Christmas is one of the most popular festivals in all over the world, which aroused the curiosity of devotees, but also Christmas is one of the most celebrated events of Christians all across the world. christmas celebrations is the most unforgettable experience for all devotees, which has become more popular by arousing the curiosity, eagerness and keen observation of all types of devotees. Christmas Parties, christmas decorations and Christmas lights draw the attention of all devotees from all over the world. Christmas Holidays are the most memorable vacations, which make your holidays memorable and enjoyable. Celebrating Christmas holidays is a main event in all Christian household on a grand-scale all over the world as the birth day of Jesus Christ on 25th of December every year. During this celebration of Christmas holidays, several people with great enthusiasm visited the tourist spots where Christmas holidays are celebrating at mass scale. India is one of the most famous tourist destinations in the world, where not only Christians but also non-Christians celebrated the Christmas Holidays with great honor towards Jesus Christ. Indians are celebrating Christmas clubbed with ensuing New Year which is viewed frequently as a vacation when people take to travel to places of their choices. Christmas celebration is one of the biggest religious festivities of the world that is celebrated in the commemoration of the promising birth of Lord Jesus in different ways, Christmas is the annual holiday in many nations. christmas parties is the key to every grand christmas celebrations, that provide fun activities for young and old alike to enjoy the holidays on unusual time with family. Christmas party ideas guarantee leaves unforgettable impressions on guests and family. Christmas ecorations are considered incomplete without the lights. The Christmas Festival Lights are lights, which can be used for indoor, outdoor decorations and can even. These lights are a supple, bendable tube of lights with which doors windows and the side of a house can be framed. Specially, these lights are designed for those people who prefer a movement in their Christmas decorations as these lights either emit a glow or come in chasing patterns. Christmas Festival is the most popular of celebrations in all over the world. You will be amazed to note that Christmas Festival starts on December 16 with nine early morning masses till the first Sunday of January. Buying Christmas gifts is the truly delightful experience for vacationers, who want to make their holidays in memorable way. Merry Christmas is popularly known as “Mass of christ”. Chritmas tree is a strong symbol of Christmas, which serves as the family’s center of attention. Christmas carols are based on Christian lyrics and relate to the Nativity. Christmas ideas have aroused the curiosity and eagerness of vacationers to purchase Christmas gifts. From a busy agenda of your life, if you want to spend some days of the year by celebrating them in grand manner. It is possible by making a plan to celebrate Christmas Holidays at special time like Christmas. Possibly, Christmas is the most cherished moment of the year and it is just a few days away. When you are planning to celebrate the holidays, then Christmas holidays are the most important to make your plan memorable and enjoyable. Chritmas is the most popular festival in all over the world, which draw the attention of people from busy agenda of life.
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Why You Must Allow Your Children Decorate Your Home for Christmas
Are you a parent? If so, are you children looking forward to Christmas this year? Whether your children are toddlers or teenagers, there is a good chance that they are excited with what Christmas may bring. In the weeks and days leading up to Christmas, you will find that their excitement just keeps on building. To hang on to that excitement, you may want to think about decorating your home for Christmas. Decorating your home for Christmas is a great way to keep your children’s excitement going strong until Christmas does finally arrive. When it comes to decorating for Christmas, you will find that you have a number of different options. Your first impulse may be to decorate your home on your own, but you may want to think about letting your children help you. You will find that there are, literally, an unlimited number of benefits to letting your children help you decorate for Christmas, no matter how young or old they are. As previously mentioned, there are a number of benefits to letting your children help you decorate your home for Christmas, no matter what their age. Despite the fact that children of all ages could benefit from helping you decorate for Christmas, there are some children who could benefit more than others. For instance, young children, especially toddlers, are in the learning stages of their life. This stage is where children can benefit the most from a small amount of responsibility and encouragement. Encouraging your children to help you decorate for Christmas, by hanging up pictures or by completing another small task, you could be encouraging them to use their mind, their imagination, and their decorating skills!Perhaps, the best way to go about decorating your home for Christmas is together. Unfortunately, in today’s world families don’t get to spend as much time with each other as they should. That is one of the reasons why Christmas is so important; it is one of the times when all families get to come together. Instead of decorating for Christmas by yourself or letting your children do it all, you all should decorate for Christmas. In addition to helping build up the Christmas spirit, decorating for Christmas as a family is one of the best ways to spending well needed bonding time together. The best part of decorating, for your kids, may be the actual decorating process, but there is something else that your kids may also enjoy. They may also enjoy helping you pick out Christmas decorations. By taking your kids with you to the store, they could easily help you pick out Christmas decorations. If you are shopping for Christmas decorations on a budget, you are advised to visit your local dollar store or department store. These stores usually have low-cost Christmas decorations, many of which will appeal to children. If, by some chance, you can’t find the decorations that you or your children were looking for, you could easily make their own Christmas decorations. In fact, making homemade Christmas decorations is another fun experience, all on its own. Regardless of whether or not you ask your children for assistance, when decorating your home for Christmas, you are urged to decorate. For children, Christmas decorations help to keep them excited about the upcoming holiday. That is why Christmas decorations are an important part of the holiday season.
Decorate Your Home With the Christmas Spirit, for the Ultimate in Holiday Decor
Capture the elusive Christmas Spirit and bring it home for the holidays! Remember what it was like when you were a kid at Christmas time? When you were filled with that warm fuzzy Christmas feeling that seemed to penetrate the whole house? How did our parents do it? Was it the innocence of childhood or is there something more to it? Get started today and your home will be bursting at the seams with that old time Christmas feeling. Practice acts of shopping kindness. Smile at people. Smile and say hello to the busy clerk behind the counter. Let them know you’re not just another impatient customer waiting in line. Smile at the harried mother with fussy young children. Let her know your not judging her parenting skills. Let that person with only one item go ahead of you at the cash register. It feels so good when they flash an appreciative thank you your way. Open doors for people. Smile at them. Let that car merge into your busy traffic lane. Wave a friendly hello. In a single shopping trip you will have given the gifts of patience, kindness, acceptance and courtesy. It’s free, it’s fun and the more you give the more you’ll get! Get sentimental. Snuggle on the couch and watch the classics; ‘Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeer’, ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ and ‘A Christmas Story’. Share childhood stories of holidays’ past with your children. Tell them how scared you were of the Abominable Snowman when you were little. How you would squirm in your seat when he had Rudolph trapped in the cave! Listen to Bing Crosby sing ‘I’ll be home for Christmas’. Sing ‘Frosty the Snowman’ when you’re stuck in traffic and laugh at yourself. Surprise an old relative or friend with a phone call. Hang mistletoe. Stop and take notice of children all happy and excited in their holiday dresses. Engage the senses. Make Christmas warm and fuzzy again. Sautee onions in a frying pan and then run out onto the front porch for a few moments. Step back in and enjoy the smell of home cooking! Play Christmas carols while you’re making dinner. Dance in the kitchen to ‘Little Drummer Boy’. Laugh. Flirt with your husband. Hug your kids. Hug the dog! Light those cinnamon scented candles you’ve been saving forever. Sit in the dark and stare at the Christmas tree lights. Make hot chocolate, spiced cider or eggnog. Appreciate! Take the time to really appreciate all that you do have. Be thankful that you have a home to come home to, a warm bed to sleep in and food in the cupboard. Say a silent thank you for the loved ones in your life. Say thank you for good health, transportation, indoor plumbing, garbage service, family pets and your house plants that keep on living. Remind yourself that even the poorest people in America live better than many around the world. Take the time to acknowledge what a luxury your hot shower really is. Appreciate; really, really appreciate what you have right now, today! Give something, anything, big or small to charity. Be thankful you have it to give. Take a lesson from the Grinch. He learned that the Christmas Spirit can’t be purchased, wrapped up and put in a box. It’s something that comes from within. It isn’t created with pretty decorations; it makes the decorations prettier. It isn’t created with ham and turkey dinner; it makes the ham and turkey taste better. It isn’t created by putting up the Christmas lights; it makes the lights shine brighter. Christmas Spirit is created in your heart. And it grows every time you express it with your love and appreciation. Practice giving it and you’ll discover what Dorothy from the ‘Wizard of Oz’ learned. What you were looking for was in your own backyard all along! Now you’re home is ready for the holidays. Merry Christmas!
Help Me Find a Book Title!!!?
I am looking for a book that was read to me by a teacher in the mid 90’s. I believe it was a science fiction story about a world(community) where everyone saw in black in white. Everythink was planned out for them. Everyone used bicycles for transportation, and when you reached older ages you get a differant bicycle. If i can remember correctly food was brought to the house. Again if I can remember correctly when you became a certain age your Life long job was picked for you…
The Child that was the main character got the special position that consisted of learning of the past. He was allowed to see in color unlike the rest of the community. …Basically learning about all the things that were taken away from the people. at the end I think he ends up falling down a hill to find a house covered with Christmas lights….
I hope that is enough to help me find out what this book is????
Old World Christmas Inside Art Pumpkin Halloween Ornament
- Hand blown glass
- Hand painted
- Back of pumpkin face features a image painted inside
- Glass
- Measures 2 by 1.25 by 2.25 inches high
Product Description
Cute Witch holding a pumpkin inside art ornament features a cute pumpkin on the back. Hang it either way for a cute accent on your tree this year. Retired from Old World Christmas… More >>
The Problem With Christmas
Christmas is a conundrum for most people. It’s like a rich, octogenarian uncle. You love him, he’s insanely funny and provocative, he gives you really nice presents and just might leave you an Italian villa in his will. But he needs to be taken to the bathroom regularly, requires a lot of attention, is opinionated and makes you absolutely crazy when you have to take him to a fancy cocktail party because you never know when he’ll pass gas or say something really outrageous, both of which he does loudly.
On the one hand, we all have some gleeful anticipation of the season – the silly and heart-warming movies and TV specials, the decorations, kids singing carols at the mall and all those paid days off. And on the other hand, many of us dread the pressure and pace of Christmas cards, shopping, the crowds, and ultimately (gulp) the obligatory family gatherings.
This social psychosis complicates the season enough, but when you add in the rhetoric from the religious community The War on Christmas, Jesus is the Reason for the Season, etc. you introduce even deeper layers of self-condemnation and anxiety. What to do, what to do?
A good starting point is to unravel the multi-layered hairball of traditions and religious implications that have come to define Christmas. Like most of our modern heritage, there’s more to this kaleidoscopic than meets the eye. Once we can see what all is going on, then maybe we can bring some sanity and fun to the celebration of it.
The History of Christmas. Actually, we’re talking about the History of the Winter Solstice celebrations, which date back over 4000 years. Most of our “Christmas traditions” were originally rituals celebrated centuries before Christ was born. The giving of gifts, carnivals, parades, carolers going from house to house, holiday feasts, and church performances can all be traced back to the early Mesopotamians (1500 BC).
Persians, Babylonians, Scandinavians, Greeks, Romans and Egyptians all had elaborate rituals that were celebrated at the Winter Solstice intended to pay tribute to the mythological importance of the sun and to the perennial cycles of nature. But, don’t be too quick to dismiss the ancient traditions as being simply pagan rituals. In fact, they were VERY spiritually oriented.
It is true that the peoples that populated what is now the Middle East 3000 years before Christ were polytheistic they had numerous gods. But they were also VERY religious. A large part of their culture was focused on seeking to learn the will of the gods, and the early Winter Solstice traditions reflected that focus. The Romans decked the halls with holly and candles as a tribute to one of their most powerful gods, Apollo. The Scandinavians built huge bonfires and held feasts that lasted for days as a way to help their sun-god defeat the power of darkness. These bonfires and feasts are the beginnings of our famous “Yule” log – the “12 days of Yuletide” was a lengthy ceremony which heralded the power of their gods over the domain of evil.
These beautiful ceremonies and ancient traditions all sought to do what our modern Christian traditions now do celebrate the dominion of the supernatural forces of the cosmos over the earthly world of man. They sought to honor their gods, and sometimes even assist them, in the ongoing battle over darkness.
So, Who Put The “Christ” In Christmas In the First Place? Well, now, that’s an interesting, and not fully complete, historical detective story. The most popular conclusion by archeologists, biblical scholars and anthropologists, is that the pagan traditions were co-opted by the early Christian Church. In the first three hundred years after the death of Christ, there was no prescribed “feast” for the occasion of Christ’s birth. This was partly because no one actually knew when or where Christ was born and partly because the major Christian celebration was the Crucifixion and Resurrection. Some local monasteries and churches had their own “birthday” celebrations at different times of the year, but it wasn’t until the mid-4th Century AD that Christ’s birth became an official celebration, complete with a specific date.
Why did it happen then? Getting the diverse peoples of the Roman empire to reject their historical religions and raucous merriment in favor of the official religion of Christianity (so decreed in 350 AD) was no easy matter. Grudgingly, but inevitably, the church accepted the perennial revelry of its diverse citizenry (pagan though it was) and wisely decided to include those celebrations for their own agenda. In what many historians consider to be a stroke of public relations genius, in 320 AD, Pope Julius I proclaimed that the pagan celebration of the December 25th “Festival of the Sun” (Natalis Invicti, i. e. “The Nativity” ) would henceforth also celebrate the Birth of Christ – ta da! Enter the Official Birth Day of Christ.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia The Advent, by 402 AD the “Feast of the Birth of Christ” (the new interpretation of The Nativity) was practiced through out the Holy Roman Empire. The Nativity scene itself (you know, the livestock, the stable, etc. ) didn’t emerge for another 800 years. In 1223, St Francis of Assisi originated the manger scene based on his interpretation of some little-known ecclesiastical customs. Somewhere around this time, the donkey that Mary rode to Bethlehem emerged as a character in the Nativity.
But, from its inception, there was dissension within the Church about Christmas celebrations. For centuries, many conservative church leaders condemned the revelry and aggressively criticized the endorsement of the sun-worshippers traditions. When the Orthodox pilgrims migrated to the Americas in 1620, Christmas revelry and symbolism were outlawed. Back in England in 1645, Oliver Cromwell and his Puritans succeeded in outlawing “the heathen traditions” of Christmas celebrations throughout England. When Charles II returned to the English throne in 1660, he restored the popular holiday, but the custom had only scattered endorsement throughout the American colonies. After the Revolutionary War, many English customs, including the celebration of Christmas, fell out of favor entirely and didn’t begin to re-emerge in the United State until the 1800s.
When Americans did finally begin to embrace Christmas as a family holiday, old customs were unearthed. In the next 100 years, Americans built a Christmas tradition all their own that included pieces of many other customs, including decorating trees, sending holiday cards, gift-giving and the early Christian traditions and stories. In 1836, Alabama became the first state in the US to declare Christmas a legal holiday, but it wasn’t until 1907 that Oklahoma finally joined the club and became the last state to do so. Christmas was declared an official US holiday in 1870. The first “official” use of Christmas decorations to lure in shoppers was at a NYC department store in 1900.
So what does that mean today? Basically, it means that there is no historical “truth” to any of the familiar observations we’ve come to embrace, whether we’re talking about the pagan celebrations or the religious ones. They are all made up. Not much sense in fighting, or fretting, over any of them if you ask me.
No One Has Taken The Christ Out Of Christmas. He’s still there if you want Him to be, but it never has been His private domain. What’s the problem? The Church snaked on the pagans to begin with, and it was a pretty successful strategy. Today, more people around the world practice the Christian traditions than ever before. Isn’t that enough? Remember, the Romans tried for about 1,000 years to make Christmas a purely Christian holiday and all they did was divide and antagonize the millions of people for whom it means something different. Don’t make the mistake that old Cromwell made. Go ahead and have it your way, it’s a beautiful tradition. But, let everyone else enjoy it their way.
Yes, Christmas Is Also About the Money. And for those who shake their heads with disgust about the commercialization of it, you guys need a quick reality check. Christmas shopping is the single most significant economic cycle in America. Hundreds of thousands of businesses rely on if for their very existence. From a commercial health point of view, if it didn’t already exist, someone would need to invent it. The money that gets spent around Christmas, for everything from twinkley little lights to airline tickets and pretty new cars is the fuel that keeps our economy plugging along all year. Forget the new homes, it’s the HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS of dollars spent at Christmas that keep America economically strong.
Christmas has a huge positive impact on other aspects of our culture. People are nicer and more tolerant. There have been truces and cease fire’s called during times of war for the sake of Christmas. More than half the charitable donations collected for ALL organizations in the US roll in during the Christmas season. Yes, I know, some of that has to do with end of year tax breaks, but it also has to do with Salvation Army red kettles, angle trees, and Goodwill donations. It’s a time of year when people feel a greater sense of social conscience and charitable organizations benefit from that feeling of good will. Too bad we don’t pony up all year through the way we do at Christmas.
What’s wrong with people paying more attention to each other, or with being delighted by the decorations and the music? Let’s cover our yards with blow up Santas and mechanical reindeer. Let’s turn our living rooms into little magical wonderlands of jolly old elves and candles and angels. Maybe if we spent more time getting in touch with the kid in ourselves we wouldn’t have so much interest in polluting the planet and killing people who have different political or religious views than we do. Who cares why we have this expanded consciousness of good will? Whether it comes from a belief in a particular God (or gods) or whether it is simply a willingness to open ourselves up to the most benevolent parts of our nature, what difference does it make? IT’S ALL MADE UP! Anything that elevates man’s humanity to man is a GOOD thing, no matter where it comes from!
Now, about that family stuff. I know it can be a pain in the ass. But, you know what? At some core level, we all long for a connection to our roots and our past. Is it so much to ask of ourselves to set aside our electro-media-stimulus-fast paced-gotta-pay-the-rent-on-the-beach-condo-somebody-please-entertain-me addiction to the very things that destroy the peace and harmony in our lives? C’mon, you’ve got 364 other days that you can obsess over getting ahead and being good enough and worrying about every little ounce you put on this year. You can afford to spend a fraction of your oh-so-important agenda getting in touch with your bloodline. Even if they’re all intolerable ass-holes, so what? Practice forgiveness and acceptance.
If you don’t want to send Christmas cards, don’t. The mailman will love you. The way I see it, anyone who keeps a check-list of who sent Christmas cards and then makes some kind of judgment about it needs to get a real life. And as for all that pressure to buy gifts… GET OVER IT! It isn’t going to kill you to get off your butt and think about other peoples delight. And speaking of butts, it isn’t going to kill you to stop kissing those of people you don’t really want to buy gifts for but do. Buy gifts for people you want to buy them for and be as generous as you want to be. If you don’t want to buy a gift, don’t. Sometimes it may be appropriate to make some type of gesture, but there are LOTS of things you can do other than buy the latest electronic gadget or such. Flowers, plants, candy or fruit work great. And you can always make a donation to YOUR favorite charity in the other person’s name. The No. 1 Rule is to have fun with your gift buying and put some personal thought into it. The No. 2 Rule is NO SUFFERING ALLOWED! (By the way, if you happen to think that books make a nice Christmas gift, then I’ve got a great one for you. Check out my book at “Your MEGAgiNormous Rules . )
The “Time” Complaint. Not enough time, too much to do, blah, blah, blah. Look here, if you don’t have enough time to have fun at Christmas you’re just confused about what’s important. I’m pretty sure that when you’re lying on your deathbed one of the things you WON’T be saying is “Gee, I wish I’d spent more time at the office and less time enjoying Christmas. ” There are 525,600 minutes in a year, only about 1500 of which get devoted to really enjoying Christmas. What, are you crazy? Surely you can fit your hectic life into the other 524,000 minutes.
Christmas is too big to be confined to any single ideology. It belongs to all people and to all of history. It has endured for thousands of years because it brings people together and celebrates hope and renewal. It’s an excellent time of year that gives us permission to transcend our normal petty natures. We get to be kind and gentle, and care about others and do little things that let those others know we care. We get to have fun, darn it! What, your life is so full of fun you can’t stand anymore?
Stop fretting over what you perceive is wrong with it. It’s just stupid to turn it into a conflict or some type of litmus test that only serves to divide us. Take what you like from it and leave the rest. And let others enjoy it in their own way. There’s something for everyone in Christmas. It truly is the most wonderful time of the year, it we just allow it to be. Have a holly jolly one!
Spend a Traditional Christmas
In today’s high-tech, always-on-the-go world, there are many Christmas traditions that are gradually being lost. But Christmas is the perfect time to slow things down and get back to basics to really enjoy the season. There are three ways to have a traditional, old-fashioned Christmas.
Decorations are what make Christmas time special for many people. It is the favorite thing for people to do since the right decorations can set the mood for a traditional Christmas and let the whole family get involved in creating the Christmas spirit.
You can start your traditional Christmas with an old-fashioned Christmas tree. Traditional decorations were all hand-made. To create the decorations, such as stringed popcorn and chains made from colorful paper, take a day early in December to get the whole family together. And get everyone into the spirit by playing the Christmas music.
For setting the mood for Christmas, baking and cooking come a close second to the Christmas tree. Cookies, pies, and hot cider are all staples of an old-fashioned Christmas celebration. All the family members can take part in this activity, even the non bakers. They can help to decorate the sugar cookies. Even the kids can also help cut the cookie shapes before they are baked.
There are plenty of Christmas day traditions that can bring the old-fashioned fun to the family or friends. For example, you can find someone to play Santa Claus and deliver the presents for everyone in the family which adds the happy atmosphere for the holiday.
Make the time special for the gift exchange. Give everyone a chance to open the gift separately. At this time, people can watch their reactions, and gives everyone a better chance to show their appreciation.
These are Christmas traditions and these family traditions can be passed on from generation to generation, with each one adding their own extras. Have a traditional Christmas.
Christmas Questions????????????????????
My english homework is to answers these christmas questions:
Put them end to end and they would stretchfrom the Tower of London to the Pyramids of Egypt?
The mince pies we eat each christmas
The £20 notes taken from bank tills on christmas shopping day
The british isles could sink under the extra 158,000 tonnes we put on them each christmas. tonnes of what?
Tinsel
Human fat
Britain spends £450 million on them every christmas
Mince Pies
Chocolate
they’ve been on earth 9 million years longer than humans
Turkeys
Reindeers
Put end to end they would go almost 4 times around the world
The christmas wrapping paper bought each year
Toilet paper used on christmas day
5 million people in the UK take them at christmas
Indigestion tablets
Baths
Put end to end they would stretch to the moon
rolls of Sticky tape bought for christmas
christmas puddings we buy every year
if santa could deliver toys at christmas how many reindeer would he need?
200,000
210,000
215,000
When there are doors and windows why does the fat guy insist on squeezing down the chimney?
st nicholas was the patron saint of chimney sweeps
pagan legend about an earth goddess who arrivied via the chimney
doors hadnt been invented when he first started
how long did it take charles dickens to write ‘a christmas carol’
22 years
2 years
2 months
how long did it take for the book to become a hit?
slow at first but sold out in ten years
instant hit and sold out straight away
by the following christmas it had sold out
what did dickens say about the book?
I was a bit surprised – ive written better
Im amazed no-one else had the idea. id pinched it from an old scottish story
The greatest, i think, ive ever written
dickens made still more money by doing what?
travelling the country talking about it
making a record of the story and selling it
turning it into a panto and playing scrooge himself
what effect did dicken’s success have on him?
all the travelling and performing killed him
it made a jealous writer kill him
it made him so rich that his wife killed him to get his money
when dickens died it was a shock to the christams industry. one little girl said what?
does that mean father christmas is dead
does that mean tiny tim is dead
does that mean there’ll be no more christmas
THE NEXT ONES ARE TRUE OR FALSE
x in xmas stands for the cross jesus died on
In the middle ages you could by a ready cooked goose to take away for christmas
Tinsel’s put on a tree because it looks like spiders webs
christmas pudding was invented after the first christmas
rosemary (the herb) was thrown on the floor and trampled on by everyone
the popular song ‘Jingle Bells’ was specially written for Christmas
santa is dead and buried in italy
in the usa there is a town called santa claus
tinsel was invented as a christmas decoration
ducks in walmer, kent get a present every christmas
how many white christmases did london have in the 20th Century
2
7
13
an english law states that everyone should go to church on chritmas day on
foot
fire
their best behaviour
victorian postmen were nicknamed ‘robins’ because of their bright red uniforms. why were their uniforms red?
so they could be seen in the snow
it was the royal mail and red is a royal colour
if they were attacked and robbed the blood wouldnt show
in the netherlands the dutch santa is dressed as a bishop and rides through the sky on what?
reindeer
horse
angel
in 1841 gateshead had a colourful whatt?
a white christmas when snow fell 2m deep
a blue christmas when people turned blue from cholera
a red christmas when the town was covered in red brick dust
electric christmas lights were first used in america around?
1850
1880
1920
in 1932 king george V gives the british public its first what?
christmas message
christmas street-lights which he switched on at chelmsford
christmas firework display form buckingham palace
in 1880 so many christmas cards were being sent, the Post Office makes its first plea to the public to do what?
post early for christmas
dont waste post office time. do not send cards
deliver you own christmas cards and save the postman’s feet
rudolf the red nosed reindeer started out as and advertising campaign in 1939. Rudolf wasnt his original name was it
rollo
rambo
rumpo
reginald
ringo
in 1999 300 santas from the german city of berlin went on strike. why?
they wanted a pay rise
the government said they had to pay tax
they wanted christmas eve off work
how do we know santa has a white beard, red and white suit and black boots when no-one has ever seen him?
Thank you so much — huge help if you answer!!!
it didnt take me that long — ive already spent 2 hours looking
Okay So I Work at a Nursery School and Were Doing a “It’s a Small World” Theme for Christmas. ?
It’s for 3 yr olds and their family, to celebrate how cultures and the world comes together. Any idea? like decorations and games?














