Celebrating Yuletide Guyanese style, with pepper pot, black cake, Soca carols
The infectious Christmas lyrics recorded by legendary Guyanese calypsonian, John Slingshot Drepaul, always bring nostalgic feelings to nationals, who blare the jingle as they prepare for the festive season.
Whether cooking, hanging curtains, baking black cake, or wrapping presents, Slingshotโs music always evokes the true Christmas spirit Guyanese love, enjoy, and cherish so much, especially when they spend it at home.
Thereโs nothing like โmehโ home on Christmas morning, liming with โmehโ friends and family, greeting everyone around, eating, dancing getting down, spending Christmas in Guyana.
The stimulating song โ โChristmas in Guyanaโ goes on to say โ โwatching all the little children running up and down, playing excitedly with their toys, making sure โmehโ get โmehโ share of curry goat and rum, and playing dominos with the boys.
โThereโs nothing like home for Christmas in Guyana, everyone there playing Soca and dancing, masquerade band coming around, mother sally prancing downโฆ Merry Christmas Ho!ho!ho!โ
Photo by Tangerine Clarke
Many from diasporas around the world who do not make it to the homeland for a Merry Christmas, reminisced about โbreaking up the houseโ (rearranging furniture) Christmas eve night, getting up next day to โput away,โ (decorate), the fresh smell of paint, hanging of fairy lights, laying down linoleum, and varnishing the floor.
Facebook friend, Paula Stanton, said her American family do not understand the concept of โbreaking up the house and the wonderful surprise of seeing it all come together when you wake up Christmas morning.โ
Donna Cato added, โMy daughter, too, does not understand, but when I am finished, she says mom the house feels lighter and nicer.โ
Photo by Tangerine Clarke
โBelieving Santa was real and waking up on Christmas morning to see the presents he left under the Christmas tree,โ said Gillian Best Hamiliton, is a delight she cherishes.
โIt is a joy to start the season by window shopping,โ said Ragamuffin Pollard.
โWindow shopping with the entire family and cousins and more cousins after eating Brown Betty ice cream was joyful,โ he added.
โWe liked checking out everybody elseโs Christmas curtains. People smiling and courteously wishing merry Christmas left and right, the sounds of caroling around Kitty, Georgetown, ending up at the vicarโs feast of sweets,โ said Pollard.
โLike the time when I was the designated angel leading carolers and stepped one knee up in a puddle earning the nickname โthe Blackfoot angel,โ which my neighborhood never let me forget, were good times,โ he shared.
For Zarena Z. Aliโs family, the entire house had to be scrubbed clean. โScrubbing the house inside out, sewing plastic window blinds, (curtains), re-staining the chairs, and washing the butter to bake black cake, are great memories.โ
She said, โfinding a suitable green shrub and making our own Christmas Tree, watching the masquerade band with a โbull cowโ dancing down, mailing out Christmas cards, and the classic morning meal of Pepper Pot and homemade bread,โ are the traditions Ali bring to mind.
Photo by Tangerine Clarke
Phillipa Morrish, who adores the spirit of celebrating Christmas, go all out to transform her home into a festive paradise with a nativity scene, three Christmas trees, and decorations to fill her heart, and the hearts of friends of family. She loves Yuletide.
This year, Morrish decorated with a Victorian village, as a tribute to Guyanaโs British history.
Brendo Freso, enjoyed decorating the Christmas tree with her mom on Christmas Eve night, while Joy Williams was eager to wake up on Christmas morning to lots of gifts under the tree, and sitting down with family for a delicious dish of Pepper Pot with bread.
The children of Green Acres School in Georgetown welcomed the season with a colorful Christmas parade, to celebrate elements that make the season so festive and nice. Some were dressed as Santa Claus, others were Elves, the Grinch, and the Christmas Tree.