Holiday Traditions


Celebrate The Novena In Italy

In Italy, the Christmas season celebration lasts for three weeks and starts eight days before Christmas. It’s known as the Novena, and during this period, children go from house to house dressed as shepherds, reciting Christmas poems and singing. In some parts actual shepherds bring musical instruments into the villages, play and sing Christmas songs. The children are given money to purchase presents.

A strict fast is observed the day before Christmas Eve, and is followed by a celebration meal known as cenone which is a traditional eel story. It may also include chocolate and a light Milanese cake called panettone or a Veronese cake called pandoro.

Presents and empty boxes are drawn from the Urn of Fate, which contains one gift for each person. By twilight, candles are lighted around the family’s nativity crib called the Presepio. Nativity scenes are very popular in Italy and nearly every house has one. After prayers are recited, children read poems. At noon on Christmas Day the Pope gives his blessing to crowds gathered in the huge Vatican square.

In Italy the children wait until Epiphany, January 6, for their presents. According to tradition, the presents are delivered by a kind but ugly witch called Befana on a broomstick. Legend has it that though she was told by The Three Kings that the baby Jesus had been born, but she was busy and delayed visiting the baby. Therefore she missed seeing the Star of Bethlehem in the night sky and lost her way and has been flying around ever since, leaving gifts at each house that has children in case the child Jesus is there. She slides down chimneys like Santa and fills stockings and shoes with good things for good children leaves coal for children who are not so good.

 

 

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Holiday Traditions

 

 

 

Holiday Traditions


Celebrate Christmas And Three Kings Day In Germany

... lit on Christmas Eve. Children count the days until Christmas using an Advent calendar where they open one window each day and find a Christmas picture inside. Some families lock up one room of their home before Christmas. When the children are awoken by their parents at midnight, they find the room filled ... 

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Celebrate The Jewish Festival Of Lights

... during this eight-day festival. On the first night of Hanukkah, Jews recite all three blessings, but only recite the first two on the nights that follow. The blessings are said before or after the candles are lit depending on tradition. On the first night of Hanukkah one light or candle is lit on the ... 

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Ringing In The Holiday Season

... would ring the bell. It became commonplace for children to ring bells in celebration of Christmas. Most families had bells back then, and since they were known to be a celebratory sound, most parents didn t mind their children making a ruckus with their constant bell ringing during the holiday. Now, people ... 

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Hang Your Stocking By The Chimney With Care

... A Christmas stocking is an empty sock or sock-shaped bag that children in the United States and some other cultures hang on Christmas Eve so that Santa Claus can fill it with small toys, candy, fruit, coins, or other small gifts when he arrives. These small items are often referred to as stocking stuffers ... 

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Caroling And Mummering In England

... later years, villages had their own bands of waits. They were originally watchmen who patrolled the city streets and sang out the time of night each hour. During the holiday season, they would entertain the townspeople with a Christmas song as well. The term eventually evolved to describe a group of carolers ... 

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