CHRISTMAS AROUND THE WORLD

There will be limited action on TBP for the next two days, as family and friends gather at my house to make merry. I hope you all have a happy and safe Christmas. Enjoy the ones you love. You never know what next year will bring and how much time you have left, so enjoy the time you’ve got. Thanks for all your support and friendship over the five years I’ve been running this crazy blog. It’s become a sanctuary for the sane. Hopefully, the truth will set us free. Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night. 

Buenos Aries

Buenos Aires

New York City

New York City

Dublin

Budapest

Moscow

Moscow

Copenhagen

Switzerland

Berlin

Berlin

Oslo

Paris

Quebec City

Quebec City

Athens

Athens

London

London

Sydney

Vatican City

Bethlehem

The Reason

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16 Comments
Joe
Joe
December 24, 2014 10:06 am

Surely the 30 blocks of squalor must have a few lights up!!!

TC
TC
December 24, 2014 10:08 am

Merry Christmas to all the poo-throwing monkeys out there!

Welshman
Welshman
December 24, 2014 10:19 am

Admin. and TBP,

Have a nice Christmas and stay safe.

Golden Oxen
Golden Oxen
December 24, 2014 10:32 am

Merry Christmas everyone.

[img]http://www.the-athenaeum.org/art/display_image.php?id=93535[/img]

Winter in New York

Paul Cornoyer

Stucky
Stucky
December 24, 2014 10:34 am

Merry Austrian Christmas to one and all !!!

180 years ago, at that Midnight Mass in St. Nicholas Church, in Oberndorf bei Salzburg, the carol “Stille Nacht! Heilige Nacht” was heard for the first time.

“Silent Night Church”
[imgcomment image?w=460&h=306[/img]

My parents are not religious, by any means. But, on Christmas Eve, right after dinner and before opening presents, they would turn off the lights, and light red and white candles, and we would sing Silent Night (in German of course), and for one evening all was right with the world.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6v0Xr6ewUU&feature=player_detailpage

ottomatik
ottomatik
December 24, 2014 11:01 am

Admin,
Merry Christmas to you and your loved ones. Thank you so very much for all of the hard work making this site run, this gift has made a profound and positive difference in my life.
Merry Christmas to all of the regulars too, thanks for the dialog, this blog is truely a gem of the 21st century, enabling sharing and education not dreamed of just a short time ago. In the season of gifting I count the TBP as one of the greatest. Merry Christmas All.

Peaceout
Peaceout
December 24, 2014 12:33 pm

Merry Christmas to one and all! Looking forward to the coming year while not losing sight to reflect on the past, and all the people that, directly or indirectly, have an impact on our lives, such as the community that resides within TBP. Best wishes!

Smoke Jensen
Smoke Jensen
December 24, 2014 2:37 pm

Merry Christmas all!

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
December 24, 2014 3:49 pm

I feel fortunate to have spent four years of high school living in Spain. My family befriended a Spanish family and we shared holidays and milestones during that time. Christmas in Spain was extraordinary. While I’m sure they had Christmas sales I don’t remember them being anything like what I was used to in the USA. Christmas was centered around the Christmas mass, family and friends. New years in Puerta del Sol, Madrid can only be believed by experiencing it. Three Kings Day extended the holidays to two weeks in length and I can almost assure you, you’ve never seen a happier, more joyous people than the Spaniards during Christmas. The gift giving tended to be about tradition and practicality rather than “STUFF”. The grand parents, always a center of family life throughout the year, seemed to actually glow with pride and contentment. Those four years were probably the best gift I ever received, Christmas or otherwise. Feliz Navidad monkeys!

I lifted the following from http://www.whychristmas.com/cultures/spain.shtml. To read the article with pictures as well as the story Christmas in many other countries just follow the link and skip the paste job below.

Christmas in Spain

Most people in Spain go to Midnight Mass or ‘La Misa Del Gallo’ (The Mass of the Rooster). It is called this because a rooster is supposed to have crowed the night that Jesus was born.

Most families eat their main Christmas meal on Christmas Eve before the service. The traditional Spanish Christmas dinner is ‘Pavo Trufado de Navidad’ which is Turkey stuffed with truffles (the mushrooms, not the chocolate ones!) In Galicia (a region in north-west Spain, surrounded by water) the most popular meal for Christmas Eve and for Christmas Day is seafood. This can all kinds of different seafood, from shellfish and mollusks, to lobster and small edible crabs.

After the midnight service, people walk through the streets carrying torches, playing guitars and beating on tambourines and drums. One Spanish saying is ‘Esta noche es Noche-Buena, Y no Es noche de dormir’ which means ‘Tonight is the good night and it is not meant for sleeping!’

A few different languages are spoken in different regions in Spain. In Spanish Happy/Merry Christmas is ‘Feliz Navidad’; in Catalan it’s ‘Bon Nadal’; and in Galician ‘Bo Nadal’. Happy/Merry Christmas in lots more languages.

December 28th is ‘Día de los santos inocentes’ or ‘Day of the Innocent Saints’ and is very like April Fools Day in the UK and USA. People try to trick each other into believing silly stories and jokes. Newspapers and TV stations also run silly stories. If you trick someone, you can call them ‘Inocente, inocente’ which means ‘innocent, innocent’. 28th December is when people all over the world remember the babies that were killed on the orders of King Herod when he was trying to kill the baby Jesus.

New Year’s Eve is called ‘Nochevieja’ or ‘The Old Night’ in Spain and one special tradition is that you eat 12 grapes with the 12 strokes of the clock at Midnight! Each grape represents a month of the coming year, so if you eat the twelve grapes, you are said to be lucky in the new year.

Apart from Christmas, there is another festival that is celebrated in Spain that is about the Christmas Story. It is called Epiphany and is celebrated on 6th January. This is the twelfth night after Christmas. In Spanish, Epiphany is called ‘Fiesta de Los tres Reyes Mages’: in English this means ‘The festival of the three Magic Kings’. Epiphany celebrates when the Kings or Wise men brought gifts to the baby Jesus.

Children have some presents on Christmas Day, but most are opened at Epiphany. Some children believe that the Kings bring presents to them at Epiphany. They write letters to the Kings on Boxing Day, December 26th, asking for toys and presents. And on Epiphany Eve (January 5th) they leave shoes on windowsills or balconies or under the Christmas Tree to be filled with presents. Gifts are often left by children for the Kings, a glass of Cognac for each King, a satsuma and some walnuts. Sometimes a bucket of water is left for the camels that bring the Kings! If the children have been bad, the Kings might leave pieces of coal made out of sugar in the presents!

Some big towns and cities have Epiphany Parades with each King having a big float that is shaped like a camel. Sometimes there are also real camels in the parade. The Three Kings in the the Spanish Epiphany are:

Gaspar, who has brown hair and a brown beard (or no beard!) and wears a green cloak and a gold crown with green jewels on it. He is the King of Sheba. Gaspar represents the Frankincense brought to Jesus. Frankincense is sometimes used in worship in Churches and showed that people worship Jesus.
Melchior, who has long white hair and a white beard and wears a gold cloak. He is the King of Arabia. Melchior represents the Gold brought to Jesus. Gold is associated with Kings and Christians believe that Jesus is the King of Kings.
Balthazar, who has black skin and a black beard (or no beard!) and wears a purple cloak. He is the King of Tarse and Egypt. Balthazar represents the gift of Myrrh that was brought to Jesus. Myrrh is a perfume that is put on dead bodies to make them smell nice and showed that Jesus would suffer and die.

Christmas in the Basque Country

In the Basque country (which is a part of northern Spain and southern France), on Christmas Eve, children’s presents are delivered by a magical man called Olentzero. He’s a big, overweight man wearing a beret and smoking a pipe. He dresses like a Basque farmer.

Christmas in Catalonia

In the Catalonia province of Spain there’s a Christmas character called ‘Tió de Nadal’ (the Christmas log) or he’s sometimes known as ‘Caga tio’ (the pooping log!). It’s a small hollow log propped up on two legs with a smiling face painted on one end. From the 8th December (the Feast of the Immaculate Conception) Catalan families gives the log a few morsels of food to ‘eat’ and a blanket to keep it warm. On Christmas Day or Christmas Eve, the log then ‘gives out’ small gifts! People sing songs and hit the log with sticks to help its ‘digestion’ and the log drops sweets, nuts, and dried fruits. When garlic or an onion falls out of the log, all of the treats are finished for the year.

Nativity Scenes ‘Pesebres’ are also popular in Catalonia (and all throughout Spain!). Many towns also hold ‘Pastorets’ which are big plays/presentations about the Christmas story, the birth of Jesus. They have lots of music and readings from the Bible. You can find out more about Pastorets on the Pastoret Society of Catalunya’s website.

A special cake called ‘Roscón’ is eaten at Epiphany. Roscón means ‘ring shape roll’. It is very doughy and is bought from a bakery on Epiphany morning. Roscón can be filled with cream or chocolate and contain a little gift.

Thank you to María Níñez for her help in giving me information on Christmas in Spain!

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
December 24, 2014 5:46 pm

I’ll admit that I have gotten into the christmas spirit this year and the proof is that I write “death to israel” in lower case letters.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
December 24, 2014 8:05 pm

Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night.

Willious Wobegone
Willious Wobegone
December 25, 2014 4:37 am

Admin,

I wanted to say thank you for running this site. Your efforts are very appreciated. I have been coming here for years, lurking in the shadows, and this is one of my very favorite sites on the internet. A sanctuary for the sane indeed.

Have a Merry Christmas.

Merry Christmas to all of you.

Archie
Archie
December 25, 2014 2:24 pm

Merry Christmas to admin and all the TBPers. I love this blog.

El Coyote
El Coyote
December 26, 2014 7:51 pm

Administrator says: Christmas on the 30 Blocks

Please tell me that is a dwarf dude, no chick can be that homely except maybe Al Sharpton’s missus.