From: b sabha <[email protected]>

From: Fr. Cedric Prakash sj 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>





CHRISTMAS IN JORDAN
                                                                     -          
Fr. Cedric Prakash sj*



Jordan has always been regarded as part of the Holy Land.  There are several 
holy sites here associated with Christianity; these include, the place on the 
River Jordan(Al-Maghtas) where Jesus was baptized by John the Baptist; the 
fortified hilltop(Machaerus) overlooking the Dead Sea, where John the Baptist 
was imprisoned and also executed; and Mount Nebo from where Moses looked onto 
the promised land. Jordan has also been known as the ‘land of peace’(Amman). An 
appropriate place to spend Christmas: the birth of our Saviour.

Christmas Day is a public holiday in Jordan There were the Christmas Masses in 
all Churches in Amman. I concelebrated at the vigil at the Church of St Mary of 
Nazareth in Sweifieh; the midnight mass at the Church of St Jean Baptiste de 
LaSalle in Jabal Hussein and the Christmas morning mass in the Church of St 
Mary of Annunciation in Jabal Luweibdeh.The Churches were fairly crowded; the 
congregations comprised people from different parts of the world: from New 
Zealand to Canada. However, at every Mass a sizeable section was from the 
Philippines and from India. A good percentage of the Filipinos work as 
domestics; several of the Indians are from Kerala, mainly nurses in the local 
hospitals, particularly in the prestigious Cancer Hospital here.

Every Mass was memorable. The singing was gutsy; the people’s participation was 
high. The Churches were festooned, with the crib and the Christmas tree having 
their places of prominence. The atmosphere was charged with the spirit of 
Christmas: as people wished one another, posed for photos and were high on 
‘selfies’

There was also a heavy dampener over Christmas: exactly a week earlier on 
December 18th, terrorist attacks in Al- Karak, the historic city in Southern 
Jordan, resulted in eleven fatalities and many more injured. The Jordanian 
authorities were taking no chances: all Churches were provided with heavy 
security on Christmas Day; public Christmas parties in hotels and clubs were 
also cancelled. Newspapers and the electronic media on Christmas Day and 
thereafter, highlighted the continued violence in different parts of the world 
and the total disregard that powerful people and even certain nations have, for 
a more peaceful and liveable world.

On December 26th, Fr. Michael Linden ,Superior and the Jesuit Center here in 
Amman, hosted an ‘at home’ for about twenty refugees, living in the city. Most 
of the refugees were Muslims from Sudan and were now living ‘alone’. It was a 
Christmas celebration in the true sense of the word: generously showing that 
there IS room in the inn, welcoming the ‘other’, sharing and caring! There was 
plenty of food and drink, singing and camaraderie and gifts for all. At the end 
of several hours of togetherness, one of the refugees summed it all saying, 
“Now I know what Christmas is all about: to make me feel wanted, accepted- like 
a human being!”

In his many messages these past couple of days, Pope Francis, has been 
painstakingly highlighting the significance of Christmas; particularly 
important was his homily at the midnight mass, when he said, “let us allow the 
Child in the manger to challenge us, but let us also be challenged by all those 
children in today’s world who are lying not in a crib, caressed with affection 
by their mothers and fathers, but in squalid “mangers that devour dignity”. 
Children who hide underground to escape bombardment, on the pavements of large 
cities, in the hold of a boat overladen with immigrants… Let us allow ourselves 
to be challenged by those children who are not allowed to be born, by those who 
cry because no one relieves their hunger, by those who hold in their hands not 
toys, but weapons”.

A powerful challenging message indeed for all us: in Jordan and elsewhere in 
the world, as we celebrate the Christmas Season!


                                                                                
                     26th December 2016
                                                                                
                       Amman, Jordan



* (Fr Cedric Prakash sj a Jesuit of the Gujarat Province is a human rights 
activist. He is currently based in Lebanon, engaged with the Jesuit Refugee 
Service(JRS) in the Middle East on advocacy and   communications. Contact: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> )



Fr. Cedric Prakash sj
Advocacy & Communications
Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) MENA Region
Rue de L'Universitie Saint-Joseph
Achrafieh 11002150 BEIRUT  LEBANON
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