For many believing Christians, it is a dream come
true. Whether on tour, business, or a private visit, a highlight for many is a
visit to Jerusalem, the holy city. Since the Six Day War of 1967, when the
historic Old City and Mount of Olives came under Israeli control, the number of
Christian visitors has risen. In addition, the demographics have changed from a
predominantly Middle Eastern to a western and third world constituency. The
purpose of this series is to understand what is happening, why, and how it
impacts the future.
In Part 01, we learned that the ‘river of
pilgrimage’ has been flowing from the very beginning of Christianity. In Part
02, the ‘tourism factor’ was introduced. The Ministry of Tourism took a
proactive approach in marketing Israel and Jerusalem as ‘attractive,’ ‘inspiring,’
and ‘safe’ places to visits. Their efforts appear to have paid off: the number
of Christian visitors has risen steadily over the past half a century, though
marketing alone is not the only reason for the increase.
In this article, Part 03, we will learn more
about the rise in numbers and demographics of the Christian visitors since
Israel reunited Jerusalem. The paradox is that these rising numbers and
changing demographics have occurred in an atmosphere of chronic geo-political
crisis. Modern Israel has been a state of war since its birth in 1948. The
biggest crisis in the last half a century was the October 1973 ‘Yom Kippur’ War,
which almost dragged in the two Cold War superpowers (USA & USSR), leading
us to the precipice of Armageddon. Yet, the Egypt-Israel peace treaty of 1979
and the Jordan-Israel peace treaty of 1994, the Oslo Accords of 1993, and the
usually quiet Syrian border, have made it possible to project a more tranquil
image.
When there is a major event, like the Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait of August 1990, the number of incoming tourists temporarily drops
off. Yet, collective memories are short and once the situation stabilises, the
visitors return. For example, 1990, incoming tourists to Israel (that’s all
tourists, not just Christians, who generally constitute 60% of all tourist
numbers) was 1,341,700. In 1991, the year of the first Gulf War, total tourist
entries were 1,110,100, which was 231,600 or 17% less than in 1990. Yet, by
1992, Israel tourism peaked at 1.7 million, 358,300 or 27% more than the 1990.
A more potent example was the second Palestinian
intifada (uprising) from 2000-2004 and the Second Lebanon (Hizballah) War of
2006.
YEAR TOTAL NUMBER OF VISITORS
TO ISRAEL 2000-2008
|
|||
Year
|
Total Number
|
Difference to
2000 #
|
Difference to
2000 %
|
2000
|
2,672,000
|
0
|
0%
|
2001
|
1,218,800
|
-1,453,200
|
-54%
|
2002
|
862,200
|
-1,809,800
|
-68%
|
2003
|
1,063,400
|
-1,608,600
|
-60%
|
2004
|
1,505,700
|
-1,166,300
|
-44%
|
2005
|
1,916,000
|
-756,000
|
-28%
|
2006
|
1,833,900
|
-838,100
|
-31%
|
2007
|
2,295,600
|
-376,400
|
-14%
|
2008
|
3,028,000
|
356,000
|
13%
|
|
Tourist numbers courtesy of Israel’s
Central Bureau of Statistics
|
As you can see, it took eight years before the tourist
numbers of the year 2000 to be exceeded. Yet note the figure for 2006, the year
of the Second Lebanon War, when 1000s of rockets were fired into Israel.
Amazingly, tourist numbers were down only 82,100 in 2006 from 2005 or a loss of
4%, yet rebounded in 2007 by 461,700 or an increase of 26% from the previous
year and 20% higher than in 2005.
Prior to 1967, the Old City of Jerusalem and the Mount
of Olives, which are where most of the Biblical holy sites are located, was
under the control of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. They, too, were
interested in tourism. Jordan’s own statistics are revealing:
COMPARATIVE TOURISM TO JORDAN 1967 & 1968
|
||||
Region
|
1968
|
1967
|
Change: #
|
Change %
|
Arab World
|
279,400
|
262,943
|
16,457
|
6%
|
ME./Asia
|
75,572
|
79,079
|
-3,507
|
-4%
|
Europe**
|
15,026
|
53,458
|
-38,432
|
-71%
|
America**
|
3,605
|
24,039
|
-20,434
|
-85%
|
Other
|
1,829
|
6,114
|
-4,285
|
-70%
|
TOTAL
|
375,432
|
425,633
|
-50,201
|
-11%
|
Statistics Courtesy of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Official
Statistics
**Denotes "Christianized Western areas"
There are some limitations to this table. It speaks of
tourism in general to Jordan and does not distinguish who went to pre-June 1967
Jerusalem. Yet there is an interesting trend: when Jordan held Old Jerusalem,
numbers of visitors from ‘Christianised’ Europe and America were a total of
77,497 in 1967. The very next year, after losing Jerusalem to the Israelis,
those numbers were only 18,631, down by 58,866 or 76% While the number of
visitors from the Arab world modestly increased by 6%, numbers were down from
Europe 71% and America 85%. What a difference a year makes.
If you look at the overall statistics, it shows that
there is a resilience to visit the holy city, even when the region is in
turmoil. For example, there was little variation of numbers in the years
2010-2012, even though the Arab Spring throbbed through the Middle East. Part
of the issue is that unless there is some super-spectacular crisis, most
visitors do not keep up with the events in the Middle East. Even so, there is
another factor involved: it is the ‘pilgrim faith factor.’ II Corinthians
5:7 says we walk by faith and not by sight. That means people are motivated
by what they believe more than circumstances and what they see. TO BE CONTINUED
Rev. Kameel Majdali, PhD (Melb) is
Director of Teach All Nations (TAN), a Bible ministry in Melbourne, Australia (tan.org.au). He is an international Bible teacher, preacher, radio broadcaster,
and published author. Kameel has led 37 Bible land tours thus far. His PhD
thesis was on this very topic.
Kameel has 2 programs on Vision Christian Radio called ‘Faith and the
Future’ and ‘on the Rock’ (vision.org.au). From August to October 2018, he will be on tour in the 4th annual,
Australia-Wide ‘Understanding the Times Tour,’ in partnership with Vision. This
year’s title is The Trump Declaration: Jerusalem, Jihad and the Coming of
Jesus. Details are available at vision.org.au/kameel-tour.
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