Christmas
Christmas celebrated to honor the glory of the nativity if Jesus
on 25th December is the most significant and spectacular of Christian
festivals. No other celebration is so enriched with so many customs
and ceremonies. There is an array of spectacles like Christmas Star,
Christmas tree, the Crib, Christmas cake, Christmas presents and
the Christmas Father. The last named is quite fascinating personage,
who claims above all to be the very embodiment of the most vibrant
and quintessence of the gayest of all the festivals. Children readily
believe him, applaud his claims and succumb to his exuberant bonhomie.
With children allowed to occupy the central stage, in the enchanted
company of Christmas Father, Christmas takes on the look of a festival
of children. The mood is set with the advent of the season by the
twinkling of Christmas stars and there is no home or shop without
the Christmas star, the beautiful pointer of the Babe of Bethlehem.
The Christmas tree is a new feature in Kerala, perhaps less than
sixty or seventy years old. The crib is a miniature production of
the stable where Jesus was born. It developed from the old practice
of giving dramatic expression to the events to and the surroundings
of the birth of Christ. Carols and songs developed from earlier
nativity plays have become one of the most cheerful spectacles of
the festivities.
Priests hold mass in churches three time starting with the first
at mid-night. Just before the mid-night mass, an image of the Child
is brought by the priest, preceded by rows of children holding lighted
candles that are placed in the crib. The hymn 'Gloria in exelcis
Deo' is intoned amidst the explosion of crackers.
A sumptuous lunch with rare delicacies is a significant feature
of the celebration. Meat forms part of the feast even in rural homes
where meat is rarely eaten. Cake has also become common in the villages
where women have learnt to make it.
In Kerala, X'mas retains its homeliness and expresses itself in
the cultural forms of the country without losing what is native
to itself. |