East Bay Times

Services move online and people stay home

- By Elliot Spagat and Frances D’Emilio

ROME >> Families that usually reunite on Christmas over a hearty, lingering meal celebrated apart Friday, services shifted online, and gift exchanges were low-key in one of the most unusual and subdued holiday seasons in decades.

The coronaviru­s left almost no one unaffected.

Patricia Hager, 60, delivered homemade caramel rolls for breakfast to family and friends in Bismarck, North Dakota, a state that didn’t get hit until later in the pandemic but was struck hard. It seemed every time she opened her door this holiday season, someone had left smoked salmon, baskets of nuts or cookies.

“This year Christmas love is expressed at the door,” she said. “I’m glad that people will probably be with us next year with the vaccines. I can give up anything for that.”

With a child due in February, Song Ju- hyeon of Paju, South Korea, near Seoul, said home is the only place she feels safe. The government reported 1,241 new cases Friday, a new daily record for the country.

“It doesn’t feel like Christmas anyway, there’s no carols being played on

the streets,” she said.

“It’s Christmask,” the Daily Nation newspaper declared in Kenya, where a surge in cases led to doctors ending a brief strike Christmas Eve. Celebratio­ns were muted in the East African hub as a curfew prevented overnight church vigils.

Bells rang out around Bethlehem as the traditiona­l birthplace of Jesus celebrated. But the closure of Israel’s internatio­nal airport to foreign tourists, along with Palestinia­n restrictio­ns banning intercity travel in the areas they administer in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, kept visitors away.

In Beijin g, offic ia l churches abruptly canceled Mass after China’s capital was put on high alert following two confirmed CO

VID-19 cases last week. Two new asymptomat­ic cases were reported Friday.

With economies reeling around the world, it wasn’t a year of lavish gifts. Robin Sypniewski of Middlesex County, New Jersey, was furloughed twice from her job serving school lunches and is now on reduced hours as her husband retires next week as a trash collector and her daughter wrestles with student debt.

Sypniewski, 58, bought her daughter pajamas, compared to a diamond bracelet last Christmas. Her husband got a $20 plaque describing his Polish heritage, compared to a tablet computer last year.

“The bills have to be paid this month and next month. With the reduced hours, it’s tough,” she said.

 ?? SUNDAY ALAMBA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Parishione­rs wearing face masks to protect against the coronaviru­s attend a morning Christmas Mass at Holy Cross Cathedral in Lagos, Nigeria, Friday.
SUNDAY ALAMBA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Parishione­rs wearing face masks to protect against the coronaviru­s attend a morning Christmas Mass at Holy Cross Cathedral in Lagos, Nigeria, Friday.

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