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Christmas only beginning for many

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  • Christmas only beginning for many

    Waterloo Region Record, Canada
    January 6, 2012 Friday
    Final Edition


    Christmas only beginning for many

    By Vanda Dobritoiu, Record staff

    Christmas may be over for many of us, but for some Orthodox
    congregations, it's just beginning.

    Waterloo Region is home to Greek, Armenian, Coptic (Egyptian),
    Eritrean, Ethiopian and Serbian Orthodox congregations. Most celebrate
    Christmas Day on Jan. 7; Armenians, on Jan. 6.

    About 2,000 people will gather at the Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in
    Kitchener today to celebrate Christmas Eve with Rev. Milan Jovanovic.
    The service, in Serbian, will be held from 6 to 7:30 p.m. followed by
    a dinner.

    On Saturday, there will be a Christmas Day service from

    10 a.m. until noon.

    Traditionally, a six-week fast takes place before Christmas, starting
    on Nov. 28. The fast allows only non-dairy products and fish.

    At St. Mary's Coptic Orthodox Church in Kitchener, a Christmas service
    will be held Saturday, from 7 p.m. to midnight, led by Rev. Athanasius
    Iskander. About 300 people will listen to the service in English along
    with a little Arabic, Coptic and Greek.

    Following the service there will be a communal meal of meat and poultry.

    For 40 days before Christmas, the faithful follow a regimen in which
    only vegetarian meals and fish are allowed.

    "The tradition surrounding Christmas is joy at the birth of Christ
    more than gift giving and feasting," said Iskander.

    In Cambridge, about 150 of the Armenian Apostolic Church members will
    celebrate Christmas today through a divine liturgy at

    11 a.m. The service will be in Armenian.

    Following the liturgy, coffee and Armenian pastries will be served.

    A traditional Christmas dinner will be served Sunday at the Armenian
    Community Centre in Cambridge, following the Sunday liturgy and water
    blessing at 10:30 a.m.

    Most Eastern churches celebrate holy days by the Julian calendar,
    established by Julius Caesar in 46 BC.

    Western churches follow a calendar refined by Pope Gregory XIII in the
    16th century.

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