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Bethlehem tales of life under fire

Two groups of Palestinians emerged from the Church of the Nativity this week.

(Page 2 of 2)



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Although Habib attends a prestigious, Catholic-run high school in Bethlehem, he is a Muslim. An elder brother has been hailed as a "martyr" after being killed by Israeli troops. Habib says that during his time in the church, he rose to pray every morning at 4:30.

Much to pray about

Even though the sense of panic and turmoil abated after the first night, there was apparently much to pray about. For most of his three weeks in the church, the single daily meal consisted of a watery soup made from fiddlehead ferns gathered from the church compound, along with a meager dose of rice and beans provided by some of the priests.

Some of the armed men in the church are from the Gaza Strip, which has a spicier cuisine than the West Bank, and they demanded that the gruel be heavily flavored with peppers. "Many times I couldn't eat because [the food] was too disgusting or too hot because of the peppers," Habib says. He lost 22 pounds.

He had to share a blanket with two other boys, leading to fitful sleeps that were often interrupted by gunfire. By borrowing cellphones, he was able to keep his family informed of his condition.

With the electricity supply limited and the heating nonexistent, Habib says the people in the church used candles as a source of both light and heat. Outside, loudspeakers played sounds of babies crying, women screaming, and dogs fighting, according to wire reports. There were a few decks of cards, but they were never available to Habib. He and other youngsters had to pass the time in conversation.

Having been home for a week, his family can already rib him about the experience. Habib has "an endless supply of gossip," says his brother Nasser, who is visiting Bethlehem from his home in San Diego.

Mr. Musallam, the security force member, is nowhere near laughter. Five men were killed in the church – shot suddenly by Israeli snipers or during exchanges of fire – and he says he still sees images of those he saw die.

One, Hassan Nasman, was laid on the floor of the church near the birth grotto, where he bled copiously. Both Musallam and Habib, interviewed separately, say he called for his mother and repeatedly said, "I don't want to die." Musallam says he took his pocket-sized Koran and read to Nasman during his final moments.

In the early days of the siege, before negotiating teams had worked out ways to evacuate wounded men and corpses from the church, those inside had to improvise ways to store the dead.

The body of Khaled Abu Siam, a Palestinian policeman shot dead by Israeli forces April 8, lay 10 yards from Habib's sleeping place for two nights. Then some men assembled a makeshift coffin from some scrap wood, sealing gaps with candle wax. They stored the body in a cave named for the children slaughtered by King Herod.

When Habib's group left the church April 25, they brought Nasman and Abu Siam with them. Habib helped carry one of the bodies.

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