Tunnel plan to save Bethlehem’s Manger Square

The little town of Bethlehem is jammed with a big-city problem – traffic gridlock, including around the church marking the spot where Jesus is said to have been born. To cope, the city is now considering the ­drastic ­solution of digging a tunnel under Manger Square.
The area in Bethlehem around the Church of the Nativity, where Jesus was said to have been born, suffers from gridlock. Picture: APThe area in Bethlehem around the Church of the Nativity, where Jesus was said to have been born, suffers from gridlock. Picture: AP
The area in Bethlehem around the Church of the Nativity, where Jesus was said to have been born, suffers from gridlock. Picture: AP

It may be the biblical town of grottos and shepherds’ fields in the minds of many around the world, but Bethlehem is a ­modern densely populated town of 28,000 with a dizzying weave of small streets that ­practically guarantee traffic jams.

“Bethlehem is going through a crisis,” said Anton Salman, a city councilor. “We think the solution to this traffic is to build an underground passage between the two sides of the square.”

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Bethlehem’s municipality hopes to build several tunnels eventually around the Palestinian city, where the urban development problems are myriad.

Bethlehem is sandwiched on three sides by other towns. From the north and south east, it is hemmed in by Israel’s separation barrier and Jewish settlements, leaving it little choice but to build vertically.

It is also a main transit point for drivers between the northern and southern parts of the West Bank, compounding its congestion. The area around the Nativity Church, built atop the site where Jesus is believed to have been born, is particularly busy, with a mix of tourists swarming the area and cars squeezing across the central Manger Square. Streets all around face a constant backlog because of traffic. Even worse, during the ­holidays, the square is closed for annual events such as the ­Christmas tree lighting and Christmas Eve celebrations. That plunges traffic nearby deeper into chaos.

The plan proposes an 80 -metre tunnel passing under a narrow two-lane street that crosses Manger Square in front of the Nativity Church. The project would take about two years to complete and would cost up to £3.2 million, with the Palestinian Authority pledging to foot the bill. If the plan is ­approved, construction could start next autumn.

With the tunnel ensuring the flow of traffic, Manger Square would be closed to cars entirely and pedestrianised.

But the tunnel project could run aground. The municipality would need to get a stamp of ­approval from the UN’s cultural agency Unesco, which has listed the Nativity Church as a world heritage site.

Junaid Sorosh-Wali, an official at Unesco’s Ramallah office, said the agency would study the plan once approached by officials and then determine its position.

Also, because the tunnel would pass near church grounds, church officials from each of the three denominations that administer the site would need to be involved. ­

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Officials at the Roman Catholic, Greek ­Orthodox and Armenian churches did not return messages requesting comment.

And, as is always the case when excavating in the Holy Land, any significant archaeological finds could hamper progress on the project. To circumvent that, the study proposes digging a tunnel no deeper than 11 metres. Anything of ­importance is usually buried ­further down, according to Mazen Karam, the director of the Bethlehem ­Development Foundation, a group that helped draft the ­tunnel study. Compensation would also be due to traders.

For Mr Karam, the tunnel is part of a series of projects meant to spruce up Bethlehem. His foundation has carried out work on cleaning up buildings in Manger Square and improving waste management in the city.

“If Joseph and Mary came back to Bethlehem, they would be shocked,” he said. “Bethlehem doesn’t deserve to be crowded with people and heavy traffic. It should be more open with wide spaces so people can go and enjoy the home of Jesus.”

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