Transcript of Christmas In Bethlehem, Famine In Sudan, The Year In Space
Up First from NPRGood morning and happy holidays. Thanks for starting your day with us. I'm Asma Khalid. Whether you're squeezing in a quiet moment before the kids wake up or whether today's work day for you, like it is for me, Up First is here for you, no matter what your day has in store. We're here to bring you independent reporting, context, and analysis about the biggest stories of the day, and you can give back to NPR to support this service you rely on. Sign up for NPR Plus today and join our mission of creating a more informed public. You'll also unlock sponsor-free listening to Up First and get similar perks for more than 25 NPR podcasts. If you're already a Plus supporter, thank you so much. If not, you can sign up right now at plus. Npr. Org. That's plus. Npr. Org. All righty, now on to the news. It's a subdued Christmas in Bethlehem with the war in neighboring Gaza. We need to live in peace and dignity in our land. What it's like for local Palestinians in the city where Christian tradition says Jesus was born. I'm Asma Khalid, and this is Up First from NPR News.
Famine has spread in Sudan, where people are experiencing one of the world's worst humanitarian disasters. People are eating peanut shells, animal butter, grasses. Nearly two years into a civil war, the hunger crisis is getting worse. And with so much Much going on down here on Earth, it's always good to remember to look up at the stars. We look up at the year in space. Stay with us. We'll give you all the news you need to start your day. All this year, NPR traveled the country, hearing from voters not just about the issues, but about their hopes for the country's future. We should be able to disagree with each other without bullying each other into submission. And what it means to be a part of a democracy. Invest in coverage that moves us forward together by giving today at donate. Npr. Org.
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Npr. Org. It's Christmas in Bethlehem, where Christian tradition says Jesus was born. For the second year in a row, official celebrations have been canceled. Palestinian leaders say they cannot rejoice as the war wages on in neighboring Gaza. In Bethlehem, which is located in the Israeli occupied West Bank, people are also hurting, and tourism has plummeted since the war began. We go now to NPR International Correspondent, Kari Khan, who is in Bethlehem. Kari, what is the mood like in Bethlehem this Christmas?
Well, it's difficult to cancel Christmas, but the mood is very somber. Official ceremonies have been very muted here. Usually, Bethlehem is full of lights, these amazing decoration, Asma, a huge tree in the center of Manger Square, and there are crowds, crowds and tourists and pilgrims. This year, it is empty, barren. I was here last year, and if it's possible, it is even more empty and more somber. I've heard from so many people, they're all saying the same thing. We just never thought the situation, the war, would last till another Christmas.
So how are people celebrating this year?
Christmas Eve, there was the traditional parade of the Latin Patriarch entering Bethlehem. It was quiet, though. There's usually these very cute scout troops that lead the procession in, and they were playing drums, no drums this year. No bagpipes. Some held signs reading We Want Peace. Others held pictures of the destruction in Gaza. The latest figures from the Ministry of Health in Gaza puts the known death toll there now at more than 45,000 people. Last night, of course, there was Midnight Mass in the Church of the Nativity, and I want to play you some of the Catholic service for you. I also went to the grotto, the like structure inside the church where Christians say Jesus was actually born and the faithful were singing there. It was beautiful. It was so moving. Let's hear a little bit of that.
I think the most amazing thing I just want to tell you is that I was able to go to both of those services so easily.
Usually, the crowds are so huge and nearly impossible to experience Christmas in Bethlehem that close.
That singing is really beautiful to listen to. Thanks for sharing, Kari. Without the crowds and tourists, what are residents, what are officials telling you in Bethlehem? How are they doing?
The economy here is devastated. Bethlehem is dependent on tourism. Hotel occupancy is in the single digits. Stores have closed. Unemployment throughout the West Bank is nearly at 50 %. The Deputy Mayor spoke with Hannah Haneia, told us Palestinians feel like the world has turned their backs on them in their suffering.
And always, we are asking the international community to bring back this message to Bethlehem and to the Holy Land, because we need to live in peace and dignity in our land.
Since Since the war began after Hamas attacked Israel, killing around 1,200 people on October seventh in 2023, Israel has imposed tough restrictions in the West Bank with new checkpoints and barring Palestinians from working in Israel. We're seeing Palestinians groups fighting each other here, too. The Palestinian Authority has launched a rare crackdown on militants in the West Bank, and it's making for a tense and complicated situation here.
Thanks so much for your reporting, Kari.
You're welcome.
That's NPR's Kari Khan in Bethlehem. In Sudan, the severity of the famine has worsened. Hunger experts say the country is experiencing one of the worst starvation crises in modern times. Since April of last year, a brutal civil war between the Sudanese army and a paramilitary group has fueled a near unprecedented humanitarian crisis. Npr's West Africa correspondent, Emmanuel Akanwotu, has been covering this and joins us now. Good morning, Emmanuel.
Good morning, Asma.
And a Merry Christmas to you.
A Merry Christmas to you.
So earlier this year, famine was declared in one part of Sudan, but it's now spread to five areas. What do we know so far?
Yes, in August, famine was declared in what's the largest refugee camp in Sudan, in the western region of Darfur. But now it's been confirmed in three other refugee camps in the same proximity. And Well, it's now five areas in Sudan affecting about half a million people and counting. Over the last week, I've spoken to experts about just what this famine looks like on the ground, just to make sense of it. One of them is Nathaniel Raymond. He's the Executive Director at Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab. He talked about Zam Zam Camp, the first region where famine was declared.
Zam Zam is in a condition called IPC 5, or Integrated Phase Classification 5, which is the highest level of food insecurity. Children, in particular, have been dying from a lack of food. People are eating peanut shells, animal butter, grasses.
The level of desperation is unprecedented in Sudan, and the number of areas suffering famine is likely to actually double over the next six months.
We were mentioning this ongoing civil war. How has the war made the humanitarian crisis more severe?
Well, both sides of the war have been accused of blocking aid in the areas that they each control, and that's the Sudanese Army and the Rapid Support Forces or RSF. For example, the RSF control most of Darfur, and that's the region where there was a genocide 20 years ago. And there's been an outbreak of similar ethnic violence against African ethnic groups since the war started. There are millions of displaced people in this region, but they're almost completely isolated. I spoke to Azadeh Hassani, she's a Director at Relief International, and they're one of few aid groups still operating Darfur, particularly in North Darfur, which is currently under a siege by the RSF.
To get supplies to North Darfur has been a huge challenge. Since the conflict has started, North Darfur has been completely completely caught off, and we lost all our access from inside Sudan.
There are no official humanitarian corridors that the RSF and the Sudanese Army have agreed on. There's been really small amounts of aid coming in from the border with Chad, but the conflict makes getting that aid in so precarious.
How have the Sudanese authorities responded?
Well, essentially with denials. The Sudanese Army is seen by most people as the de facto government in Sudan, although they've lost control of large parts of the country. But the existence of famine is really a direct challenge to its legitimacy because people will hold them accountable for why this has been allowed to happen. Famine is declared by this independent body called the Integrated Food Security or IPC, and they rely on countries to support their networks, and Sudan has now pulled out of that system.
That's NPR's West Africa Correspondent Emmanuel Akinwotu. Thanks so much.
Thank you.
Here on Earth, a lot of things happened in 2024, but for a couple of minutes, let's leave our planet and consider what happened this year in space. Npr Science Correspondent, Nell Greenfield-Boyce, is here to remind us of the highlights and the lowlights. Good morning, Nell. Hey there. So I've got to imagine that a big highlight must have been that solar eclipse back in the spring.
That's right. Millions of people saw the total solar eclipse, or maybe they saw this big solar storm that caused widespread auroras in the night sky. But there were also lowlights. I guess if you wanted to talk about that, the main one would have to be those astronauts. Those astronauts that NASA says are definitely not stranded.
Okay, so they They are still in orbit, though, right? They are.
They are. So if you recall, they went up there in June on what was supposed to be this short test flight of a spacecraft made by Boeing called Starliner. And then NASA decided it was too risky for them to come home in it, so they had to just chill on the international space station waiting for a return ride. And so they're there. And NASA said initially they'd be able to return to Earth in February, but they just said it's going to be longer than that, probably like March.
That's a bummer for them. It is. So how are they eventually going to get home?
So SpaceX. So SpaceX has this capsule that regularly takes astronauts to and from the space station. And this was a big year for SpaceX. Not only did it take over Boeing's return flight, but it finally got its mega rocket into space. This is SpaceX It's Starship. It's the biggest rocket ever built. So that was a big deal. Spacex also did the first ever private spacewalk. So basically there was this orbiting capsule and two crew members opened the hatch and stuck their heads outside. I mean, until Well, then, only national space programs had ever tried these so-called extra vehicular activities, so that was a really big deal.
I understand that one of those spacewalkers might become the new head of NASA. What can you tell us about that?
That's Jared Isaacman. He's this wealthy entrepreneur. He's a private astronaut, and he's Donald Trump's pick to lead the space agency. Donald Trump has this alliance with Elon Musk of SpaceX, who supported his campaign. Musk and Isaacman have this financial connection through through SpaceX. It'll probably be an interesting confirmation process in the Senate. No one knows what all of this might mean for NASA and this expensive rocket that NASA has got to try to get people back to the moon.
Okay, so speaking of NASA, where do things stand with its efforts to return to the moon?
So NASA had been planning to send astronauts to orbit the moon next year, but a couple of weeks ago, officials announced that that trip has been pushed off to 2026 at the earliest. And so that means actually landing on the wouldn't happen until like 2027. At the earliest. Right.
Okay, so we have been talking about people in space. What about robotic missions?
So this year we got the first rock samples returned from the far side of the moon. I mean, that was a robotic mission from China. And then NASA also now has this probe that's going to Europa. That's this moon of Jupiter. It launched in October. And Europa seems to have this liquid water ocean underneath a layer of ice. And so that place could have ingredients for life. So it's a cool mission. But Jupiter is so far away, spacecraft won't get there until 2030.
What about 2025? What will we get to see in the new year in space?
We can look forward to Sphere X. That's a NASA telescope. It's going to create a 3D map of the entire sky mapping hundreds of millions of stars and galaxies. The information it will gather will tell us more about this really brief but powerful moment just after the Big Bang. That's when the newborn universe just suddenly and dramatically expanded.
That sounds really interesting. You're going to have to come back on the show when that happens and tell us all about it. Definitely will. All right. That's NPR's Nell Greenfield voice. That's up first for Wednesday, December 25th. I'm Asma Khalid. For your next Listen, consider this from NPR. Whether you play it on loop or whether it drives you crazy, there is no question, some songs are permanent fixtures in the Christmas canon. What makes a song a holiday hit? Listen to consider this from NPR. Today's episode of Up First was edited by Andrew Sussmann, Miguel Masias, Giselle gray, Lisa Thompson, and Ali Schweitzer. It was produced by Zied Butch, Yadumas, Claire Murashima, and Anna Peretz. We get engineering support from Nisha Hynes, and our technical director is Andy Huther. Join us again tomorrow.
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For the second year in a row, official celebrations have been cancelled in Bethlehem, the city where Christian tradition says Jesus was born. Famine has spread in Sudan where people are experiencing one of the world's worst starvation crises in modern times. And, a look at the year's biggest stories from space. Join the new NPR Plus Bundle to support our work and get perks like sponsor-free listening and bonus episodes across more than 25 NPR podcasts. Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Andrew Sussman, Miguel Macias, Gisele Grayson, Lisa Thomson and Ally Schweitzer.It was produced by Ziad Buchh , Nia Dumas, Claire Murashima and Ana Perez. We get engineering support from Nisha Heinis. And our technical director is Andie Huether.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy