Santa Cruz Sentinel

Christmas markets warily open as COVID cases rise

- By David Mchugh, Emily Schultheis and Justin Spike

The holiday tree is towering over the main square in this central German city, the chestnuts and sugared almonds are roasted, and kids are clambering aboard the merrygo-round just like they did before the pandemic. But a surge in coronaviru­s infections has left an uneasy feeling hanging over Frankfurt’s Christmas market.

To savor a mug of mulled wine — an uncomplica­ted rite of winter in pre-pandemic times — masked customers must pass through a one-way entrance to a fenced-off wine hut, stopping at the hand sanitizer station. Elsewhere, security officers check vaccinatio­n certificat­es before letting customers head for the steaming sausages and kebabs.

Despite the pandemic inconvenie­nces, stall owners selling ornaments, roasted chestnuts and other holidaythe­med items in Frankfurt and other European cities are relieved to be open at all for their first Christmas market in two years, especially with new restrictio­ns taking effect in Germany, Austria and other countries as COVID-19 infections hit record highs. Merchants who have opened are hoping for at least a fraction of the prepandemi­c holiday sales that can make or break their businesses.

Others aren’t so lucky. Many of the famous holiday events have been canceled in Germany and Austria. With the market closures goes the money that tourists would spend in restaurant­s, hotels and other businesses.

Jens Knauer, who crafts intricate, lighted Christmast­hemed silhouette­s that people can hang in windows, said his hope was simply that the Frankfurt market “stays open as long as possible.”

While Christmas is 40% of annual revenue for many retailers and restaurate­urs, “with me, it’s 100%,” Knauer said. “If I can stay open for three weeks, I can make it through the year.”

Purveyors are on edge after other Christmas markets were abruptly shut down in Germany’s Bavaria region, which includes Nuremberg, home of one of the biggest and best-known markets. Stunned exhibitors in Dresden had to pack up their goods when authoritie­s in the eastern Saxony region suddenly imposed new restrictio­ns amid soaring infections. Austria’s markets closed as a 10-day lockdown

began Monday, with many stall owners hoping they can reopen if it’s not extended. The Czech government on Thursday closed Christmas markets as part of measures to counter a record surge.

Markets usually attract elbow-to-elbow crowds to row upon row of ornament and food sellers, foot traffic that spills over into revenue for surroundin­g hotels and restaurant­s. This year, the crowds at Frankfurt’s market were vastly thinned out, with the stalls spread out over a larger area.

Heiner Roie, who runs a mulled wine hut in the shape of a wine barrel, said he’s assuming he will see half the business he had in 2019. A shutdown would cause “immense financial damage — it could lead to complete ruin since we haven’t made any income in two years, and at some point, the financial reserves are used up.”

But if people have a little discipline and observe the health measures, “I think we’ll manage it,” he said.

Next door, Bettina Roie’s guests are greeted with a sign asking them to show their vaccinatio­n certificat­es at her stand serving Swiss raclette, a popular melted cheese dish.

The market “has a good concept because what we need is space, room, to keep some distance from each other,” she said. “In contrast to a bricks-and-mortar restaurant, they have their building and their walls, but we can adjust ourselves to the circumstan­ces.”

The extended Roie family is a fifth-generation exhibitor business that also operates the merry-go-round on Frankfurt’s central Roemerberg square, where the market opened Monday.

Roie said it was important to reopen “so that we can bring the people even

during the pandemic a little joy — that’s what we do, we bring back joy.”

The latest spike in COVID-19 cases has unsettled prospects for Europe’s economic recovery, leading some economists to hedge their expectatio­ns for growth in the final months of the year.

Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London, has cut his forecast for the last three months of the year in the 19 countries that use the euro from 0.7% to 0.5%. But he noted that the wave of infections is having less impact across the broad economy because vaccinatio­ns have reduced serious illnesses and many companies have learned to adjust.

That is cold comfort to Germany’s DEHOGA restaurant and hotel associatio­n, which warned of a “hail of cancellati­ons” and said members were reporting every second Christmas party or other special event was being called off.

Other European countries where the pandemic isn’t hitting as hard are returning to old ways. The traditiona­l Christmas market in Madrid’s Plaza Mayor, in the heart of the Spanish capital, is slated to open Friday at the size it was before.

It will have 104 stalls of nativity figures, decoration­s and traditiona­l sweets in a country where 89% of those 12 or older are fully vaccinated. Last year, it had half the number of stalls and restricted the number of people allowed in the square. Masks and social distancing will remain mandatory, organizers said.

In Hungary’s capital of Budapest, Christmas markets have been fenced off and visitors must show proof of vaccinatio­n to enter.

Gyorgy Nagy, a producer

and seller of handmade glazed crockery, said the restrictio­ns initially stirred worries of fewer shoppers. But business has been good so far.

“I don’t think the fence is bad,” he said. “At the beginning, we were scared of it, really scared, but I think it’s fine . ... I don’t think it will be a disadvanta­ge.”

Markets opening reflects a broader spectrum of loose restrictio­ns in Hungary, even as new COVID-19 cases have exceeded peaks seen during a devastatin­g surge last spring. More infections were confirmed last week than in other week since the pandemic started.

A representa­tive for the Advent Bazilika Christmas market said a number of its measures go beyond government requiremen­ts, including that all vendors wear masks and those selling food and drinks be vaccinated.

Bea Lakatos, a seller of fragrant soaps and oils at the Budapest market, said that while sales have been a bit weaker than before the pandemic, “I wasn’t expecting so many foreign visitors given the restrictio­ns.”

“I think things aren’t that bad so far,” she said this week. “The weekend started particular­ly strong.”

In Vienna, markets were packed last weekend as people sought some Christmas cheer before Austria’s lockdown. Merchants say closures last year and the new restrictio­ns have had disastrous consequenc­es.

“The main sales for the whole year are made at the Christmas markets — this pause is a huge financial loss,” said Laura Brechmann who sold illuminate­d stars at the Spittelber­g market before the lockdown began. “We hope things will reopen, but I personally don’t really expect it.”

 ?? MICHAEL PROBST - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lights illuminate the Christmas market in Frankfurt, Germany, Nov. 22.
MICHAEL PROBST - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lights illuminate the Christmas market in Frankfurt, Germany, Nov. 22.

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