Norwegians traditionally put up their Christmas tree on December
23rd. The year we lived in Norway, it was hard for me to get into the
Christmas spirit without the tree dominating our living room the entire month
of December. Once the tree is up, they delight in setting it in the
center of the room, joining hands, then dancing around it, singing traditional
songs. Since there were only the three of us, we skipped that tradition, as
we couldn’t fit around the tree and we didn’t know the songs we were to
sing. We also skipped the tradition of
lighting real candles clamped onto the branches, as my fears of a house fire
won out. We opted for the more modern
electrical version of the clamp on candles and they worked just fine, without
all the worries.
The
typical Norwegian Christmas Eve is well scripted, and I dare say, there are not
many variations on the theme. Men and boys dress up in suits and ties, women
and girls wear their fanciest dresses. It is the height of formality and it
would be a serious sign of disrespect to be in anything less.
There
is a bit of a mad dash Christmas Eve morning as people drive around dropping
off gifts at different houses. No one opens any gift from anyone
until after dinner. To me, it was weird they don’t open it in front of the
person who gave it to them, but they don’t.
Every
church has a Christmas Eve service, sometime between one and three in the
afternoon. Stores close by one o’clock so as not to compete with church
attendance. The big Christmas dinner at home follows immediately
afterwards.
In
our part of Norway, everyone eats the same traditional meal of steamed lamb
ribs, sausages, boiled root vegetables and sauerkraut - with nary a green thing
on the plate. Rice pudding is always served afterwards. Whoever
gets dished up the one almond hiding in the pudding gets a special prize -
usually a marzipan candy pig. That tradition goes way back, but how the pig
became part of their Christmas traditions remains a mystery.
After
dinner, the gifts start flowing. Most parents give just one gift to each family
member and everyone watches as each one is opened. Since big gatherings
are common that night, it’s a long evening. After a few hours, there is a break for coffee
and dessert, then back to the gifts. At
some point, Julenissen comes knocking on the door with a bag of little
treats for “all the good boys and girls.” This Norwegian Santa wears a Halloween type
face mask, along with a red and white suit, but he’s far from believable, if
not a bit scary looking.
We
held to some of our own American traditions that year, so I was a bit worried
the Christmas police might show up at our house the next morning since we
waited to open our gifts until then, and there were not one, but ten gifts with
Kaleb’s name on them. It’s how we Americans do the “merry” part of Christmas.