Christmas celebrations worldwide
Finland
Finnish people believe that Father Christmas (Santa Claus) lives in
the north part of Finland called Korvatunturi, north of the Arctic
Circle. People from all over the world send letters to Santa Claus in
Finland. (It is only fair to say that the people of Greenland say that
really, Father Christmas lives in Greenland!) There is an even big
tourist theme park called 'Christmas Land' in the north of Finland, near
to where they say that Father Christmas lives.
Everyone cleans their houses ready for the three holy days of
Christmas - Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and Boxing Day. Christmas Eve
is very special, when people eat rice porridge and a sweet soup made
from dried fruits (plums, raisins, apples, pears, apricots and figs).
It's eaten in the morning or at lunch time.
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They will then decorate a spruce tree in the home. At mid-day, the
'Christmas peace declaration' is broadcast on radio and TV from the
Finnish city of Turku by its Mayor. In the evening, a traditional
Christmas dinner is eaten. The meal will include 'casseroles' containing
liver, rutabaga, carrot and potato, with cooked ham or turkey.
Some families eat liver pate. Rawpickled slightly salted salmon,
herrings and salad called "rosolli". Mushroom salad is also common.
Rosolli is cold salad made from peeled, cooked and diced potatoes,
carrots, beetroot and diced apples, onions and pickled cucumber. Season
with salt (some people use also pepper).
Whipped cream (+ salt, vinegar and beetroot colour to make it pink)
is served with rosolli. Food traditions during the Christmas period
depend on which part of Finland people live.
In Lapland and in Finland's islands there are different foods. Other
foods include cooked peas, different kind on salads, roe, cold
fish-dishes, pates, other casseroles such as beetroot casserole with
cheese or with blue cheese, sweet and spiced breads, carelian pies, and
cheeses. Gingerbreads, spiced cakes, different kind of cakes and cookies
and others to eat with coffee or milk.
You eat these at "day-coffee" time on the Christmas eve (after the
Christmas peace declaration which everybody watches on TV, or before
going to the church and graveyard), in the evening.
Christmas smells include mulled wine, gingerbreads, spices - cinnamon
being the most common - Christmas tree, burning candles and hyacinthe.
Poinsettia and hyacinthe are the most popular Christmas flowers.
On Christmas eve many go to church, on the afternoon or late
afternoon (time depends of local churches) - this is new tradition.
The "real" and old Christmas church is early on the morning of
Christmas day. Many go there too. Graveyards are very beautiful places
on the Christmas eve, since there are lot of soft white snow and the
only lights come from candles people bring to the graves of loved ones.
If relatives are buried in other graveyards, there are places in
graveyard you can lit your candle to remember them.
Sauna of course is part of celebration. People go there before church
and graves, or after them. After sauna is the festive dinner. The high
moment! After that comes Santa Claus (if there are children) or the
presents that are under the Christmas tree are opened.
In some families where there are no small kids, the presents are not
put under the tree, but collected to big sacks, which are carried near
the front door. Then a family member might say, Did I heard sound of
reindeers and bells...
Or Did I hear Santa Claus... When they go to check, there are big
sacks full of presents there. So it was Santa after all. Then people
drink coffee and eat cakes, cookies and other sweet things.
Enjoy presents and play games. Small kids go to bed but others stay
up late. Many families will visit cemeteries and graveyards to place a
candle onto the burial graves of family members. Cemeteries are very
beautiful at Christmas-time.
Children receive their presents on Christmas Eve, usually with a
family member dressing as Father Christmas. As children grow older, they
come to realise that 'Father Christmas' is really a bigger brother,
sister or family member.
Romania
On December 6, St Nicholas comes and puts small gifts in children's
shoes that have been polished and placed near the windows and if
children have been naughty they get a little stick.
Usually people in the country side grow their own pigs which are
sacrificed for Christmas on December 20 and the meat is cooked in
different ways for the Christmas meal, like home-made smoked/unsmoked
sausages. Each part of the pig is used in different ways to make
different dishes. Mince is made and together with rice, onions and
spices is used for the stuffed cabbage or vine leaves, which are called
'sarmale'.
So pig is traditional for Christmas meal. On Christmas Eve usually
children go around houses and sing carols and get fruit, sweets or money
in exchange. On Christmas Day everyone has a big family meal and visit
relatives. In the country side people dress as bears and goats and go
and sing special traditional songs at each house in the village.
People from Transylvania serve stuffed cabbage on Christmas Eve, and
next day for lunch. Most likely the reason for that custom is that
stuffed cabbage is the best on the second and third day after it was
cooked. Moms can prepare the food a day earlier, leaving more time for
decorating and organizing. Very practical.
On December 25, the whole family used to attend church and eat
stuffed cabbage for lunch.
Russia
In the days of the Soviet Union, Christmas was not celebrated very
much. New Year was the important time - when 'Father Frost' brought
presents to children. With the fall of Communism, Christmas can be
openly celebrated - either on December 25; or more often on January 7.
This unusual date is because the Russian Orthodox church uses the old
'Julian' calendar for religious celebration days. Special Christmas food
includes cakes, pies and 'meat dumplings'.
Sweden
The most important day is Christmas Eve. A special Christmas meal is
eaten on Christmas Eve - ham (pork), herring fish, and brown beans - and
this is the time when families give presents to each other. Many people
attend a church meeting early on Christmas Day.
United States
The USA is so multi-cultural that you will find many different ways
of celebrating Christmas. A friend writes about Christmas meals, "Our
family (Eastern European origin) favor turkey with trimmings. My
grandparents and their relatives preferred keilbasi (Polish sausage),
cabbage dishes, and soups.
My husband's Italian family insisted on lasagna!" Another friend
wrote: All year long children are told to behave, or they will get coal
in their stocking. On Christmas Eve, they hang highly stylized stockings
on the mantle of the fireplace, then go to bed early so that they will
find presents in the morning.
They are told that at midnight Santa will come, bringing a huge bag
of toys. He will come down through the chimney, leave candy in the
stockings and presents under the Christmas tree (anything from a Pine or
Fir to a Spruce), then 'plug one nostril' and shoot up through the
chimney. (This comes from the story "A Visit From St. Nicholas," where
St. Nick laid a finger "aside of his nose."
He wasn't plugging up his nose - he was making a sign for secrecy.)
Cookies are traditionally left for him, and a carrot is commonly left
for Rudolph the Red-nosed reindeer, very much a part of Christmas
tradition (Santa will land on the roof with his sleigh and nine
reindeer).
On Christmas morning, things such as cinnamon rolls or coffee cake
are served for breakfast, and for dinner there is typically ham (and
occasionally regal plum pudding). That is it for celebration? Boxing Day
is never celebrated, Epiphany is only celebrated by Catholics, and
Advent not commonly celebrated. Another American reader wrote in with
the following:
Advent is celebrated in almost all Roman Catholic and mainline
Protestant churches. I was RC until I was 15, as were my grandparents,
and we always followed the four weeks of preparation before Christmas in
our church services.
I found the same to be true in my father's Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America, my friend's United Methodist Church, my in-law's
Presbyterian USA congregations, and for myself as a member and pastor of
the United Church of Christ for the last 16 years.
We also recognize Epiphany in mainline Protestant churches. On the
first Sunday following January 6, our service tells again the story of
the Magi who came to Jesus presenting their gifts following his birth.
As a child, I fondly remember leaving carrots and sugar for all of the
reindeer, along the milk and cookies for Santa!
www.soon.org.uk/country/christmas.htm
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