Los Angeles Times

Pandemic poses challenges on Christmas across globe

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ROME — Curfews, quarantine­s and even border closings complicate­d Christmas celebratio­ns Friday for countless people around the globe, but ingenuity, determinat­ion and imaginatio­n helped keep the day special for many.

In Beijing, official churches abruptly canceled Mass on Christmas Day. China’s capital was put on high alert after confirmati­on of two COVID- 19 cases last week, and two new asymptomat­ic cases were reported Friday. One of several notices was posted at Beijing’s St. Joseph’s Church, which was built by Jesuit missionari­es in the 17th century.

Border crossing closures kept thousands of migrants from economical­ly devastated Venezuela who live in Colombia from going home for Christmas. Colombia’s government shut the crossings in a bid to slow the spread of coronaviru­s infections. Those trying to return home for the holidays this year had to turn to smugglers.

Yakelin Tamaure, a nurse who left Venezuela two years ago, was not going home and said there would be no gifts or new clothes for her children, ages 10 and 15. Tamaure said that she hasn’t been able to find work as a nurse because she still doesn’t have a Colombia residence permit. Her parents are in Venezuela.

“My mother broke her foot and can’t walk properly, so I’m worried about her,” Tamaure said. “I try to send her money, but it’s not the same as being there.”

Others successful­ly crossed borders elsewhere only to f ind themselves in quarantine. For their f irst Christmas since getting married in March, Nattasuda Anusonadis­ai and Patrick Kaplin were cooped up in quarantine in a Bangkok, Thailand, hotel room. It wasn’t great fun, but they did make sure to get a Christmas tree.

They returned this month from a 4 ½ - month trip to Canada and the United States, making a 32hour journey from Montreal via Doha, Qatar. One condition of entering Thailand is a 14- day quarantine upon arrival. Thai citizens can stay at state facilities for free, but foreigners like Kaplin, from Canada, must pay to stay at an approved hotel, the option the couple took so they could stay together.

“The hotel was surprised that we ordered a full- sized Christmas tree but didn’t give us too much trouble to bring it in,” Anusonadis­ai said. But they hadn’t ordered enough ornaments, so they added items collected on their travels, like an eagle feather and, of course, masks.

“We will continue this tradition now, since it’s nice to see so many personal memories on the tree,” Kaplin said.

Churches in South Korea have ignited clusters of coronaviru­s infections in densely populated Seoul, along with hospitals, nursing homes, restaurant­s and prisons. The 1,241 new cases reported Friday by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency represente­d a record for the country.

Song Ju- hyeon, a resident in Paju, near Seoul, who is expecting a child in February, said home is the only place she feels safe now.

“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 second surge in cases has eased and a brief doctors’ strike ended on Christmas Eve. Celebratio­ns were muted in East Africa’s commercial hub as overnight church vigils could not be held because of a curfew. Fewer people also reportedly headed home to see families, which could help limit the spread of the virus to rural communitie­s, which are even less equipped to handle COVID- 19 than cities.

In Paris, members of Notre Dame Cathedral’s choir, wearing hard hats and protective suits — not against COVID- 19 but for constructi­on conditions in the medieval landmark ravaged by fire in 2019 — sang inside the church for the f irst time since the blaze.

In a Christmas Eve concert, accompanie­d by an acclaimed cellist and a rented organ, the socially distanced singers performed beneath the cathedral’s stainedgla­ss windows amid the darkened church, which is transition­ing from being a hazardous cleanup operation to becoming a massive reconstruc­tion site. The public was not allowed in and isn’t expected to see the interior of Notre Dame until at least 2024.

In Rome, partial lockdown measures were keeping the faithful from gathering in St. Peter’s Square, where in past years tens of thousands would receive a papal blessing and hear the pope’s traditiona­l Christmas Day message. But they wouldn’t have been able to see Pope Francis anyway this year. In response to a virus resurgence in Italy, the pontiff wasn’t appearing on the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica this Christmas but opted to deliver his annual address on world issues from inside the Apostolic Palace.

Elsewhere, Christmas was a difficult time. Thousands of drivers were stranded in their trucks at the English port of Dover, lacking the coronaviru­s tests that France is now demanding. The elderly, meanwhile, struggled with virus travel restrictio­ns that kept them from visiting family or friends for the holidays.

“The solitude gets to me these days. I often feel depressed,” said Alvaro Puig, an 81- year- old in Spain who spent Christmas Eve eating dinner alone with his pet rabbit. “These holidays, instead of making me happy, make me sad. I hate them.”

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