Christmas in early Sri Lanka
Andrew Scott
Christmas: Enacting the Christmas story in Sri Lanka
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Celebration: It's Christmas time once again - a season well-known for
the good cheer and universal festivity. Though the degree of Christmas
festivity changes from place to place and according to one's means the
seasonal cheer and love radiated during Christmas is something universal
and perennial throughout the world.
The threats of social upheaval and political turmoil and the problem
of unemployment and under-development in many countries, cannot wipe out
the enchanting cheer of Christmas that pervades the entire world during
this season. It is amidst a background such as this that Sri Lanka too
is celebrating Christmas and there is no better time for us to think
about the unique way in which Christmas came to be celebrated in this
country from the early times.
In Sri Lanka too, like in all other countries, Christmas is joyfully
celebrated each year and this celebration of the birth of Christ is
believed to have been held in Sri Lanka from the time that the
Portuguese set foot on our shores when by mere accident or calculation,
Lorenco de Almeida force, landed in the Galle harbour and then at the
Colombo harbour on November 15, 1505.
It is said that the Portuguese having landed in Colombo erected a
small prayer house to thank the Lord who brought them safe from the
perils of a rough sea and on December 25th that year Lorenco de Almeida
and his men who landed in Sri Lanka celebrated Christmas for the first
time in Sri Lanka.
In contrast to this belief ancient chronicles mention that there were
Christians in Sri Lanka long before the arrival of the Portuguese.
The Persian cross found in Anuradhapura in the 5th century A.D. prove
that Christians have been travelling, trading or living in Sri Lanka
even during the early Anuradhapura period.
Senerath Paranavitarana, the renowned Professor of Archaeology, too
has mentioned that there were Christians in India and Sri Lanka from the
very ancient times.
Specially because neighbouring India had Christians from the very
early times there is no doubt that they would have had a great impact on
Sri Lanka specially because of the geographic proximity of these two
countries and also because of trade and commerce that linked the two
countries.
The Mahavamsa records that king Pandukabhaya, after his coronation,
planned the new capital of Anuradhapura and took care to allocate space
for building various places of worship for different religious sects and
in doing so set apart space for the building of a chapel for the
Christians.
This proves that there were Christians in Sri Lanka even during those
very early times. The two crosses excavated in the Anuradhapura area in
1913 were identical with the cross at Thomas Mount near Madras, an early
Christian centre in India. The decorative Baptismal font at the Vavuniya
Museum too shows that Christians had lived in Anuradhapura during the
very early times.
There cannot be any doubt that Christmas was celebrated in Sri Lanka
from the very early times dating back to even the Anuradhapura period.
However, it can be surmised that the first official Christmas mass in
Sri Lanka was held in Colombo on December 25, 1505, by the Portuguese.
King Buvenakabahu VII who ruled in Kotte from 1521 to 1550 sent an
embassy to Portugal requesting the king of Portugal to accept and
proclaim Prince Dharmapala as the rightful heir to the throne.
In addition the king had requested the king of Portugal to send some
missionaries to preach the gospel of Christianity in the kingdom of
Kotte. In response to this appeal the king of Portugal had sent a group
of Franciscan missionaries to Kotte.
Tradition has it that the Christian mass was first celebrated on
December 25, 1505 in Kotte and that even the royal family of Kotte
participated in it.
It is mentioned that by the 6th century a group of Persian traders
settled in Sri Lanka. They were essentially Christians, built a
Christian church and even got down a Christian priest to officiate in
their religious activities.
The well-known voyager, Cosmos, who travelled extensively in the
Indian Ocean, mentions many interesting facts about the early Christians
in Sri Lanka. Cosmos, a Greek by race, was a trader from Egypt and came
to the East for the purpose of travel.
Later he retired to the seclusion of a Christian monastery and spent
much of his time to write books on a variety of subjects but specialised
on scripture books. His book "Topographia Christiana", written in the
first half of the 6th century gives us very valuable and interesting
information regarding Sri Lanka which he describes as "A great emporium
of trade in the Indian Ocean."
In his description he records the existence of a Christian church as
well as a Christian community in Sri Lanka in the 6th century.
He states: "Even in Taprobane, an island in further India, where the
Indian sea is, there is a church of Christians with clergy and a body of
believers." He further states that this church received the Persian
Christian traders who had settled in these shores and mentions that they
had even a Christian priest.
Referring to the church Cosmos says:
"The island has also a church of Persian Christians who have settled
there and a Presbyter who is appointed from Persia and a Deacon and a
complete ecclesiastical ritual." So there is every reason to believe
that from those early times Christmas was celebrated in Sri Lanka. Not
only Cosmos but even earlier Persian biographers who wrote long before
him mention the existence of this community of Christians who would
definitely have celebrated Christmas in a fitting manner.
H.W. Codrington, in his informative book "A Short History of Ceylon"
writes: "The capital (Anuradhapura) was of vast extent, but contained
many parks, open spaces and monastic establishments.
It possessed a quarter assigned to foreign merchants, in whose hands
was most of the trade. About 560 A.D. we read of a Persian Christian
colony. A Nestorian cross undoubtedly belonging to this community is to
be seen in the Anuradhapura Museum.
Traders from Egypt, subjects of the Roman Empire, visited the
country." Though these Persian Christian traders were strangers to Sri
Lanka there is no doubt that they celebrated Christmas, the most
important event in the Christian calendar, for the first time in this
country in the early 6th century.
These facts suggest that Christmas celebrations were held in Sri
Lanka from the distant past but the mystery remains when exactly the
first Christmas celebration in Sri Lanka was held. |