While snowfall is a rarity and Santa Claus is seldom seen, Christmas at the Vatican is truly unique.
Cranes erect an enormous evergreen alongside the granite obelisk in St.
Peter's Square and workers nested in cherry picker buckets adorn the
tree with lights, ornaments and tinsel.
This year's tree is decorated with 3,000 gold and silver balls, and
1,500 white and yellow LED lights, which have lower energy consumption
and greater durability. The tree will be topped with a flashing star.
Construction of the larger-than-life nativity scene takes weeks and
yards of thick burlap keep curious eyes from seeing the final product
until its unveiling on Christmas Eve.
But even further from the public eye are the holiday traditions of the
papal household. While Pope John Paul II had close to an open-house
attitude, Pope Benedict XVI is much more discreet.
In addition to the public events, Pope Benedict celebrates Christmas privately with the members of his papal household.
"We celebrate Christmas together, listen to the holiday music, and
exchange gifts," he said in the recent book-length interview "Light of
the World."
The close-knit papal family includes Pope Benedict's two secretaries and
a small group of women from the Memores Domini lay community who care
for the papal apartment. Unfortunately, this holiday season is marked
with the loss of one of the pope's close collaborators, Manuela Camagni,
who died Nov. 24 after she was struck by a car.
A close friend of the pope still delivers traditional Bavarian food every Christmas season.
Thaddaeus Jospeh Kuehnel, a German banker in Munich, has spent the past
28 years hand delivering the pope's favorite sweets and sausages from
Bavaria.
Kuehnel told Catholic News Service
he was driving to Rome the week before Christmas to deliver Bavarian
sausages from the pope's favorite restaurant, Franziskaner; special
mustard; and sweets from the Zentis food company, which specializes in
marzipan and jams.
The papal goodie bag also includes cakes and cookies that cloistered
nuns baked specifically for the pope, Kuehnel said in a Dec. 8
interview.
He will load his car with five Bavarian Christmas trees for the pope and
will personally deliver the gifts and have dinner with the pope, he
said.
On Christmas Day itself, no special guests are expected and the main
meal, lunch, is made up of "Italian food," said Jesuit Father Federico
Lombardi, Vatican spokesman.
The pope's brother, Msgr. Georg Ratzinger, will arrive at the Vatican
Dec. 28 to spend a few weeks with the pope. Father Lombardi said Dec. 28
is the date then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger always would leave Rome for
Germany to spend the holidays with his brother, so they have kept the
same date of reunion.
All of the trees adorning the various Vatican offices and hallways,
including the pope's, are decorated by the technical services department
of the Vatican City governor's office, said Pier Carlo Cuscianna,
department director.
The department also provides the figurines and creche supplies for one
of the papal household's Nativity scenes, but the pope and his personal
assistants "put it together as a family," Cuscianna told CNS.
Father Lombardi said the pope has three different Nativity scenes in the
papal apartment: a large one in the hallway set up by the Vatican
workmen; one under the Christmas tree in the living room, where the pope
puts the baby Jesus just before celebrating Midnight Mass in St.
Peter's Basilica; and one in the dining room, which has belonged to the
pope for the past 45 years.
The large Nativity scene in St. Peter's Square is unveiled Dec. 24, and
while the pope can see it from his apartment window, he doesn't visit it
until after his New Year's Eve thanksgiving prayer service.
The core figures in the scene -- the Holy Family and the Magi -- come
from St. Vincent Pallotti, who had them on public display in a Rome
parish starting in 1842.
Another Nativity scene is on display inside St. Peter's Basilica. That
creche is constructed by the basilica's workmen, known as "sanpietrini,"
who compete with the workers in the square in trying to build the more
spectacular representation of Jesus' birth, one of the "sanpietrini"
told Vatican Radio.
Carlo Stella, one of the workmen in the basilica, said they try to
introduce new elements into the scene each year, and the 2010 addition
is a mechanical kneeling shepherd who lifts his hat before the Christ
child.
The wooden statues were carved by a German sculptor, but the Vatican
workmen fire and paint the clay chicken, ducks and sheep figurines
themselves, Vatican Radio reported.
About a dozen carpenters, bricklayers, plumbers and electricians work
two to three weeks straight to get it ready in time for Christmas Eve
when Pope Benedict will personally place the baby Jesus in the manger at
the end of Mass Dec. 24.
Almost every Vatican office has its own Nativity scene, some made from unusual materials.
The Swiss Guards, for example, use eight German beer crates for the
scene's base and an empty munitions box for the grotto to symbolize that
the only weapon a Christian needs is Christ.
SIC: CNS/INT'L