Brazil
has immigrants from just about any place you can mention.
So we've imported Christmas traditions from just about everywhere.
But
you’re busy today with your own traditions, right?
And I’m
also very occupied with my own.
So
how about if I just show you a few pictures of the sort of stuff that goes on down
here this time of year.
This photograph was taken at the 2012 Light
Festival in the City of Gramado, a city in Brazil’s southernmost state.
It bills
itself as the country’s largest Christmas celebration.
And runs
for 72 days, from the 1st of November until the 30th of January.
There’s
a huge program, a new event taking place almost every day during the entire period.
Concerts.
Stage
shows.
Parades.
Fireworks
and fun of all sorts.
And, as
befits the name, the whole town is lit up. I think it's safe to say that obody in Brazil does Christmas better than Gramado.
But some do it bigger. This is Gramado's Christmas tree. And, big as it is, it's dwarfed by...
...São Paulo’s. Erected in Ibirapuera Park, it’s 68 meters tall
(about 223 feet).
Rio
de Janeiro goes us one better. Theirs floats. And it's even larger – 85 meters (about 279 feet.)
But
Brazil’s granddaddy of all Christmas trees is in Aracaju, the
capital of the northeastern state of Sergipe. It’s a colossus that tops out at
over 110 meters (a little over 361 feet.)
Pretty impressive, huh?
Happy Holidays to All.
Leighton – Christmas Eve 2012
And a Happy Christmas, Merry Kwanzaa, and Happy New Year to you, Leighton! (Sorry - Hanukkah, the Winter Solstice, and the Mayan Apocalypse are over!)
ReplyDeleteI've got to run and spray artificial snow on my wire baobab Christmas tree to get into the right spirit. It's hot and humid here in Knysna today, pushing 30 degrees C (88F) with a light drizzle.
ReplyDeleteA merry Christmas and a healthy and happy New Year to all.
Wow, all those decorations remind me of my son's neighborhood in Houston! Merry Christmas, my friend, no matter where you are.
ReplyDeleteGreat to be reminded of him and this great post! Thanks, Annamaria.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Michael. We have been hearing a lot of news from Brazil in the States--about the politics, about the devastations of Covid, and the wanton destruction of the rainforest. the news brings Leighton to mind and makes me wish for his voice to weigh in on what is going on there. No matter if they were good or bad, he always made Brazil's events clear. I was happy to have found this beautiful post from happier times.
DeleteI think of Leighton every time I land on MIE... God rest his soul.
ReplyDelete