Holiday Traditions!

Chelleyyyyy

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I'm curious about Dominican Christmas traditions... what's the typical Christmas morning look like in Dominican?
 

dulce

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Christmas Eve (buena noche) is when the families will gather to eat drink and be merry!
On Christmas morning the adults are sleeping late because they are pretty much hung over. When they start moving around again they will eat leftovers from the night before. After they eat they will start partying again.
The Christmas season is a great time to be in the DR. Plenty of excuses for non stop parties with family and friends.
The kids Christmas is celebrated in January.
 
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LatinoRican

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As Dulce wrote, the Christmas season is a very festive one in the Dominican Republic. It spans from before Christmas Eve to after Three King's Day on January 6th. In the DR, children still receive their gifts from the Three Kings (not Santa Claus) despite the influence /proximity of the U.S.A.
 

AnnaC

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Here is a good post from our Dominican Natasha made way back in the early years of DR1

Christmas is Christmas, celebrated on Dec. 25th. Three Kings Day (Dia de Reyes) is celebrated on Jan. 6th. This is when children receive gifts as opposed to ChristmasDay in the US. Yes, more and more Dominican families exchange gifts on Dec. 25th. (most likely because of the internalisation of the "white beared fellow", foreign nationals living in the DR, and because so many Dominicans living abroad have adopted Dec. 25th as the day to exchange presents). Nevertheless, Three Kings Day is still KING and that tradition will remain (hopefully).

Kids all over anxiously await the arrival of the Three Kings the night before - Jan. 5! Instead of leaving milk and cookies for Santa, us Dominican kids would gather an old shoebox and fill it with grass (for the camels) and mints for the Kings. We would place it under the bed. The next morning, we would find our presents under the bed, minus the shoebox, of course ;-) Growing up, I used to try to "cheat" and fight sleep as hard as I could in order to "catch" the Reyes and the camels come in!!!

As far as celebrating Christmas, well Dominicans don't really have a huge Christmas dinner like you have here in the US. That gastronomical ordeal is done the night before, on Christmas Eve (Nochebuena). Many Europeans do this too.

Christmas Eve dinner is even more important than Christmas Day itself. If you are a Dominican who is alive, you HAVE to be with your loved ones on this night! Christmas Eve dinner consists of a myriad of dishes, too many to mention here, but to give you an example, there is ALWAYS pasteles en hojas. There just isn't a Christmas Eve dinner without PASTELES. Think of tamales - but instead we make them with ground plantains and other tubers and fill them with ground beef. We then wrap them with banana leaves and boil them...ummmm delicious.

Christmas Eve is a VERY festive night. People drink, dance, sing, and just plain party throughout the whole day. Many people also choose to go to midnight mass (my folks did anyway). On Christmas Day people are just too bloated (from the "jartura" they had the night before) to really do much. You ussually eat the leftovers from Nochebuena (which you will probably have for another month or so). Kids are dressed in their best clothing on Christmas Day and people just hang out with friends and family throughout the day.

You think you are done? NO! This whole gastronomical dinner is again repeated on New Years Eve/Dec 31st. After dinner, people welcome the New Year with their loved ones and then the young (and not so young) hit the clubs or go to people's parties. I have to say that I have never seen other groups of people welcome the New Year and celebrate the whole Christmas season the way Dominicans do :) Hope this helps!

Regards,
Natasha
 
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Chelleyyyyy

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I love it! Natasha's post was great :) My heritage is Hungarian, so growing up we always celebrated on Christmas Eve.
Anyone know the origin of the Three Kings? This is new to me .. never heard of it! The grass and mints made me smile; it's super cute!
 

La Mariposa

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I love it! Natasha's post was great :) My heritage is Hungarian, so growing up we always celebrated on Christmas Eve.
Anyone know the origin of the Three Kings? This is new to me .. never heard of it! The grass and mints made me smile; it's super cute!

Have you ever heard about the Three wise men celebrated January 6th??
 

Keith R

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Here is a good post from our Dominican Natasha made way back in the early years of DR1

Christmas is Christmas, celebrated on Dec. 25th. Three Kings Day (Dia de Reyes) is celebrated on Jan. 6th. This is when children receive gifts as opposed to ChristmasDay in the US. Yes, more and more Dominican families exchange gifts on Dec. 25th. (most likely because of the internalisation of the "white beared fellow", foreign nationals living in the DR, and because so many Dominicans living abroad have adopted Dec. 25th as the day to exchange presents). Nevertheless, Three Kings Day is still KING and that tradition will remain (hopefully).

Kids all over anxiously await the arrival of the Three Kings the night before - Jan. 5! Instead of leaving milk and cookies for Santa, us Dominican kids would gather an old shoebox and fill it with grass (for the camels) and mints for the Kings. We would place it under the bed. The next morning, we would find our presents under the bed, minus the shoebox, of course ;-) Growing up, I used to try to "cheat" and fight sleep as hard as I could in order to "catch" the Reyes and the camels come in!!!

As far as celebrating Christmas, well Dominicans don't really have a huge Christmas dinner like you have here in the US. That gastronomical ordeal is done the night before, on Christmas Eve (Nochebuena). Many Europeans do this too.

Christmas Eve dinner is even more important than Christmas Day itself. If you are a Dominican who is alive, you HAVE to be with your loved ones on this night! Christmas Eve dinner consists of a myriad of dishes, too many to mention here, but to give you an example, there is ALWAYS pasteles en hojas. There just isn't a Christmas Eve dinner without PASTELES. Think of tamales - but instead we make them with ground plantains and other tubers and fill them with ground beef. We then wrap them with banana leaves and boil them...ummmm delicious.

Christmas Eve is a VERY festive night. People drink, dance, sing, and just plain party throughout the whole day. Many people also choose to go to midnight mass (my folks did anyway). On Christmas Day people are just too bloated (from the "jartura" they had the night before) to really do much. You ussually eat the leftovers from Nochebuena (which you will probably have for another month or so). Kids are dressed in their best clothing on Christmas Day and people just hang out with friends and family throughout the day.

You think you are done? NO! This whole gastronomical dinner is again repeated on New Years Eve/Dec 31st. After dinner, people welcome the New Year with their loved ones and then the young (and not so young) hit the clubs or go to people's parties. I have to say that I have never seen other groups of people welcome the New Year and celebrate the whole Christmas season the way Dominicans do :) Hope this helps!

Regards,
Natasha

Sigh. I miss Natasha's always informative posts. :ermm:

Thanks, Anna -- my first thought too was to dig out Natasha's old posts on holidays in the DR. Maybe they should be made "seasonal sticky's"?
 

AnnaC

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Jan 2, 2002
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Sigh. I miss Natasha's always informative posts. :ermm:

Thanks, Anna -- my first thought too was to dig out Natasha's old posts on holidays in the DR. Maybe they should be made "seasonal sticky's"?

I miss her too. I was cleaning out my computer today and came across it but forgot to post it. Luckily with all my skills :cheeky: I was able to do a search and found it again this year.
 

LatinoRican

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Apr 11, 2004
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Los Reyes Magos

This to Chelley:
The tradition of the Three Wise Men or Three Kings was brought to the DR by the Spanish. It relates to the biblical story of three wise men (magi) or kings as some stories would have it, who from their individual countries saw a star, got together and followed it to find the Christ child in a manger. Their gifts were gold, myrrh, and incense. Due to their long jouney, they arrived on Janurary 6th with their gifts. Most hispanic countries honor this tradition rather than the one having to do with the white, fat man in the red costume.
;)
 
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Christmas Eve (buena noche) is when the families will gather to eat drink and be merry!
On Christmas morning the adults are sleeping late because they are pretty much hung over. When they start moving around again they will eat leftovers from the night before. After they eat they will start partying again.
The Christmas season is a great time to be in the DR. Plenty of excuses for non stop parties with family and friends.
The kids Christmas is celebrated in January.

Christmas Eve is Nochebuena in Spanish (one word). All over Latin America, the celebration is on the 24th and while kids participate, it's more of a family celebration and everyone stays up until midnight (partying goes on well into the morning for many). Kids don't believe in Santa Claus (Papa Noel) but in the Three Kings (celebrated on January 6th).
 

dulce

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Jan 1, 2002
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Thank you for correcting my Spanish. Many times I forget to reverse the words.
Thanks to Anna for posting Natasha's old post too. She was a great asset to the board. I miss her posts also.