RT Article T1 Gazan Christians: Pilgrimage Permits, Migration, and the Exchange of Precarity JF Exchange VO 49 IS 3/4 SP 316 OP 338 A1 Schmitt, Kenny LA English YR 2020 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1747439959 AB Abstract This study casts light on the dynamics driving Christian migration from the Gaza Strip and its consequences. By analyzing the historical background and institutionalization of Palestinian movement restrictions—specifically the pilgrimage permit regime—the article explores the temporal and spatial entanglements of pilgrimage, migration, and politics. Since 2007, deteriorating conditions have led Gazan Christians to use temporary pilgrimage permits as a pretext to permanently escape the Strip. The article argues that this migration is driven by the overwhelming precarity of Gazan Christians’ life circumstances, a precarity that includes temporal and spatial, political and economic, religious and personal insecurities. Further, those who escape do not find themselves in a better situation; they experience geographic isolation and communal fragmentation within the West Bank. The process of Gazan Christian migration is best understood as the mere exchange of precarity. K1 Precarity K1 movement restrictions K1 Migration K1 Palestinian Christians K1 Gaza K1 Pilgrimage DO 10.1163/1572543X-12341572