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    You are at:Home»Orthodox News»Christians in Jaffa Mark Beginning of Christmas Season

    Christians in Jaffa Mark Beginning of Christmas Season

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    By Webmaster on December 4, 2014 Orthodox News, Orthodox News Top Stories
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    St. Peter's Church in Jaffa, Israel. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.
    St. Peter’s Church in Jaffa, Israel. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

    Source: The Algemeiner

    JNS.org – Israeli Arab Christians in Jaffa marked the beginning of the Christmas season in the Holy Land with an annual Christmas tree lighting celebration earlier this week.

    At the gathering in the ancient port city adjacent to Tel Aviv, men dressed up as Santa Claus met children, sang Christmas carols and lit fireworks.

    Orthodox Christian leaders also addressed the crowd of Jewish, Muslim and Christian onlookers, using the occasion to promote unity between the three faiths.

    “This is the best example for all the citizens of Israel to see how people can do things that we can really take people from all the natures, Jews, Muslims and put them together. This is the tree. I wish that this can bring peace to our land, to Israel, to Christians, Muslims and Jews,” said George Mansour, head of the Orthodox Christian scouts in Jaffa, the Jerusalem Post reported.

    Israel has one of the few Christian communities left in the Middle East that is still growing, totaling roughly 161,000 people in 2013. According to the Pew Research Center, just 0.6 percent of the world’s 2.2 billion Christians now live in the Middle East and North Africa. Christians make up only 4 percent of the region’s total inhabitants, drastically down from 20 percent a century ago, making Middle East Christians the smallest regional Christian minority in the world.

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