
First off the blocks is the Zwarte Piet or Black Peter tradition in the Netherlands. On December 5th, weeks before I've even thought about starting my Christmas shopping list, the Dutch paint their faces black and wait for the arrival of Sinterklaas himself. As Jeff from Big City Blog says "the celebration is simultaneously fun, innocent, and mildly horrifying. Think of it as a plate of holiday goodness, with a dash of racism from yesteryear." Zwarte Piet, he explains, represents the devil, a slave or a chimney sweep, depending on who you're talking to...
Apparently Britain isn't the only country to set its food on fire at Christmas! Nellie from Wild Junket explains how festivities in Germany involve "boiling a huge tub of mulled wine at home, placing a gigantic cone of sugar on top and then drenching it completely with rum before setting it on fire."
True to stereotype, Italy goes wild about food at Christmas. Against stereotype, they start early. As Cherrye from My Bella Vita explains, Italy gets the party started on 8th December with the Immacolata, a day that commemorates the conception of Mary. They build up momentum by serving up the main meal, the cenone, on Christmas Eve instead of waiting until Christmas Day. In Calabria, expect seafood salad, pasta with clams or mussels, cheese, olives, wine and grilled fish. Also, "no Christmas Eve dinner is complete without sauteed broccoli rape." After all that, there's still seasonal fruit and sweet panettone and torrone to come!
Britain simply oozes with tradition at Christmas, from the Queen's Speech to leaving a sherry out for Father Christmas and a carrot somewhere for Rudolph. Heather from Heather on Her Travels talks about the main meal: lunch on 25th December:
The US, with its melting pot of global cultures, throws in and mixes up a bit of everything. Christmas involves turkey, gluhwein and Santa Claus. Shopping can become a "consumer feeding frenzy," according to Sean Oliver on Pocket Cultures.
The Philippines are "abuzz with celebration as soon as the calendar hits the '-ber' months," according to Claire from First Time Travels. "There are parties and reunions left and right with gift-giving as the main activity. Highways are filled with Christmas lights and Christmas lanterns, while children go house to house (or car to car) to sing carols."
No, I haven't been sipping too much mulled wine. As Jennifer on Orange Polka Dot explains, a traditional nativity scene in Catalunya involves a caganer,a figure at the back, poised mid-poo. I'd seen these for sale around Andalucia but it wasn't until I'd read Jennifer's post that I realised the full extent of Christmas defecation in the north of Spain: I hadn't heard about the caga tió.
By now, it's easy to see that Christmas can span a good six weeks - and I'm not the first to notice this, as this beautiful post on Sophie's World points out. In Rome, children look out for the befana...Comment
Comment by Karen van der Zee on January 4, 2011 at 9:08pm
Comment by Abigail King on January 4, 2011 at 7:36pm Happy New Year to you too! Great to have a few more details to add in. I, personally, would love to try feuerzangenbowle one day. Karen...I'm not so sure! Ok, Sinterklaas wasn't in Israel all those years ago but the tradition of giving children gifts in December...makes more "Christmas" sense than the Hello Kitty poo! I'm guessing that the Sinterklaas tradition travelled west and became a bit more embellished over the years... Or perhaps I'm still overcome with festive cheer :) (in Spain for their big event, the Three Kings tomorrow)
What happens in the Netherlands on Dec 25th?
Some weird and wonderful traditions. That mulled wine and sweet sugar drenched rum from Germany is known as feuerzangenbowle and it is great at their Christmas Markets with a large brattie and mustard or currywurst!
Iain
www.malloryontravel.com
Comment by Karen van der Zee on December 28, 2010 at 5:48pm Being a Dutchie (now an expat in the wild yonder), l grew up with Sinterklaas and it was always great fun. However, it has nothing to do with Christmas! Sure, the name Sinterklaas may make you think so, and it's celebrated in December, but that is it. Sinterklaas, as history tells us, was a Spanish bishop living centuries ago, who, on his birthday Dec. 5, handed out presents to poor children. Zwarte Piet (Black Peter) was his Moorish helper.
Sinerklaas arrives in the Netherlands every year by boat from Spain, sailing into Amsterdam, riding a white horse. He does not come from the North Pole ;)
Thanks for putting this post together! Great fun. Happy New Year!
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