
The
Mayor of Bethlehem is Christian, but Its Hamas Thats
in Charge
It exalts terrorism, wants to wipe out Israel,
and is threatening a tax of non-Moslem residents. Its testing
ground is the city of Jesus birth
by Sandro Magister
ROME, 29 December 2005 Thirty thousand pilgrims from all
over the world came to Bethlehem for Christmas, one third more
than the previous year. The leader of the Palestinian National
Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, a Moslem, attended the midnight Mass at
the basilica of the Nativity. And in his homily, the Latin
patriarch of Jerusalem, Michel Sabbah, an Arab, hailed him as a
man of peace, reserving his protest for the wall raised up
before us, forcing us to live as if in a prison, our lands
confiscated, our young men carried away at night and thrown into
the Israeli prisons.
But in the city where Jesus was born, relations between
Christians and Moslems are more complicated than they appear.
Christians are no longer the majority of the 30,000 inhabitants
of the city, as they always were in the past The Moslems are now
more numerous than the Christians in the same proportion that the
mosques exceed the churches, by a margin of 15 to 10.
The mayor of Bethlehem is still a Christian, as always. Eight out
of the fifteen seats on the city council are still reserved for
Christians. But in the latest municipal elections, which took
place in May of 2005, a coalition with crucial support from the
Moslems of Hamas emerged victorious.
The leader of the Hamas contingent in the municipal council of
Bethlehem, Hassam El-Masalmeh, exalts the suicide attacks against
the Jews, and asserts that these will continue until all of
Palestine, including the territory of Israel, is under
Palestinian control.
But mayor Victor Batarseh, a practicing Catholic, condemns the
terrorist attacks and wants Hamas to stop carrying them out. He
says that he is ready for a territorial compromise with Israel in
order to bring about a true Palestinian state. But even before
the latest municipal elections, he chose Hamas as his main ally,
together with another extremist group called Islamic Jihad.
During the 1990s, Bethlehem was governed by men connected
with Yasser Arafats party, Fatah.
These men were accused of corruption and abuses against the
Christian population. When the second intifada broke out, in 2000,
part of Arafats security forces formed a new armed group,
the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades.
In April of 2002, guerillas connected with Fatah, under hot
pursuit from Israeli troops, occupied the basilica of the
Nativity in Bethlehem, and a lesser known fact, other convents
and Christian institutions in the city. The crisis developed
before the eyes of the world, and ended with the liberation of
the basilica. The leaders of the uprising were transferred to
Gaza, and to a few European countries.
Hamas quickly stepped into the vacuum that was created. It won
the favor of a large part of the population of Bethlehem,
creating initiatives for health care, the care of orphans, union
protection for workers, and fighting corruption. Future mayor
Victor Batarseh, 71 years old, a doctor who had once been a
militant in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,
allied himself with Hamas and against the Fatah party, in view of
the municipal elections in May of 2005. His platform was the
fight against corruption, transparent government, and the
improvement of citizens lives. According to his agreement
with Hamas, the reasons for religious division between Christians
and Moslems were to be kept at bay.
Batarseh was elected mayor, and the coalition he presided over
began to put its plans into practice. It banned the use of
municipal vehicles for private purposes; it closed unauthorized
businesses; it put new rules in place for public works contracts,
aimed at eliminating the waste of money; it fired the municipal
employees who were on the payroll but didnt do any work.
The men connected to Fatah reacted in a variety of ways. A few
days before Christmas, militants of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs
Brigades occupied the city hall in Bethlehem, demanding back pay
and new hiring.
But the reactions drew upon other fears as well. Hanna Nasser,
the previous mayor of Bethlehem, a Christian of the current that
is close to Fatah, accused the new administration of
spreading Islamic fundamentalism.
It is a fear that took shape after the electoral victory of Hamas,
not only in Bethlehems municipal elections, but also in
those of other cities of Cisjordan: Nablus, Jenin, Qalqilya. A
new style can already be seen in the municipalities where Hamas
is installed: Christian women employed there, who are accustomed
to shaking everybodys hand, are held at a distance by the
newly elected, for whom physical contact violates Islamic
principles.
The general plan of Hamas also includes the imposition of a
special tax, called al-jeziya, upon all of the non-Moslem
residents in the Palestinian territories. This tax revives the
one applied through all of Islamic history to the dhimmi, the
second-class Jewish and Christian citizens.
In an interview with Karby Legget, published in the December 23-26
edition of The Wall Street Journal, Masalmeh, the
leader of the Hamas contingent at the municipal council of
Bethlehem, confirmed: We in Hamas intend to implement this
tax someday. We say it openly, we welcome everyone to Palestine
but only if they agree to live under our rules.
Batarseh, the mayor, doesnt agree. He doesnt want the
tax, and says it will never be introduced.
He knows well that living with Hamas is difficult. But he says he
is convinced that the only way to make Hamas more moderate
is to bring them inside the system.
It is the same gamble that Mahmoud Abbas has on a number of
occasions said he will make: integrating Hamas into the political
system so that after this it will abandon terrorism. But neither
Israel nor the United States is willing to recognize Hamas as a
party to dialogue with unless it first abandons terrorism.
General political elections will be held in the Palestinian
territories at the end of January. The puzzle that emerges may
already have been written in Bethlehem.
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30 Dec 2005