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284 pages, Hardcover
Published March 23, 2023

🎄 Unto All of Us a Child is Born - Jerry Pinto: Fellow Mumbaikar Jerry Pinto's essay resonated with me every step of the way. It is written in his trademark tongue-in-cheek humour covering the whole story of the birth of Jesus The only point on which I firmly disagree with him is that rose cookies (‘kokisan’ as we call them in Konkani) aren't plate fillers; I love them! - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
🎄 Christmas in Many Flavours - Madhulika Liddle: Isn’t it a good sign when both the editors of this book made it to my favourites? Liddle’s essay touched my heart (and stomach) so much! It brought out the beauty and the variety of an "Indian" Christmas. I would have rated it higher had it not seemed so much like a Wiki entry at times with multiple lengthy lists. - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
🎄 Cake ki Roti at Dua Ka Ghar - Madhulika Liddle: Another winner by the co-editor. I loved the content, but disliked the randomness of the narrative. A bit of structure would have made this an easy five star for me, given how much its points connected with me, especially the one about the distorted idea that non-Christian Indians have about us Christian Indians. - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
🎄 I'm Dreaming of a Goan Christmas - Vivek Menezes: A beautiful essay touching upon how truly multicultural the Indian community is, and how the communal elements are threatening this harmony across religions. Poignant and supported by historical data. - ⭐⭐⭐⭐✨
🎄 In Search of an East Indian Christmas in Mumbai - Deborah Rosario: The perfect mixture of customs, information, nostalgia, and insight. If even half of the essays had been this good, this book would have crossed over a 4.5 stars average. - ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
🎄 Did Your First Christmas Cake Come Out of an Ammunition Box Too? - Easterine Kire: Loved this because it made me aware of a practice I had never heard about. A perfect representation of the innovative Indian “jugaad”. I cut half a star only because it didn't tell me WHERE this happened! - ⭐⭐⭐⭐✨
🎄 A Village Christmas - Damodar Mauzo: Konkani is my ‘mother tongue’, the language of my parents and the language in which I speak to my kids. But as it is one of the less-spoken languages in India, there are very few Konkani writers who hit the big league in regional fiction. As such, this Jnanpith Award-winning Konkani writer (The Jnanpith Award is India's highest literary honour) has been on my reading radar since a long time. My first experience of Damodar Mauzo’s writing showed me why he is so acclaimed. There’s such a down-to-earth beauty and passion in his words! This essay, translated to English by Jerry Pinto, is a nostalgic account of a harmonious celebration of all festivals in a Goan village, and contains an important message for all those who seek to divide us based on religion. This line gave me goosebumps: “When people call Majorda a Christian village, it angers me. Does a village have a religion? Can a village have a religion?” A easy five-star, even if it weren’t for my Konkani bias. - ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
🎄 How India's Pluralistic Past Shows the Way Forward - Manimugdha S. Sharma: This will be an eye-opening write-up to many who believe the Bollywood and political version of Indian Christianity. (Contrary to common misconception, Christianity came here not with the colonial powers but through Apostle Thomas – aka “Doubting Thomas” – in 52 CE.) Loved the history and the focus on our historical unity across religions. - ⭐⭐⭐⭐