Christmas in Phnom Penh
Christmas Dinner
Everyone worked all day on Christmas Day and then the Maryknoll family plus a  few of the regulars who join us on Wednesdays got together for a Christmas  dinner of turkey and all the trimmings. Quite good! We had about thirty people,  just about the limit we can handle at our house. By 8:00 PM people were already  heading home because the next day it was back to work. 
And this is the end of the Christmas 2002 reporting!
Christmas in Phnom Penh  
Christmas Eve Mass
Christmas Day is a  regular working day here in Cambodia so instead of a Christmas morning mass, we  decided on a Christmas Eve mass at 6:00 PM. That gave people barely time enough  to get home from work but also allowed the mass to finish before it was really  late and more dangerous on the streets after dark. A lot of our regular  Saturday-night church-goers had gone "home" to the Philippines, Australia,  Europe, and North America, but the church was still more than full with many new  faces. Students from the religious education program acted out the gospel, and  after mass people were invited to soft drinks and conversation on the front yard  of the center .
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Each year John and Kathy Tucker dress up in full Santa Claus regalia and visit  the various Maryknoll group homes for AIDS patients and for children with  developmental disabilities. None of them have a clue what Christmas is all  about, but they certain enjoy the arrival of Santa's jeep, this year with the  addition of Elf Ed McGovern! Here Santa puts some gifts under the tree at the  Maryknoll center house and then poses with our kitchen staff. Charlie found  himself restocked with peanut butter and jelly, thanks to SantaOn the Sunday before Christmas, there is always a lot going on at the Maryknoll  sisters' house. Earlier in the afternoon children from the neighborhood and the  kids of the motorcycle drivers are invited over to decorate Christmas cookies.  They all go home with gifts and bags of candy. Then at supper time, the big  Maryknoll kids come over for a pizza supper. This year we had several Korean  guests, friends of Cho Hae In, a Maryknoll associate priest from the Seoul  diocese.The five major international Christian congregations held a joint Christmas  service again this year. Pictured are the congregation and children's choir  (above); two of the prayer leaders (left); and the regular and Filipino choirs  (below). About 425 people from many nations attended the service held in a hotel  ballroom

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Today was supposed to be a general staff meeting for the Disability Action  Council but last week the director suggested that we take a boat ride together  instead, in honor of the Christmas season. None of the staff are Christian,  except for the three of us ex-patriates seconded to DAC from other  organizations, but everyone thought it was a grand idea. 
We had a three-hour trip upriver, farther up than I had ever been before. The  boat stopped at its turnaround point at a well-organized river village where we  saw local women weaving silk material in beautiful traditional Khmer designs.  The village was full of children who provided the only connection with Christmas  that I could make on this trip.Christmas Day itself is a work day in Cambodia where few of the Cambodian people  would know what Christmas is all about. In the foreign community, though, some  Christmas events take place. Some NGOs have parties for their staffs, schools  have parties in the classrooms, and the odd few public events are scheduled. One  of those took place last night when the Filipino choir who sing at the Saturday  night mass of the English-speaking Catholic community held a Christmas song  session at the Sunway Hotel. It had been announced at the mass last Saturday and  five of us Maryknollers decided to go to show our support for the choir.  Unfortunately the choir's announcement failed to mention that reservations were  needed, the music program was in conjunction with a buffet dinner, and there was  a $6.50 charge. We finally got in and sat in extra chairs set up in the aisles  (there are no such things as fire-safety rules here). The photo shows our group  lighting our candle for the singing of Silent Night .
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