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ZABABDEH: A man puts up a Palestinian flag at the entrance of the "Our Lady of Visitation" Catholic church in the northern West Bank town of Zababdeh on April 10, 2025. — AFP photos
ZABABDEH: A man puts up a Palestinian flag at the entrance of the "Our Lady of Visitation" Catholic church in the northern West Bank town of Zababdeh on April 10, 2025. — AFP photos

Zionist entity dims Easter joy in occupied West Bank

Zionist raids, threats of annexation leave Palestinian Christians anxious

ZABABDEH: In the mainly Christian Palestinian town of Zababdeh, the runup to Easter has been overshadowed by nearby Zionist military operations, which have proliferated in the occupied West Bank alongside the Gaza war. This year unusually Easter falls on the same weekend for all of the town’s main Christian communities — Catholic, Orthodox and Anglican — and residents have attempted to busy themselves with holiday traditions like making date cakes or getting ready for the scout parade. But their minds have been elsewhere.

Dozens of families from nearby Jenin have found refuge in Zababdeh from the continual Zionist military operations that have devastated the city and its adjacent refugee camp this year. “The other day, the (Zionist) army entered Jenin, people were panicking, families were running to pick up their children,” said Zababdeh resident Janet Ghanam. “There is a constant fear, you go to bed with it, you wake up with it,” the 57-year-old Anglican added, before rushing off to one of the last Lenten prayers before Easter.

Ghanam said her son had told her he would not be able to visit her for Easter this year, for fear of being stuck at the Zionist military roadblocks that have mushroomed across the territory. Zababdeh looks idyllic, nestled in the hills of the northern West Bank, but the roar of Zionist air force jets sometimes drowns out the sound of its church bells.

A Christian worshipper sings inside the Anglican Church in the Palestinian town of Zababdeh in the north of the Zionist-occupied West Bank, on April 10, 2025.
A Christian worshipper sings inside the Anglican Church in the Palestinian town of Zababdeh in the north of the Zionist-occupied West Bank, on April 10, 2025.

‘Existential threat’

The Zionist entity has occupied the West Bank since 1967 and in recent months far-right ministers in its coalition government have called for the annexation of swathes of the territory. “It led to a lot of people to think: ‘Okay, am I going to stay in my home for the next five years?’” said Saleem Kasabreh, an Anglican deacon in the town. “Would my home be taken away? Would they bomb my home?” Kasabreh said this “existential threat” was compounded by constant “depression” at the news from Gaza, where the death toll from the Zionist entity’s response to Hamas’s October 2023 attack now tops 51,000, according to the territory’s health ministry.

Zababdeh has been spared the devastation wreaked on Gaza, but the mayor’s office says nearly 450 townspeople lost their jobs in the Zionist entity when Palestinian work permits were rescinded after the Hamas attack. “(The Zionist entity) had never completely closed us in the West Bank before this war,” said 73-year-old farmer Ibrahim Daoud. “Nobody knows what will happen”.

Many say they are stalked by the specter of exile, with departures abroad fueling fears that Christians may disappear from the Holy Land. “People can’t stay without work and life isn’t easy,” said 60-year-old math teacher Tareq Ibrahim. Mayor Ghassan Daibes echoed his point. “For a Christian community to survive, there must be stability, security and decent living conditions. It’s a reality, not a call for emigration,” he said.

“But I’m speaking from lived experience: Christians used to make up 30 percent of the population in Palestine; today, they are less than one percent. “And this number keeps decreasing. In my own family, I have three brothers abroad — one in Germany, the other two in the United States.” Catholic priest Elias Tabban adopted a more stoical attitude, insisting his congregation’s spirituality had never been so vibrant. “Whenever the Church is in hard times ... (that’s when) you see the faith is growing,” Tabban said. — AFP

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