Christmas in
the good old days
By
Noel Crusz
Here I am on the ocean liner THE PACIFIC SKY in
the Coral Sea on a pre-Christmas voyage from Sydney to New Caledonia.
The memories
of how we celebrated Christmas in Sri Lanka come back.
The house was
painted, the walls white-washed with low black tar edgings all round
the rooms and the chairs were re-cushioned. The travelling tailor
came home, measured the rooms, and made the curtains on our old
Singer sewing machine.
Red Mansion
polish was applied on the cement floor, which got a shine from a
heavy handled brush. Cake making was a ritual, where my mother laid
the rules and we offered to help. We ate a good many cadjunuts and
raisins when no one was looking. There was the wooden ice-box with
sawdust and a heavy metal covering for slabs of ice.
Two weeks before
Christmas the children were taken in a hired car to Pettah's Main
Street. The well known shoe store was T.G.M. Perera's and we were
fitted with the best shoes. Even Jamaliya's Shoe Store in Wellawatta
took in orders for boots, the teenage fashion of the thirties.
Before World
War II, there was Ono & Co. This Japanese toy shop owned by
a Mr. Numano had a wonderful array of toys from Japan.
The Main Street
tailor measured us, as we provided China silk for our shirts. The
silk of course was bought in early November from the Chinese peddlars
who plied their trade on bicycles. Some of the Chinamen carried
their bundles on their back, with a heavy stick for balance. Main
Street in Pettah in the early thirties was very narrow. It had to
cope with the tram lines and bullock carts.
Our Christmas
shopping included a visit to X.P. Paivas for lunch and ice cream.
Round the corner was The Rupee Store, where for one rupee you could
buy many things.
Millers, Cargills,
Simes and Whiteaways dominated the Fort shopping. We went to Hunters
and Siedles and The Roche Brothers shops for many items.
I cannot forget
the shopping in the golden mile of Colpetty, Bambalapitiya and Wellawatta.
The Wickremesinghe Brothers headed by George imported the famous
Mende Radiograms from Germany.
We cannot forget
the well known shops in Wellawatta: M.P. Gomez, A.W. Jansz, J.B.
De Pinto, Nooranis, Jamaliya's Boot Works and many famous boutiques.
As a boy I went with my father to A.W. Jansz's store near High Street.
We bought Dutch Edam Cheese, as an accompaniment for the Christmas
breudher. I still remember Jansz bellowing to a tardy salesman:
"What are you standing there shooting 'papaws'! Jansz sold
liquor and all types of hardware. We bought wire-netting to build
chicken coops.
The shopping
spree in Colombo included a visit to Pilawoos for a treat of buriyani.
Elephant House played a significant part in booking Christmas cakes.
Yet there was one last item that was in the shopping list: Fireworks.
We gazed in wonder at the array of fireworks in the Fireworks Palace
opposite the Fort Railway Station. Sparklers, Roman candles, sky
rockets, Catherine wheels, squibs, crackers of every size were there
in the showcase.
Christmas was
on. The cake was made and sent to the bakery. The servants were
pounding and roasting, making string hoppers and pittu, cutting
up A.W. Jansz ham, with cutlets and seeni sambol.
Churches saw
long queues at the Confessional. I remember well the Allied troops
celebrating Christmas in Ceylon. In the Seminary in St. Francis
Zavier in Bambalapitiya, the African troops came for Midnight Mass.
In Bandarawela, the Italian prisoners of war, brought tears when
they sang the Adeste Fideles.
As I look out
now at a placid sea, the Christmas memories for an expatriate find
no sequence. There were Christmas trees from up-country estates
sent by train. Carol parties on Christmas Eve went about in lorries.
Arthur Van Langenberg helped me to stage a massive Christmas pageant
on Christmas Eve at St. Lucia's Cathedral Square in Kotahena. There
were hundreds in the cast.
The beautiful
teenager Camille Cramer played Mary, as she was seated astride on
a real donkey, led by a young doctor, who played Joseph. As Gerry
Paul hit the Police drums, the donkey took off, with Joseph clinging
to its tail, and the audience, including Mary in ripples of laughter.
As midnight
came, there were a never-ending sound of fireworks and sky rockets,
that would surely have awoken the Christ Child. Carol parties came
to the doorstep. At Kawdana, children in costume came around singing
Sinhala carols. A hand cart with an illuminated crib was the backdrop.
They even brought a portable harmonium.
Of course the
homes saw families sitting for a feast of string hoppers, ham, breudher,
cheese, mulligatany and cake. There were presents near the family
Christmas tree.
The postman,
the dhoby, the baker, the fishmonger were the regular Christmas
early birds. They all got cash, plus a tot of arrack or gin.
As children
we waited eagerly for the Sakkili Band. These were the poor men
and women who carried the night soil buckets, before the water closet
and drainage era. Many householders were generous in the cash tips
they gave them. An extra pint of arrack helped them in their dance!
The famous Kukul Charlie also made his trek down all the lanes.
Those were the days when Donovan Andree dominated and enriched the
local entertainment scene. Donovan brought down the Ice Follies.
Soon night
came once more. We lit our fireworks, saw the servants lighting
the big Roman candles and sky rockets. The radio blasted yuletide
melodies.
As my ship
went on its voyage, I was dreaming not of a 'White Christmas', but
of the Christmases I spent in Sri Lanka. Nowhere in the world did
I ever experience Christmas, as the Ceylonese prepare and enjoy
it. I can still hear the hustle and bustle in Pettah, the cries
of the street vendors and the pavement hawkers. The wailing of the
mamma-pappa balloon, the rattle of the toy-carts, and the delicacies
from the gram sellers are unforgettable.
An Aussie Christmas
is pea-nuts compared to a Christmas in Ceylon. I do not wonder why
my parents christened me Noel, and my sister Noeline.
I am reminded
of J.P. de Fonseka who gave lustre to Christmas writing. He edited
the Christmas issue of St. Mary's parish bulletin in Bambalapitiya.
He wrote: "St. Thomas Aquinas theology avoids the Christmas
cake and wine and toys and crackers and family reunions of children
and parents... He considers the mystery of the GOD man, without
whom the Christmas wines rejoice not and the crackers crack in vain."
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