Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EASING OF restrictio­ns for Christmas raises concerns in Europe.

- RAF CASERT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Angela Charlton, John Leicester, Dave Rising, Frank Jordans and Nicole Winfield of The Associated Press.

BRUSSELS — Please leave a chair empty at this year’s family Christmas dinner as a precaution, or face the possibilit­y of having that chair empty forever.

That’s the stark dilemma Belgium’s prime minister has set to urge smaller festive family gatherings as Europeans battle with containing the surging covid-19 pandemic over the holiday season.

Alexander De Croo argued that the country’s long-running, costly efforts should not be thrown away for the sake of a few warm and fuzzy hours exchanging gifts under the Christmas tree. “I would not want the progress of the past four weeks to be wasted because of four days,” he told legislator­s last week.

Europe’s nations are struggling to reconcile cold medical advice with a tradition that calls for big gatherings in often poorly ventilated rooms, where people chat, shout and sing together — providing an ideal conduit for a virus that has killed more than 350,000 people on the continent so far. These weeks it is the No. 1 cause of death in the European Union.

Yet the desire for contact with family is such that all the horrible realities can be briefly sidelined. In France, it took a letter addressed to Santa Claus to put it in perspectiv­e.

A year of pandemic and lockdown weighed so heavily on a 22-year-old student that, as a grown adult, he rekindled his youth and wrote again to the jolly children’s saint.

“For the end of this year, I’d simply like the family whose name I proudly bear to be reunited, and things to progressiv­ely return to normal,” wrote Alexis — Santa letters don’t usually involve a surname.

If families have not lost close ones to the pandemic, many have been unable to meet for much of the year when distancing had to do the job that it is hoped vaccines will do in 2021. Often grandparen­ts could not see their grandchild­ren, and family functions — even weddings and funerals — required minute planning and heart-wrenching choices on who would be excluded.

Hence the groundswel­l to hit the pause button, even for just a few days.

Britain, with the continent’s highest death toll at more than 58,000 yet a Christmas tradition unlike few others, could not resist the temptation of relaxation.

People are currently barred from visiting other households in much of the U.K and there are travel limits to high-infection areas.

All that will go overboard for five days over the holidays, when up to three households can form a “Christmas bubble” and members can move freely between them.

At the same time, hospital and care home staff across Europe feel their many sacrifices could be in vain if rules are eased too much. After all, this fall’s resurgence followed similar relaxation­s over the summer.

Although the European Union has no direct say in national Christmas restrictio­ns, EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, a former doctor, urged caution until vaccines become widely available.

“We must learn from the summer and not repeat the same mistakes,” she said. “Relaxing too fast and too much risks a third wave after Christmas.”

But even in her native Germany, led by Angela Merkel, social considerat­ions will prevail: A current rule that limits private gatherings to five people from up to two households, not including children, will be allowed to double to 10 people over Christmas.

Karl Lauterbach, a lawmaker from Merkel’s coalition and an epidemiolo­gy professor at the University of Cologne, said that “Christmas is of greater importance to people, therefore the planned easing of restrictio­ns at Christmas is the right course.”

But many of Europe’s scientists disagree. Steven Van Gucht, a virologist with Belgian government health group Sciensano said Friday that Germany’s Christmas rule is not about a reunion of 10 people.

“It is about hundreds of thousands, millions of meetings of 10 people,” he warned. “And the impact can be enormous.”

So what can be done? Some counterint­uitive suggestion­s emerge. Christmas dinner is possible — but with the core family in the dining room and grandparen­ts in the kitchen, says Dr. Remi Salomon of the Paris hospital authority.

“Don’t eat with them. If I give the virus to Grandma and Grandpa, that’s the worst thing of all. How would I live with that afterward?” he told France-Info network.

“If we let go too quickly, the virus will circulate again too quickly.”

That’s why Belgium’s De Croo spun his dark allegory of empty chairs from his legislativ­e pulpit. His nation of 11.5 million has been hard-hit, with more than 16,000 deaths. The country barely managed to keep its health system afloat by imposing curfews and closing bars, restaurant­s and nonessenti­al shops.

Italy, where the pandemic initially struck hard, is taking a hard line at Christmas as well. And a prime tradition is up for debate: Midnight Mass.

The government is reportedly seeking to negotiate with Catholic officials to hold Christmas Eve religious celebratio­ns earlier, before the 10 p.m. national curfew, though there’s also a proposal to extend the curfew to at least midnight around Christmast­ime.

The Vatican hasn’t released its Christmas celebratio­n schedule, but Pope Francis has celebrated Midnight Mass starting at 9 p.m. anyway for several years, and this year he’s expected to do so before just a handful of worshipper­s.

 ?? (AP/Michael Probst) ?? Foot traffic is light Friday evening along Roemerberg square in central Frankfurt, Germany. Usually the traditiona­l Christmas market is bustling at this time of year, but it was canceled because of the coronaviru­s. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1129euholi­days/.
(AP/Michael Probst) Foot traffic is light Friday evening along Roemerberg square in central Frankfurt, Germany. Usually the traditiona­l Christmas market is bustling at this time of year, but it was canceled because of the coronaviru­s. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1129euholi­days/.

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