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Palestinian businesses seek tourists

Another shopkeeper near the Sebastia ruins entrance waits for customers.

- Sam Eaton / Marketplace

Adli Mahmoud Musla's rows of painted clay trinkets and postcards are a throwback to a time when foreign and Israeli tourists came by the busload.

- Sam Eaton / Marketplace

The ruins at Sebastia are considered to be some of the regions most extensive and date back more than two thousand years.

- Sam Eaton / Marketplace

Roman columns at Sebastia are used for propaganda absent any tourism.

- Sam Eaton / Marketplace

Despite a tourism revival in Bethlehem the rest of the West Bank remains politically and economically isolated.

- Sam Eaton / Marketplace

The Sebastia parking lot was built to accommodate tour buses but is now used as soccer field.

- Sam Eaton / Marketplace

The children here face few prospects for future employment if Israel continues its policy of road blocks and travel restrictions in much of the West Bank.

- Sam Eaton / Marketplace

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TEXT OF STORY

Steve Chiotakis: The Israeli-occupied West Bank has been relatively calm the last few months. And tourists are taking advantage. They're flocking in record numbers to Bethlehem to visit the historic birthplace of Jesus Christ. But most don't venture beyond and that's something Palestinian business leaders want to change. Marketplace's Sam Eaton reports.


Sam Eaton: The ruins of Sebastia a few hours north of Bethlehem date back more than 2,000 years. Here, among the olive groves, you'll find some of the region's most extensive archaeological remains. And there's not a soul in sight.

Nasser Abufarha: As you see we are in a large parking lot that's empty. And you see a number of shops that are closed as well because there are not many tourist traffic coming here.

At least not since 2000 when Israeli soldiers blocked access to the village after the second Palestinian uprising. Today me and my guide, Nasser Abufarha, are the only visitors. And word gets out fast.

Adli Mahmoud Musla unbolts the heavy doors to his souvenir shop and invites us in.

Eaton: When was the last time you made a sale from the shop to a tourist?

Adli Mahmoud Musla Almost a year ago. A small sale.

Musla hopes that peace with Israel will someday usher in a new era of tourism for the West Bank.

But Palestinian-American businessman Sam Bahour says that era won't come without new investments and the time to make them is now.

Sam Bahour: In normal business terms high risk means high return. Putting seeds into the economy today may pay off big time.

Both for investors, and for the Palestinian people, the recent tourism revival in Bethlehem has helped cut the city's unemployment rate in half. And that's also good for Israel. Bahour says every new job, means one less protestor throwing rocks at Israeli tanks.

The day the Israelis wake up and understand that this occupation is not only affecting us but it's even affecting their own ability to grow, I think that we're going to see an influx of tourists that will be written about for a very long time.

That day couldn't come any sooner to towns like Sebastia. As we leave, dozens of young men play soccer in a parking lot built for tour buses. And the shopkeeper I spoke with closes his store again, hoping another year won't go by before he makes his next sale.

In the West Bank, I'm Sam Eaton for Marketplace.

About the author

Sam Eaton is an independent radio and television journalist. His reporting on complex environmental issues from climate change to population growth has taken him all over the United States and the world. Follow Sam on Twitter @eatonsam
Rebeccah K's picture
Rebeccah K - Dec 19, 2008

Travel tip: the old city of Jerusalem is gorgeous, but packed with tourists. For a more "authentic" experience, go to Nablus near the village of Sebastia on the West Bank where Sam Eaton was, and visit the old city there. I've had the pleasure of being guided by Nasser Abufarha too, and he took me around and showed me the old spice mills, the sesame press, took me to the kunafeh bakery and treated me to the famous Nabulsi pastry; we drank fresh carrot juice and bought dates; visited the ancient Turkish bath... It might be crowded, but not as crowded as the old city in Jerusalem, and only with locals doing their everyday shopping.

Michael Herndon's picture
Michael Herndon - Dec 18, 2008

Grammar used on NPR is poor and getting worse, but "me and my guide . . . are the only visitors" is a low point. You all need basic grammar lessons.

J Laine's picture
J Laine - Dec 18, 2008

"Today me and my guide, Nasser Abufarha, are the only visitors. "

Me and my guide? Me and my guide! I was in the shower and dropped the soap when I heard this comment. We expect better from NPR.