Christmas
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Christmas celebrated
to honour the glory of the nativity of 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 a 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 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 to 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 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 times 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 admidst
the explosion of crackers. A sumptous lunch with rate
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.