reverend mitri raheb. talk about bethlehem. >> it is a very sad christmas. i don't think in my entire life i asked. so much sadness but also so much anger about what is happening in gaza. as you said, the celebration -- the festivities were canceled in bethlehem so you don't have christmas lights. you don't have a christmas tree. the people are not up for celebrations because of the people in gaza -- not only the people in gaza, but we in the west bank, we are experiencing apartheid, colonization by jewish settlers. the death toll, as you said, 20,000 in gaza. in the west bank, in the hundreds. and also the palestinian detainees, over 3000 in the west bank. amy: you have said the story of christmas, the story of the birth of jesus, is more relevant now than ever even though you will not be having festivities around this. >> correct. because the christmas story actually is a palestinian story. it talks about a family in the north of palestine that is ordered by an imperial decree of the romans to evacuate to bethlehem, to go there and register. this is exactl