4.44 AM Friday, 29 March 2024
  • City Fajr Shuruq Duhr Asr Magrib Isha
  • Dubai 04:56 06:10 12:26 15:53 18:37 19:52
29 March 2024

Christmas spirit hits malls and war zones alike in Asia

Shoppers walk around a mall decorated with a Christmas tree and other ornaments in Jakarta. (AFP)

Published
By Lawrence Bartlett

From fairy lights and tinsel on military bases in Afghanistan to a Green Santa in Japan, a Secret Santa in South Korea and a Boozy Santa in Vietnam, Christmas has come to Asia – home, of course, to the World Champion Santa from Hong Kong.

For a region without all that many Christians, Asia has a lot of Christmas.

Jingle Bells is as likely to haunt shoppers in malls in Buddhist Bangkok or Islamic Jakarta as it is in London or New York. And in the background can be heard the massed ringing of cash-registers in China's southern Guangdong province, Santa's modern grotto, which exported $4 billion (Dh24.68bn)?worth of toys in the first nine months of this year.

While it is mainly the commercial and festive charms of Christmas that have worked their way into end-of-year celebrations in Asia, its Christians keep the religious traditions alive.

In the Philippines, where some 80 per cent of the population of about 94 million are Catholics, the military also takes a breather from fighting Muslim separatists and communist insurgencies with an annual Christmas truce, which is traditionally reciprocated by the rebels.

In Afghanistan there may be no truce, but US soldiers tramping back to base from muddy patrols through impoverished villages in biting temperatures are welcomed with Christmas trees, fairy lights and tinsel.

In Kandahar, one of the deadliest flashpoints in the war, Canadian Captain Glen Parent said carol singing, Christmas food with all the trimmings and church services will be laid on to create a home away from home.

In the capital Kabul, boutiques selling local embroidery and trinkets do a roaring trade as expatriate aid workers stock up on presents before flying home for the festive season.

But children in Japan are unlikely to be on the receiving end of any of those gifts if Green Santa gets his way.

"The green Santa Claus does not necessarily give out gift boxes to children, but he tells them how precious the natural environment is," said Shoko Ito, director of the Green Santa Foundation.

"Instead of giving gift boxes, he promises children a peaceful and beautiful Christmas time in the future," Ito said.

The group, which deploys a traditional Santa with a long white beard but clad in a green outfit, raises funds to conserve forests and gives lectures on environmental issues at schools.

In South Korea, by contrast, children eagerly await Christmas Eve when parents –whether among the country's 13.7 million Christians or not – shower them with gifts in the name of Santa Claus.

Residents of the southwestern city of Jeonju will also be watching to see if a secret Santa – who has donated more than 81 million won since 2000 – will visit again this year. He has regularly left donations for needy residents – phoning in anonymous tips about where the cash can be found – but has never been spotted, local media report.

In communist Vietnam, with about six million Catholics in a population of 86 million, some churches in the capital Hanoi have been brightly decorated with lights and red bunting and carols can be heard in the evenings.

But the commercial side of the festival has also made its mark. Outside one bar a giant Santa stands on a bed of fluffy fake snow –clutching to his belly a monstrous can of beer.

While Chinese New Year may be Hong Kong's biggest celebration, the former British colony still celebrates Christmas with gusto a dozen years after its return to China.

The city is festooned with lights, carols are inescapable in malls and offices and some retail workers – possibly against their will – are wearing red Santa hats.

Other former British colonies also find space for Christmas festivities decades after winning their independence and despite Christians being in the minority.

Multicultural Malaysia, which enthusiastically celebrates Muslim, Christian, Chinese and Hindu festivals, is now festooned with tinsel, fake snow, and shopping centre tableaux of gingerbread houses and Christmas trees.

The population, which includes Muslim Malays and ethnic Chinese and Indians, is in the midst of a months-long series of festivals which begins with Ramadan and ends with Chinese New Year in February.

India's Christian minority –which at 2.3 per cent of the population is still a sizeable 24 million people – has celebrated Christmas openly in the majority Hindu nation for centuries.

In neighbouring Pakistan, however, the small Christian community in eastern Gojra is still reeling from August 1 riots, when an angry mob set upon Christian homes and churches, torching buildings and killing seven people.

Christians make up less than three per cent of Pakistan's 167 million population, and are generally impoverished and marginalised. But Gojra's local priest Father Shabir said he hoped Christmas would signal a new start for their small community.

"We are still sad, but we want to give a new message of hope on this Christmas," he said.

Christians in northern China also face a Christmas of fear after 10 local religious leaders were jailed in recent weeks and their new church shuttered amid a crackdown on unauthorised worship.

China officially provides for freedom of religion but in practice the ruling Communist Party restricts independent worship by forcing groups to register with the government. Despite the problems Christians can face, businesses in China have latched onto Christmas as a fashionable, commercial venture as living standards have risen and contact with the West has increased.

Many shops in Beijing are decked out with decorations and trees, and some waitresses in Chinese restaurants have started wearing Santa hats –and, yes, Jingle Bells jangles nerves in the malls there too.

Busy time for world's best Santa

Sporting a tickly beard and pillow-stuffed belly, Jimmy Chan is the most popular adult in a Hong Kong mall as children clamber onto his lap for a photo with the famous Santa Claus.

Chan, a 44-year-old magician, had never seen snow before last month but that didn't stop him beating rivals from around the globe to become the World's Best Santa in an annual competition in Sweden.

The event took place in sub-zero temperatures in the Swedish town of Gaellivare and included contests such as chimney-climbing, present-wrapping, porridge-eating, kick-sledding and reindeer-racing.

Chan, whose participation was sponsored by a Hong Kong shopping mall, lost the porridge-eating and reindeer-racing contests but was a clear winner overall.

"I'm a very busy man this time of year. I am criss-crossing the city in my reindeer sleigh, going to three or four different malls a day, meeting with all the children in town,"?he says. Despite a demanding schedule, Chan says he maintains a jolly attitude by connecting with people and being a kid at heart.

 

Keep up with the latest business news from the region with the Emirates Business 24|7 daily newsletter. To subscribe to the newsletter, please click here