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I Had Christmas In Africa

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Christmas celebrations in African nations is characterized by much outdoor activity because the season often occurs during a time when the weather is pleasant. Using palm trees and participating in processions are also characteristic features of activities related to Christmas in many parts of Africa.



In South Africa, activities that occur outside during Christmas include the usual caroling, but also the unusual ones of swimming and camping. The beach and mountains play an important role during Christmas in South Africa because the season occurs during the hottest time of the year - summer.

Given the pleasant nature of the weather during Christmas, families also take advantage of it by often going sightseeing in the countryside on a relaxing drive in the late evening of Christmas Day. A rich and sumptuous menu that includes a suckling pig or roast beef, turkey, mince pies, yellow rice, vegetables and puddings usually makes up the traditional South African Christmas dinner.

To create a festive environment, decorated pine branches and fir, sparkling cotton wool and tinsel are used in homes and businesses as decorations.

A similar decorative pattern of using evergreen, palm trees and lighted candles are also seen in countries such as Ghana and Liberia. While these are used in homes and businesses, they are also often carried in processions and during caroling activities.

While South Africans gather at the beach during Christmas time to enjoy the warm summer waters, people in other African nations often gather outside at in town squares and in the streets to march, sing and enjoy an overall feeling of merriment.

Despite the seemingly general similarity in activities, however, countries have their own individual style that makes Christmas celebrations unique.

Of all the celebrations in African nations, Christmas activities in Ethiopia stand out for their difference in when they are celebrated and how it is done. One of the features that make Ethiopian Christmas different is that the main celebratory event occurs on Jan. 7, around the time known as the Epiphany or Three Kings Day in North and South America.

Given the general modest economic financial situations of a significant number of the population in many African countries, Christmas celebrations also tend to occur over a shorter period of time, compared to activities in more wealthier countries.

Another difference in celebrations of Christmas in Ethiopia is the participation of various people who take part in a pilgrimage and converge on the capital city during Christmas Eve. These wanderers fill the night air with a din of praying and chanting and create a multicolor spectacle when they gather on Christmas morning to have a religious service.

But retaining a similarity with other African nations, Ethiopians

enjoy a Christmas dinner that includes a meat stew. Stews, rice, root vegetables such as yams, breads and soups often are part of the menu of traditional Christmas day dinners in African nations.

Christmas dinners are likely enjoyed by families outside, where everyone shares the meal while sitting in a circular pattern outside under the shade of a sprawling tree, instead of sitting in a formal setting at a table.

As is the practice in every household during Christmas, Africans also exchange gifts. Popular items that are exchanged as Christmas gifts include cotton cloth, soaps, sweets, pencils and books, all very practical items that can be readily used. Again, this may be related to the modest financial resources of up to half the population in many African countries, as well as to cultural norms.

Individuals aren't able to afford extravagant gifts but they still want to surprise children, family and friends at Christmas with an unexpected gift. The generally pervasive cultural norm of humility and modesty that exists among traditional African peoples, also plays an important role in not having overreaching extravagance at Christmas.
I Had Christmas In Africa
If you are planning to spend Christmas in Spain then you are in for a treat so long as you are going to stay into the New Year. Every year, just before New Year's eve my family rents an apartment in Marbella using www.HolidayRentalsinSpain.com. In Spain the traditional day for celebrating is not the 25th of December but the night of January 5th when the Three Kings come into each and every home and leave presents for the children in the fireplace. The 25th December is a public holiday and some children now have a Papa Noel that comes to them then too but the main celebrations in all the towns and homes are on the night of January 5th. If you cannot stay in Spain until then, you will miss out on the major part of Christmas here.

On January 5th as it begins to get dark each town will have a major procession going through it and all the children line up on the edge of the road to watch the arrival of the Three Kings. They arrive on horseback or camel and as the floats go by sweets, rather hard ones usually, are thrown by the children and adults on the floats to all the people lined up on the streets. Children bring cones and bags to fill as the sweets pour or bounce onto the pavements. It is a wonderful 30-45 minutes for the children and afterwards the adults usually go in search of a tapas bar where children are of course welcome ( this is Spain!) and the rest of the evening is passed away merrily.

On the day of the 6th it is a public holiday and the Spanish have a feast of seafood, ham and a traditional cake made of almonds, sugar, flour and turron.

Christmas in Spain is far less commercial than in the UK. The streets will hang out lights but only the larger stores will go to any great effort to decorate their windows with festive Christmas trees and reindeer. Families do not put out lights outside their homes as they do in the UK, the whole thing is far less "twinkly." If you hate the commercial side of Christmas in the UK then spending Christmas in Spain is a good choice. Personally I miss the "twinkle" and the big build up but I just LOVE Christmas so I bring the "twinkle" here and hang out everything and anything on my balcony and my tree still goes up at the end of November.

Crackers, cards, mince pies, Christmas cake, turkey, baby sausages, festive paper, real Christmas trees are all hard to find here in Spain. If they are important to you bring what you can over with you. If you are staying near Gibraltar, perhaps on the Costa del Sol then you can always do a quick drive over there ( don't forget your passport) and stock up on treats at the supermarket there. You will find some Spanish supermarkets sell turkey and mince pies, but only in areas that have a high density of ex-pats living there. Better to be on the safe side and pack a few extras in your suitcase.

For me the best solution is to spend Christmas in the UK and then whilst everyone is depressed at the thought of more cold weather and long queues at the shops during the sales I head to Spain for the wonderful celebrations of the Three Kings and usually warm sunshine. I get my fix of sales on the 26th and by the 27th I am ready to spend the next Christmas in Spain. Two Christmas' each year. What a perfect life!
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Both Daniel Millions & Gary Smith are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Daniel Millions has sinced written about articles on various topics from Lose Weight, Cars and Writing.
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