Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Ferguson: Northern Lights Christmas


Northern Lights Christmas Market, Ferguson, Missouri. November 2017.



On the Sunday following Thanksgiving, Ferguson holds its Northern Lights Christmas Market and Parade. This is also when one can buy tickets to the Ferguson Christmas Home Tour.

Northern Lights Christmas Parade, Ferguson, Missouri. November 2017.


After a nature-infused weekend with family members in the Ozarks Scenic Riverways here and here, I hied home early Sunday so I could grab tickets for me and my mom for the Christmas Home Tour and also to see the parade that night!


Northern Lights Christmas Parade, Ferguson, Missouri. November 2017.


Northern Lights Christmas Parade, Ferguson, Missouri. November 2017.

Northern Lights Christmas Parade, Ferguson, Missouri. November 2017.


One of several videos here, a children's dance troupe:



And, as always, I swoon over drums:




But I was besotted with this crazy-creative moving train table, operated at the Christmas Market by one of Santa's helpers!


Monday, December 18, 2017

Ferguson: Our Lady of Guadalupe and One of Her Stolen Sons


Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Ferguson, Missouri. December 2017.


December 2017

Beauty, sadness, membership, anger, quiet, fear, song, powerlessness, power.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Ferguson, Missouri. December 2017.



All of these wavelets lapped around me at the Spanish Mass I attended at Ferguson's Our Lady of Guadalupe Church.


Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Ferguson, Missouri. December 2017.


Forefront in my mind was the St. Louis Public Radio story I'd read the day before about a parishioner, Jose Garcia. In November, the United States of America deported him to Mexico, yanking him from the arms of his wife, Ana, and his three little girls - Amanda, Julissa, and Dana.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Ferguson, Missouri. December 2017.


Who benefited from this action?


Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Ferguson, Missouri. December 2017.


No one, other than a pyramid scheme of ICE operatives to whom a man is a commodity for meeting quotas and adding ticks to a quarterly report.


Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Ferguson, Missouri. December 2017.


A tiny little stat thrown into a virtual mass grave of thousands of other data blips, all denuded of their names, ties to families and communities - their very humanity.


Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Ferguson, Missouri. December 2017.


Marks on a report that will be covered by a fresh sediment layer when government operatives dump new nameless, faceless expendables into the ditch.


'tis the season.


Tuesday, February 14, 2017

El Paso: Christmas Eve at Our Lady of Guadalupe


Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.


December 2016

I'm not a member of a house of worship, but I do like to attend such for cultural events and traditions. Since I move each year, I experience traditions such as Christmas Mass in different parts of the world.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.


My Christmas Eve in Lafayette, Louisiana, was memorable. I actually attended TWO masses in one evening! The first was nice, but ohhh, the second - at Our Lady of Wisdom on the University of Louisiana-Lafayette campus - it was a gorgeous visual, auditory, and olfactory bath.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.


For 2016, an El Paso friend told me that she liked to attend Our Lady of Guadalupe's Christmas services, and that was a good enough recommendation for me.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.



Below is the conveyance of the Baby Jesus to the altar, his presentation to the congregation, his blessing on the altar, and loving placement in the manger, snuggled against a lamb:




Later, a priest and a couple wrap the infant ceremoniously in a swaddling blanket:

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.


The Christmas-time altar held many delights. Even a Christmas fish.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.



Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.


Not to appear disrespectful, but I wish the Virgin Mary above and the cow below didn't look so worried. I don't know; maybe the cow just looks startled.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.


Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, El Paso, Texas. December 2016.


It is a special privilege for me to witness so many traditional events that show how richly textured our American culture is.




Monday, December 30, 2013

Louisiana: Pierre Part: Christmas Parade and Gumbo


Gumbo, Pierre Part, Louisiana


A new friend in Louisiana, originally from Belgium, and who I'll call Coline, called me one day and asked if I wanted to join her at a family gathering in Pierre Part, which is in Assumption Parish.

One of the hostesses was a former colleague of Coline's, from when Coline taught in the community's French Immersion program at Pierre Part's public school.


Anyway, my answer was hell, yes!

It was a rainy, cloud-covered, chilly day as Coline and I set out from Lafayette to Pierre Part. It was important to get to Pierre Part before noon because that's when the bridge into town would be raised (swung?) to allow boat traffic through. I think it was 11:59 when we clicked onto the bridge. Whew!

A family matriarch, one of six sisters - all present - was the titular hostess for this gathering. It was at her house, which sits on a main street in town, parallel to the bayou.  Her son, Kent*, and daughter-in-law, Monica* (my friend's former colleague), met and greeted all arrivals and handled the hustle and bustle of hosting duties.

The six sisters reigned at the large dining table, smilingly receiving guests and happy homages. 

Gumbo

Kent explained to me some of the processes that go into making a big ol' pot of gumbo. In this part of southern Louisiana, folks use okra in their gumbo. Kent said this gathering's gumbo had its start more than 24 hours before, with the making of the roux. Some ingredients (and think in many pounds):
  • Sausage without its casings
  • Chicken 
  • Onions
  • Celery
  • Peppers
  • Okra

Plus seasonings and flour and water.

Pot where roux was made. Pierre Part, Louisiana.


Kent was the gumbo maker and sitter. His mother and aunts conducted periodic quality control testings to ensure the seasoning was just so.

Seasonings by the gumbo pot. And beer, of course. Pierre Part, Louisiana.


The art of making good gumbo reminds me of similar virtuosity needed to make churchkhela:






There was rice to put in your bowl before ladling gumbo over it.



Primary accompaniment: potato salad. Don't know why, but this surprised me. I've since learned that this is a traditional side for gumbo. 


Christmas parade

Because of the dreary weather, both the party and the parade suffered attrition from their usual large attendance.








Nevertheless, Kent laid out a large blue tarp on the grassy area by the road in preparation for the anticipated candy bounty delivered by the parade.















You know what I loved? It was the adults, mostly, including myself, who seemed to have the most fun collecting candy.




And beads, because we are in Louisiana, after all.







Kent, Monica, and their nuclear and extended families and friends were so gracious to receive a complete stranger into their midst.

Swamp People

Monica asked me if I'd watched Swamp People yet. What? My first thought was that she was referring to a horror movie like the vintage Swamp Thing. But it occurred to me that this might not be the case, so I recovered, and said, "No, what is it?" And she explained that Swamp People is a TV series about some local folks.




Also mentioned was another series called Swamp Pawn.

I haven't watched Swamp People yet, but I'm gonna. I did watch the first episode of Swamp Pawn, and you know what? It's damn good.

Traiteurs

Another thing I heard about at the gathering are traditional healers of Acadiana, or traiteurs. People still seek out their healing gifts today.

Vermilionville, the cultural heritage site in Lafayette, has the Healer's Garden, which has medicinal plants that are or were used by traditional healers in south Louisiana.

My understanding is the traiteurs often have a healing gift for specific ailments, such as the elimination of warts.

More information to come on this tradition in the future, I hope.

Nannies

In the cajun culture, nannies are godmothers. As it was explained to me in the Pierre Part gathering, the relationship between a nanny and her godchildren is very, very special.

More on this, too, I hope, in the future.

Boats

On the way out of Pierre Part, filled with gumbo and warm hospitality, we passed a community of houseboats.

Yet another topic for the future.



Language

Pierre Part has an interesting history, not the least of which is the issue of language. An excerpt from wikipedia
 
Until the early- to mid-twentieth century the people almost exclusively spoke Cajun French at home. This caused the people of Pierre Part and the rest of the Cajun community to be labeled as "backwards" or "ignorant" by outsiders, and in many cases from the 1910s to the 1970s, students whose first language was French were punished corporally in school for speaking it. From the 1970s onward, extremely few children were taught Cajun French as a first language, since the previous generations were taught to be ashamed of their heritage.

In the 1990s an effort was made to reintroduce French into the school systems. This became somewhat controversial as the French taught in school was not Cajun French. Many of the teachers brought in were Belgian, French, and Canadian who taught their own dialect of French. However, there are still many who contend that the "Standard French" taught in French Immersion classes at Pierre Part Elementary School is the best chance that local Cajuns have at preserving their language and culture, since there is no written standard for teaching the Cajun dialect of the French language

I'd like to return to Pierre Part to explore more.



Thursday, December 26, 2013

Rootless: On Doing Holidays Solo


Gutter sun, Oil Center, Lafayette, Louisiana


Most major holidays I'm not solo, but there are times, such as this Christmas, I have been.


Since my happiness is my responsibility and not the job of others, it's incumbent upon me to create a satisfying holiday. ... Hmm, that holds true when I'm solo and when I'm with family and old friends.

The now-memories of Christmas Eve 2013 are luminous. They didn't come to me; I went out and got them.


In 2010, I wrote Holidays for the Rootless, reposted below: 

Some reflections here:
Holiday Homesickness, from nunomad.com
Expat Celebrations: Tips For Spending Holidays Overseas, by Anne Merritt, from matadornetwork.com
Family Holiday Traditions and Living Abroad, by Betsy Burlingame, from expatexchange.com


The ideas are for people who are abroad, but they hold true for anyone, really, regardless of where they are.