» How to Celebrate a Greek Christmas· TimeCheeze.com Media Search Lab · Life Hacks · Funny YouTube · Funny Videos · Where the woot, lol, omg, wtf, heh people play.
Todays New Videos Top Videos Submit your Media






How to Celebrate a Greek Christmas

posted by PiMpALiZe

ChristopsomoIn Greece, members of the Eastern Orthodox Church consider Christmas second only to Easter as the most important holiday of the year.

Instructions
STEP 1: Take the children to see Santa Claus, who can often be found outside shopping areas giving treats to children.

STEP 2: Expect neighborhood children to sing “kalanda” (Christmas carols) on Christmas Eve and offer their good wishes to you. Have dried figs, walnuts, almonds and - most important - coins on hand to offer the youngsters who come to your house.

STEP 3: Prepare a holiday feast for Christmas Eve. Serve traditional foods and wine with baklava for dessert.

STEP 4: Bake loaves of “Christopsomo” (Christ bread), a sweet bread formed into shapes of your choice. You can also decorate the loaves with symbols that reflect your family’s trade. Serve the bread with dried figs.

STEP 5: Display a wooden bowl with a piece of dangling wire holding a sprig of fresh basil wrapped around a wooden cross; this is the Greek symbol for Christmas. Keep fresh water in the bowl to keep the basil alive.

STEP 6: Immerse the basil and cross in holy water once a day and sprinkle drops in every room of your house to keep the sprites, or “killantzarin,” away. These sprites are known to slide down the chimney between Christmas and Epiphany (January 6) and play mischievous pranks on your family.

STEP 7: Remind your children to hang their socks over the fireplace, where small gifts will appear.

STEP 8: Serve vasilopita, or Christmas cake, on December 31. Bake a florin (gold coin) into the cake. Whoever finds the coin in his or her piece of cake will have good luck in the coming year.

STEP 9: Exchange gifts on January 1, which is St. Basil’s Day. Also perform a renewal ceremony on this day by replacing all the water in your jugs with St. Basil holy water.

Tips & Warnings

  • Remember that St. Nicholas is considered the patron saint of sailors in Greece; he is said to save them from shipwrecks.
  • Instead of giving large numbers of gifts to family and friends, many people in Greece give small presents to hospitals and orphanages.
  • Greece is a country made up of many ethnic and religious groups, so Christmas traditions are diverse and cannot be generalized. The steps above represent a sampling of local traditions that may or may not be appropriate for your personal celebration of Christmas.
Link to your Favorite Bookmark Sites! Share and Enjoy:These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • del.icio.us
  • digg
  • Fark
  • Ma.gnolia
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • Spurl
  • YahooMyWeb

Other Post Entries You Might Enjoy!

No Responses to “How to Celebrate a Greek Christmas”

Care to comment?

You must be logged in to post a comment.