色情视频

Students Explore Different Holiday Traditions

色情视频s international students uphold some of their home countries holiday traditions while learning about American ones.

Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Angela Moss, an international student from Nassau, Bahamas, looks forward to dancing on the islands this Christmas. (Photo: Michael Klitzing)
Angela Moss, an international student from Nassau, Bahamas, looks forward to dancing on the islands this Christmas. (Photo: Michael Klitzing)
As students finish final exams at 色情视频, Helene Guilguet is watching with mixed emotions as many of her international friends head to the airport to return home for the holidays. An exchange student from Institut d鈥櫭塼udes Politiques de Paris in the U.S. for a year, Guilguet had initially looked into the possibility of returning to her native Fontainebleau, France for Christmas.

When she saw the cost of a plane ticket, however, she decided to make other plans.

鈥淚鈥檒l just have to acknowledge the fact that I鈥檓 not going to have a typical Christmas with my family around the fireplace, eating good food," Guilguet said. "I'm fine with that, because this is a one-time opportunity. My family actually pushed me to stay here and enjoy it.鈥

Many are faced with a tough choice when winter break rolls around: go home to their native country or stay and experience new holiday traditions in the United States.

Return to Junkanoo

According to business management senior Angela Moss, Christmas in the Bahamas isn鈥檛 so different from what you find in the United States, though you鈥檙e more likely to find conch, crab or lobster as part of Christmas dinner on the islands as opposed to ham or turkey. It鈥檚 the day after Christmas where things really get different.

On Dec. 26, Boxing Day, Bahamians take to the streets for a daylong festival called Junkanoo, which celebrates the end of slavery. In Moss鈥 hometown of Nassau, New Providence, entire families pack buildings and line barricades along Bay Street to see dancers and brass bands in elaborate costumes perform alongside enormous, vibrantly-colored floats.

鈥淲hen they鈥檙e making music, they call it rushing," Moss said. "You literally dance the entire time. They rush all night until 10 or 11 o鈥檆lock in the morning, and that鈥檚 when the dancing stops.鈥

Then at New Year鈥檚, they do it all over again.

Moss, who is heading back to Nassau at the conclusion of finals, is excited to attend Junkanoo for the first time in two years.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know the last time I heard that music," Moss said.

First American Christmas

Computer science graduate student Niranjan Hegde has experienced Christmas before. In his native Bangalore, India, the city鈥檚 small but visible Christian minority celebrate with lights and festive food.

鈥淪ome of my Christian friends would come and give us cakes which they鈥檇 cook at home,鈥 said Hegde, who is Hindu. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of like what happens in the U.S., but not on such a large scale.鈥

Hegde will be getting his first real taste of the holidays in the United States by staying here during winter break It actually started last week, when he attended the office holiday party of the , where he works as a student assistant. He particularly enjoyed the lively 鈥渨hite elephant鈥 gift exchange, which he called the 鈥渒ing of the show.鈥

鈥淚t was very exciting because the entire culture is different,鈥 said Hegde, who plans to travel to 色情视频, Las Vegas and Arizona with his Indian roommates during winter break. "At any festival back home there are lots of pujas (an act to show reverence to a god) in addition to a lot of good, homemade food. But this was nice 鈥 it kept the delicious food part but added a lot of enjoyment.鈥

Far from France 

In her first holiday season in the United States, Guilguet said she mostly noticed similarities to the traditions of France, though there are some notable differences. For one, the holiday season - and the time people take off work to celebrate - is much longer in France. And the Southern California weather is a far cry from chilly Fontainebleau.

But there鈥檚 also a difference in intensity.

鈥淚 would say the Christmas spirit is more hardcore here,鈥 Guilguet said. 鈥淐hristmas is such a big thing here. Even compared to Paris, with all the lights and shops on the Champs-脡lys茅es, I feel like here it's even more."

Like Hegde, Guilguet is planning to travel around North America during her time off. She will explore Baja California and Mexico City and visit French classmates in Boston and Colorado.

It鈥檚 not time with her family in front of the warm fireplace, but it will be her only chance to experience a different kind of holiday season in the foreseeable future.

鈥淚鈥檓 going to have a lot of French Christmases in the next few years,鈥 Guilguet said. 鈥淚 can just travel around this time.鈥
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