Photo: Ileana Johnson |
We decorated it together with home-made paper baskets filled with hard candy, raisins, and small butter cookies, crepe paper garlands, small pretzels, an orange wrapped in fine tissue paper coming all the way from Israel, a few apples dangling from a string, and 12 red and green 3-inch candles clipped carefully away from overhanging branches that could catch on fire.
Mom’s hand-stitched table cloth made a convenient tree skirt. Two metal bars forged by hand helped Dad nail the tree to the floor at the foot of the couch where I slept in the living room that doubled as my bedroom.
I fell asleep and woke up every morning setting my eyes on the scented tree. It lasted two enchanted weeks before the dried needles fell all over the floor.
Christmas was lighting one of the 12 candles for a few minutes every night, careful not to set the tree on fire, basking in the soft glow while Daddy’s twinkly eyes were beaming with pride that he made his family happy once more. We were rich with love and God’s blessings.
Christmas was standing in shorter lines for freshly baked bread, butter, milk, cooking oil, flour, sugar, and the small pork roast mom always baked in the gas oven. Grandpa’s homemade smoked sausages with pretzels toasted on the stove top were always on the menu. Grandpa used to joke that life was so spectacularly good, even the dogs ran around with pretzels on their tails. Pretzels were sold by big bags, hard and stale, but toasting them on the stove made them taste just baked.
Christmas was Daddy opening the ceremonial bottle of red wine freshly brewed that year by cousin Mircea from Grandma Elizabeta’s vineyard grapes.
Christmas were the village carolers in hand-sewn folk costumes coming door to door, trudging through 3 ft. of snow, pulling a plough decorated with a real fir tree, singing traditional songs and snapping their whips in spite of the Communist Party moratorium, forbidding the observance of such religious traditions.
Christmas was sneaking at midnight to the village Orthodox Church with aunt Leana, the singing deacon, lighting candles and praying, surrounding the building when the crowd overflowed its tiny confines into the yard and the cemetery. The cold chilled us to the bone but the inside eventually warmed from our bodies, the candles, and the excitement of prayers and closeness to God.
Christmas was eating with my Mom and Dad, feeling full, happy, and loved in our tiny apartment, sometimes sharing meals with family members who had traveled far to be with us. The spare wool comforter aunt Nicuta had woven, a blanket, and set of sheets painstakingly hand washed would make cozy beds on the floor for the tired traveler – no fire place to light up, just the coils of steam heat which the government generously made sufficiently hot during Christmas to make up for the cold misery during the winter.
Christmas was peering in the shop windows at the glass ornaments we could not afford but I wished I had. They were made in Poland, whimsical fairy tale characters, no religious symbols of any kind, they were “verboten.”
Every Christmas I longed to have the same doll in the window at Omnia department store, dressed with miniature detailed clothes, real curly hair, blue eyes, and eyelashes. I never asked my Dad because Mom said it cost three months of his salary. I still had my raggedy cloth doll aunt Stella, the village seamstress, had made for me when I was two years old. When my first child was born, Dad mailed her a large doll similar to the one I had longed for. The doll was so big, it stayed in a corner untouched. My spoiled children had too many other toys to play with and never appreciated the sacrifice their Granddad had made in sending such a gift of love.
On Saint Nicholas Day, December 6, I would put my boots outside the door, hoping that they would be filled with candy in the morning and not coals. Grandpa had a wicked sense of humor – he would sometimes fill one boot with switches and another with candy and a chocolate bar. Chocolate was always in short supply and hard to find.
Photo: Ileana Johnson |
The warm adobe style fireplace built from mud bricks mixed with straw cast a dancing glow on the tree decked with tokens of food, something our heathen Roman ancestors did during the celebration of Saturnalia. On December 17, the polytheistic Romans celebrated Saturnus, the god of seed and sowing, for an entire week. As Christians, we celebrated the birth of Christ and the religious traditions in our Orthodox faith, in spite of the communist regime forcing the transformation of Christmas into a secular holiday.
When my children were born, Christmas became a tradition of toys and happiness seen through squeals of innocence and twinkly eyes when unwrapping a favorite game, book, toy, stuffed animal, or bike. I taught my children to be charitable and to share with other children who were less fortunate than we.
I decorate my Douglas fir with beautiful lights and shiny ornaments now. My heart fills with loving and longing memories of glowing Christmases past and of family members lost who made our Christian traditions so special.
I hope and pray that American Christmas traditions will be passed on to future generations to light up the season of faith, family, and charity.
Note: An abbreviated version of this article appeared in my first book, Echoes of Communism, 2010 edition.
Dear Ileana,
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful description. Thank you for sharing your memories and the love your family shared!
When you described your Christmas tree, you made me smile! Where we live now is where I grew up. It is the last piece of land which was part of my grandfather's farm.
Back 60+ yrs. ago, we lived alone on this modest hilltop without any neighbors close by. We were surrounded by vacant fields owned by one of our neighbors who lived almost 1 mile east of us. Sometimes in the vacant fields, we could find a white pine tree, something we could use as our Christmas tree. My parents always made a point of decorating the tree on Christmas Eve so when my brother and I awoke, we'd come downstairs and find the beautiful, decorated Christmas tree with many familiar ornaments.
Fast-forward to Christmas 1980. My father died unexpectedly on 11.21.1978. While dad was in ICU at St. Joseph's Hospital in Houston, we met another family from Houston whose dad died one day before my dad died. We got to know one another since we spent approx. 2 weeks together in the ICU waiting room. Sadly, this same family's mother died at the same hospital close to the same date as their father died, one year later.
The next Christmas which was 1980, my mother invited the two sisters to come here and spend Christmas with us. One of the sisters was a flight attendant so traveling by airplane was no problem for her.
I will never forget the younger sister (who was close to my age) offered to go to the field with me to find a tree. We found one right behind our house and I thought it was perfect. My friend Robbie laughed saying "This looks like a Charlie Brown tree!" I was shocked. I wasn't quite sure what she meant.
In MY eyes, our Christmas trees past and present looked beautiful. Our trees were never perfect and we never paid anything for them. I must admit, her observation/critique, although expressed with laughter not intended to hurt me, I was still surprised. We dragged the tree back here and we decorated it with her older sister and my mom.
Beauty IS in the eyes of the beholder! My older brother and I loved our Christmas trees! Your description Ileana took be back to 1958 and onward. I think I barely remember Christmas from when I was 3 yrs. old and onward. I appreciate the care you take in creating your descriptions because they DO take me back to a time and place I loved long ago. Thank you very much!
I am very grateful that my husband Chip and his family observed the same traditions as we. Chip grew up in a large Roman Catholic family. I grew up as Protestant and later became a Roman Catholic convert. The Ritas purchased their tree on Christmas Eve and their parents decorated the tree during the late night so that when Chip and his siblings awoke, there was the beautifully decorated Christmas tree! Chip and I continue that tradition to today. We always decorate our tree on Christmas Eve. We usually keep it up until mid-late January. We make a point to water it daily so that it is less likely to become a fire hazard.
Thank you Ileana for taking me back to times I remember and will always cherish!
Love,
Virginia