Bouchez, who leads the French-speaking Reformist Movement (MR) party, called the scene “nonsense and an insult to our traditions”.
After visiting the Grand Place, the tourist hotspot where the nativity scene is on display, Brussels resident Arlette Coppoy agreed.
“It’s a disgrace,” Coppoy told AFPTV.
“For me, in Catholicism, Jesus was born in a manger. He wasn’t born in a tent with faceless parents, with nothing.”
For fellow Brussels local Michel Elias, however, the artwork allowed him to reflect on contemporary goings-on in the Holy Land.
“I think this nativity scene is very good, because Jesus was Palestinian and now he finds himself under a sheet of canvas, like the Palestinians in Gaza,” Elias said.
“This moves me deeply. I think this is exactly what Christmas is all about.”
Geyer, who identifies as a practising Catholic, insisted that the idea of breaking with tradition was “far from our minds” when fashioning the nativity.
Her artwork had been discussed with the ruling coalition in Brussels, including Bouchez’s MR – which did not block its set-up.
-Agence France-Presse