Christmas Day
December 25
A festival held every year in memory of the birth of Christ.
Christmas is essentially a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving
and of good will toward others. Many customs older than
Christianity mark the festivities. In our country the
observance of the day was discouraged in colonial times, and in
England in 1643 Parliament abolished the day. Now its
celebration is world-wide and by all classes and creeds.
HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS
BY CLIFFORD HOWARD
Of course Uncle Sam is best acquainted
with the good old-fashioned Christmas—the kind we have known
all about since we were little bits of children. There are the
Christmas trees with their pretty decorations and candles, and
the mistletoe and holly and all sorts of evergreens to make the
house look bright, while outside the trees are bare, the ground
is white with snow, and Jack Frost is prowling around, freezing
up the ponds and pinching people's noses. And then there is
dear old Santa Claus with his reindeer, galloping about on the
night before Christmas, and scrambling down chimneys to fill
the stockings that hang in a row by the fireplace.
It is the time of good cheer and happiness and presents for
everybody; the time of chiming bells and joyful carols; of
turkey and candy and plum-pudding and all the other good things
that go to make up a truly merry Christmas. And here and there
throughout the country, some of the quaint old customs of our
forefathers are still observed at this time, as, for instance,
the pretty custom of "Christmas waits"—boys and girls who go
about from house to house on Christmas eve, or early Christmas
morning, singing carols.
But, aside from the Christmas customs we all know so well,
Uncle Sam has many strange and special ways of observing
Christmas; for in this big country of his there are many
different kinds of people, and they all do not celebrate
Christmas in the same way, as you shall see.
IN THE SOUTH
Siss! Bang! Boom! Sky-rockets hissing, crackers snapping,
cannons roaring, horns tooting, bells ringing, and youngsters
shouting with wild delight. That is the way Christmas begins
down South.
CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH
CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH
It starts at midnight, or even before; and all day long
fire-crackers are going off in the streets of every city, town,
and village of the South, from Virginia to Louisiana. A
Northern boy, waking up suddenly in New Orleans or Mobile or
Atlanta, would think he was in the midst of a rousing
Fourth-of-July celebration. In some of the towns the brass
bands come out and add to the jollity of the day by marching
around and playing "My Maryland" and "Dixie"; while the soldier
companies parade up and down the streets to the strains of
joyous music and fire salutes with cannons and rifles.
To the girls and boys of the South, Christmas is the
noisiest and jolliest day of the year. The Fourth of July
doesn't compare with it. And as for the darkies, they look upon
Christmas as a holiday that was invented for their especial
happiness. They take it for granted that all the "white folks"
they know will give them presents; and with grinning faces they
are up bright and early, asking for "Christmus gif', mistah;
Christmus gif, missus." No one thinks of refusing them, and at
the end of the day they are richer and happier than at any
other time during the whole year.
Except for the jingle of sleigh-bells and the presence of
Jack Frost, a Christmas in the South is in other ways very much
like that in the North. The houses are decorated with greens,
mistletoe hangs above the doorways, Santa Claus comes down the
chimneys and fills the waiting stockings, while Christmas
dinner is not complete without the familiar turkey and
cranberry sauce, plum puddings and pies.
IN NEW ENGLAND
For a great many years there was no Christmas in New
England. The Pilgrims and the Puritans did not believe in such
celebrations. In fact, they often made it a special point to do
their hardest work on Christmas day, just to show their
contempt for what they considered a pagan festival.
During colonial times there was a law in Massachusetts
forbidding any one to celebrate Christmas; and if anybody was
so rash in those days as to go about tooting a horn and
shouting a "Merry Christmas!" he was promptly brought to his
senses by being arrested and punished.
CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND
CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND
Of course things are very different in New England now, but
in many country towns the people still make more of
Thanksgiving than they do of Christmas; and there are hundreds
of New England men and women still living who knew nothing of
Christmas as children—who never hung up their stockings; who
never waited for Santa Claus; who never had a tree; who never
even had a Christmas present!
Nowadays, however, Christmas in New England is like
Christmas anywhere else; but here and there, even now, the
effects of the early Puritan ideas may still be seen. In some
of the smaller and out-of-the-way towns and villages you will
find Christmas trees and evergreens in only a very few of the
houses, and in some places—particularly in New Hampshire—one
big Christmas tree does for the whole town. This tree is set up
in the town hall, and there the children go to get their gifts,
which have been hung on the branches by the parents. Sometimes
the tree has no decorations—no candles, no popcorn strings, no
shiny balls. After the presents are taken off and given to the
children, the tree remains perfectly bare. There is usually a
short entertainment of recitations and songs, and a speech or
two perhaps, and then the little folks, carrying their presents
with them, go back to their homes.
IN NEW MEXICO
In certain parts of New Mexico, among the old Spanish
settlements, the celebration of Christmas begins more than a
week before the day. In the evenings, a party of men and women
go together to the house of some friend—a different house being
visited each evening. When they arrive, they knock on the door
and begin to sing, and when those in the house ask, "Who is
there?" they reply, "The Virgin Mary and St. Joseph seek
lodgings in your house." At first the inmates of the house
refuse to let them in. This is done to carry out the Bible
story of Joseph and Mary being unable to find lodgings in
Bethlehem. But in a little while the door is opened and the
visitors are heartily welcomed. As soon as they enter, they
kneel and repeat a short prayer; and when the devotional
exercises are concluded, the rest of the evening is spent in
merrymaking.
On Christmas eve the people of the village gather together
in some large room or hall and give a solemn little play,
commemorating the birthday of the Saviour. One end of the room
is used as a stage, and this is fitted up to represent the
stable and the manger; and the characters in the sacred story
of Bethlehem—Mary and Joseph, the shepherds, the wise men, and
the angels—are represented in the tableaux, and with a genuine,
reverential spirit. Even the poorer people of the town take
part in these Christmas plays.
AMONG THE SHAKERS
The Shakers observe Christmas by a dinner at which the men
and women both sit down at the same table. This custom of
theirs is the thing that serves to make Christmas different
from any other day among the Shakers. During all the rest of
the year the men and women eat their meals at separate
tables.
At sunset on Christmas day, after a service in the church,
they march to the community-house, where the dinner is waiting.
The men sit on one side of the table and the women on the
other. At the head sits an old man called the elder, who begins
the meal by saying grace, after which each one in turn gets up
and, lifting the right hand, says in a solemn voice, "God is
love." The dinner is eaten in perfect silence. Not a voice is
heard until the meal comes to an end. Then the men and women
rise and sing, standing in their places at the table. As the
singing proceeds they mark time with their hands and feet. Then
their bodies begin to sway from side to side in the peculiar
manner that has given this sect its name of Shakers.
When the singing comes to an end, the elder chants a prayer,
after which the men and women silently file out and leave the
building.
AMONG THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS
"You'd better look out, or Pelznickel will catch you!" This
is the dire threat held over naughty boys and girls at
Christmas-time in some of the country settlements of the
Pennsylvania Germans, or Pennsylvania Dutch, as they are often
called.
Pelznickel is another name for Santa Claus. But he is not
altogether the same old Santa that we welcome so gladly. On
Christmas eve some one in the neighborhood impersonates
Pelznickel by dressing up as an old man with a long white
beard. Arming himself with a switch and carrying a bag of toys
over his shoulder, he goes from house to house, where the
children are expecting him.
A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL
A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL
He asks the parents how the little ones have behaved
themselves during the year. To each of those who have been good
he gives a present from his bag. But—woe betide the naughty
ones! These are not only supposed to get no presents, but
Pelznickel catches them by the collar and playfully taps them
with his switch.
IN PORTO RICO
The Porto Rican boys and girls would be frightened out of
their wits if Santa Claus should come to them in a sleigh drawn
by reindeer and should try to enter the houses and fill their
stockings. Down there, Santa Claus does not need reindeer or
any other kind of steeds, for the children say that he just
comes flying through the air like a bird. Neither does he
bother himself looking for stockings, for such things are not
so plentiful in Porto Rico as they are in cooler climates.
Instead of stockings, the children use little boxes, which they
make themselves. These they place on the roofs and in the
courtyards, and old Santa Claus drops the gifts into them as he
flies around at night with his bag on his back.
He is more generous in Porto Rico than he is anywhere else.
He does not come on Christmas eve only, but is likely to call
around every night or two during the week. Each morning,
therefore, the little folks run out eagerly to see whether
anything more has been left in their boxes during the
night.
Christmas in Porto Rico is a church festival of much
importance, and the celebration of it is made up chiefly of
religious ceremonies intended to commemorate the principal
events in the life of the Saviour. Beginning with the
celebration of his birth, at Christmas-time, the feast-days
follow one another in rapid succession. Indeed, it may justly
be said that they do not really come to an end until
Easter.
BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO
BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO
One of the most popular of these festival-days is that known
as Bethlehem day. This is celebrated on the 12th of January, in
memory of the coming of the Magi. The celebration consists of a
procession of children through the streets of the town. The
foremost three, dressed in flowing robes to represent the wise
men of the East, come riding along on ponies, holding in their
hands the gifts for the Infant King; following them come angels
and shepherds and flute-players, all represented by children
dressed in pretty costumes and carrying garlands of flowers.
These processions are among the most picturesque of all
Christmas celebrations.
AMONG THE MORAVIANS
For many days before Christmas the Moravian housewives in
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, are busy in their kitchens making good
things for the holidays—mint-cakes, pepper-nuts, Kümmelbrod,
sugar-cake, mince-pies, and, most important of all, large
quantities of "Christmas cakes." These Christmas cakes are a
kind of ginger cooky, crisp and spicy, and are made according
to a recipe known only to the Moravians. They are made in all
sorts of curious shapes—birds, horses, bears, lions, fishes,
turtles, stars, leaves, and funny little men and women; so that
they are not only good to eat, but are ornamental as well, and
are often used by the good fathers and mothers as decorations
for the "Putz."
Every Moravian family has its Putz at Christmas-time. This
consists of a Christmas tree surrounded at its base by a
miniature landscape made up of moss and greens and make-believe
rocks, and adorned with toy houses and tiny fences and trees
and all sorts of little animals and toy people.
A CHRISTMAS "PUTZ"
A CHRISTMAS "PUTZ"
On Christmas eve a love-feast is held in the church. The
greater part of the service is devoted to music, for which the
Moravians have always been noted. While the choir is singing,
cake and coffee are brought in and served to all the members of
the congregation, each one receiving a good-sized bun and a
large cup of coffee. Shortly before the end of the meeting
lighted wax candles carried on large trays are brought into the
church, by men on one side and women on the other, and passed
around to the little folks—one for each boy and girl. This is
meant to represent the coming of the Light into the world, and
is but one of the many beautiful customs observed by the
Moravians.
IN ALASKA
"Going around with the star" is a popular Christmas custom
among some of the natives of Alaska who belong to the Greek
Church. A large figure of a star, covered with brightly colored
paper, is carried about at night by a procession of men and
women and children. They call at the homes of the well-to-do
families of the village, marching about from house to house,
headed by the star-bearer and two men or boys carrying lanterns
on long poles. They are warmly welcomed at each place, and are
invited to come in and have some refreshments. After enjoying
the cakes and other good things, and singing one or two carols,
they take up the star and move on to the next house.
These processions take place each night during Christmas
week; but after the second night the star-bearers are followed
by men and boys dressed in fantastic clothes, who try to catch
the star-men and destroy their stars. This part of the game is
supposed to be an imitation of the soldiers of Herod trying to
destroy the children of Bethlehem; but these happy folks of
Alaska evidently don't think much about its meaning, for they
make a great frolic of it. Everybody is full of fun, and the
frosty air of the dark winter nights is filled with laughter as
men and boys and romping girls chase one another here and there
in merry excitement.
IN HAWAII
The natives of Hawaii say that Santa Claus comes over to the
islands in a boat. Perhaps he does; it would be a tedious
journey for his reindeer to make without stopping from San
Francisco to Honolulu. At all events, he gets there by some
means or other, for he would not neglect the little folks of
those islands away out in the Pacific.
They look for him as eagerly as do the boys and girls in the
lands of snow and ice, and although it must almost melt him to
get around in that warm climate with his furs on, he never
misses a Christmas.
Before the missionaries and the American settlers went to
Hawaii, the natives knew nothing about Christmas, but now they
all celebrate the day, and do it, of course, in the same way as
the Americans who live there. The main difference between
Christmas in Honolulu and Christmas in New York is that in
Honolulu in December the weather is like June in New York.
Birds are warbling in the leafy trees; gardens are overflowing
with roses and carnations; fields and mountain slopes are
ablaze with color; and a sunny sky smiles dreamily upon the
glories of a summer day. In the morning people go to church,
and during the day there are sports and games and merry-making
of all sorts. The Christmas dinner is eaten out of doors in the
shade of the veranda, and everybody is happy and contented.
IN THE PHILIPPINES
"BUENAS PASQUAS!" This is the hearty greeting that comes to
the dweller in the Philippines on Christmas morning, and with
it, perhaps, an offering of flowers.
CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES
CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES
The Filipino, like the Porto Rican and all others who have
lived under Spanish rule, look upon Christmas as a great
religious festival, and one that requires very special
attention. On Christmas eve the churches are open, and the
coming of the great day is celebrated by a mass at midnight;
and during all of Christmas day mass is held every hour, so
that every one may have an opportunity to attend. Even the
popular Christmas customs among the people are nearly all of a
religious character, for most of them consist of little plays
or dramas founded upon the life of the Saviour.
These plays are called pastures, and are performed by bands
of young men and women, and sometimes mere boys and girls, who
go about from village to village and present their simple
little plays to expectant audiences at every stopping-place.
The visit of the wise men, the flight into Egypt—these and many
other incidents as related in the Scriptures are acted in these
pastores.
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