelight service at Christmas Lutheran (Laurin-Whitney Gottbrath) |
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