Young people now have places to go and the tourists are back.
By MATTHEW KALMAN
For as long as anyone can remember, young people have had nothing much to do in Bethlehem after nightfall. When the IDF and Palestinian gunmen finally quit the streets in 2005, restaurants and cafes continued to observe an unofficial 10 p.m. curfew, and anyone seeking some action had to head north to Ramallah, a tortuous, hourlong journey through military checkpoints and deathdefying mountain roads.“I spend my evenings at home on the Internet because there is nothing to do here for people our age,” said Sally Zaghmout, 19, a student at Bethlehem University.“There are no bowling alleys, no cinemas, no big fields where you can go and play sports. It’s really hard. If people of my age go to discos some gossip will start, because it’s a really conservative country and everybody knows everybody.”Twin brothers Firas and Ruslan Mukarker opened Taboo, the first venue in Bethlehem to stay open every night until dawn.But this season, something is happening in Bethlehem. In recent months, a growing number of hip nightspots have opened around town, drawing packed crowds until well past midnight – a signal, perhaps, of a new confidence on the part of young entrepreneurs and a shift toward some kind of normality after a decade of violence and economic privation.Bethlehem’s economy fell to pieces after the outbreak of the second intifada in September 2000.Tourists, who provide the city’s main source of income, stopped coming. On Star Street, the traditional gateway to the Old City, 88 of the 102 shops are still shuttered.Thousands of residents emigrated.When the intifada ended in 2005, Bethlehem was surrounded by the West Bank security barrier and military checkpoints that cut off its residents from nearby Jerusalem and deterred all but the most determined pilgrims.The first signs of life after dark appeared in 2006, when a local entrepreneur opened a late-night disco, discreetly situated on the upper floor of a failed holiday complex in Beit Jala, a suburb of Bethlehem. A hefty entrance charge and a couples-only policy kept out troublemakers. Now renamed the Layal Lounge, the club attracts crowds from all over the West Bank from Thursday to Saturday nights.