Opinion | Enjoying Christmas doesn’t make you any less Chinese
- Local governments in at least four cities and one county in mainland China ordered restrictions on Christmas celebrations
- But believing in the beauty of Christmas does not diminish any passion we have for Chinese history and traditional values
My 2018 has been bumpy: lost jobs, broken relationships, failed investments, and finally a terrible injury from horse riding, with three broken bones and now three pieces of titanium in my spine.
Physically on the mend but spiritually down in the gutter, when Christmas was finally approaching, I felt desperately in need of a long conversation with Santa to make sure he would send me some gifts of peace and joy.
Yet Beijing is not exactly the best place to have such a hopeful conversation, especially not this year. A few nights before Christmas Eve, while driving through the city’s central business area and seeing fewer festive lights, I felt as if someone had stolen my Christmas. Naive as it might sound, this has become the reality in some cities.
Being a Christian, I have never expected to celebrate Christmas in China the same way as in other places where religion is more prevailing or at least, allowed. Mainstream Chinese culture and values are very much rooted in Confucianism as well as in thousands of years of history that departs from that of the West. We also now have an atheist government which holds on to a set of principles different to the original values of Christianity.
Celebrations in full swing in Beijing despite Christmas crackdown
Against all odds though, Christmas has become a popular holiday in China, especially for the millennial generation who grew up with the internet and imported pop culture mainly from the US and Europe. Christmas is more celebrated here commercially than as a religious day. Urban dwellers in China recognise Christmas as a happy occasion associated with glittering lights along city streets, lighthearted carols in office buildings and big discounts in shops. Few, except the Christian communities, would bother to learn or think about its religious origins.