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Well, yesterday we were quite busy. We went to Bethlehem first thing in the morning. We took a bus to the infamous wall and then walked through and then took a cab the 2 km (mile and a half) into town because we are lazy and it’s HOT. 40 degrees (100F).
View of the interior the Church of the Nativity (Basilica of the Nativity). You can see the trap doors in the floor that open to allow you to see the original Roman mosaics.

Church of St. Catherine . The Midnight Mass held here is broadcast around the world on Christmas Eve.
When we got there we were lost cause the guide book had NO info. So with our two words of Arabic we asked a taxi driver how to get to the mosque. Expecting him to tell us a price, he suggested (IN ENGLISH!) that we could walk and it’s only 15 min.
We walked through a very busy market (lots of people welcoming us, even those selling meat and things we obviously wouldn’t buy) and felt very comfortable. There were women and children everywhere. We also saw UN aid trucks and supplies being delivered. So it is getting there. When you get to the mosque/synagogue there’s a checkpoint. The mosque side was still closed for prayers (you can hear the call – it’s not hard to know when it is). So we wanted to start with the synagogue. But it wasn’t obvious how to get there. Wendy asked the Israeli soldier how to get there and he told her to just go around. It was a deserted street, and she must have looked worried, so he told her "Everything’s okay. Don’t be afraid. It’s safe. Just walk around." Apparently that’s what 6 years of Hebrew school allow you to do. Have these conversations…We walked around the corner and there were more soldiers and it was perfectly safe (the biggest danger we could see was from the guy trying really hard to sell us some postcards). We went inside and visited the tombs of Jacob, Leah, Abraham and Sarah. The synagogue is simple and there were a surprising number of people praying given the complete lack of tourists we saw in the city. When we were finished we wanted to go into the mosque to see where Rebecca and Isaac are buried.
A few years ago a crazy Jewish guy started shooting and killed a bunch of people and wounded some 200 more in the mosque, so now officially Jews are no longer allowed in. So we start walking towards the mosque and an Israeli soldier (different one than the one we talked to at first) stops us and asks where we’re from. So we say Canada, and he says "Christians?" and we said – "yes". He waved us over to security and they radioed up to the mosque and we had to wait 5 min for prayers to be over and then we were allowed in. Quite an experience. Wendy never thought she’d lie to a Jew about not being Jewish so that he didn’t keep her from going somewhere. The craziest part of the whole thing? They take your word for it, and then barely searched our bag at security. Once inside we visited the tombs and noticed that they have bullet proof glass hanging over the tombs of Abraham and Sarah because you can actually see them from both sides (there are also bars over the windows). The sherut back to Bethlehem told us about a better bus that went right back to Jerusalem (with a quick stop at the wall to get our papers checked). We went shopping at the Cardo briefly and then went on to our pre-arranged tour of the Western Wall Tunnels. They’ve excavated underneath the city to reveal the original wall is still there. It was an incredible tour – at one point you are walking on the road they walked to get up to the Temple Mount more than 2,000 years ago.