The Philippine Star

Good will to all

On exploring the mysteries and peculiarit­ies of the hallowed day we call Christmas.

- By Jam Pascual

The Christmas truce of 1914 supposedly transpired this way: British soldiers in their trenches would be greeted by enemy Germans calling out “Merry Christmas,” before exposing themselves, unarmed. There are reports of soldiers exchanging gifts — cigarettes, buttons, plum pudding — and an impromptu football match held on No Man’s Land, the space between two opposing enemy lines. One can imagine a private wondering if this first world war, and the wars that might come after, could be replaced with a friendly kickabout. A miracle is typically described as a divine act that goes against the laws of nature. Many continue to debate what constitute­s a violation of the ordered world, so the term “Christmas miracle,” which carries a sort of seasonal exclusivit­y, is more peculiar. As if there is something about the weeks that lead to Dec. 25 that further pronounces our capacity for goodness.

*** In a rush to get some documents certified, I managed to find, despite the odds, a notary public open on a Sunday. The lawyer in charge — let’s call him Gerard — was dressed in a plaid polo and khakis, and the walls in the second floor of his small office were lined with plastic wreath leaves. It was a manuscript I asked him to certify, and when I told him I was a writer, he printed out a few pages from a personal blog he kept which was filled with essays regarding his support for Rodrigo Duterte and Donald Trump, and loving anecdotes about his family. He wanted comments. I looked at the printouts, then his shelves, which were filled to capacity with books on the law. I told him it was cool that he had a place for his writing, and that I was happy his office was open on a Sunday. I would eventually resolve to email him, a few days after the Nov. 30 rally.

*** The film Tokyo Godfathers follows Gin, Hana, and Miyuki, three homeless people who, upon finding an abandoned baby while scavenging for food on Christmas Eve, navigate the city in a desperate search for the infant’s parents. The film deals with themes of, as video essayist Pause and Select puts it, coincidenc­e and providence, and the thin line between the two. As Hana puts it, observing a long line assembling into a nearby temple: “God must be busy at this time of year.”

One type of divine miracle is the incorrupti­ble corpse: in which the body of a holy or saintly individual refuses to decompose. Take for example the body of Mary of Jesus de Leon y Delgado who, known for her stigmata and feats of levitation, is placed on display behind glass at the Monastery of St. Catherine of Siena every anniversar­y of her death. The intuitive understand­ing is, there is a good soul keeping what is of the world from falling apart. Personally though, considerin­g the persistenc­e of a certain political family, I’ve had enough of corpses that don’t know when to quit.

*** To me, “Christmas miracle” describes a singular event, a supernatur­al occurrence that just happens to transpire over the holidays. The term “Christmas spirit” is more of a sustained emotion, a state of grace, that envelopes you at least until the family reunions conclude. The Christmas spirit takes hold a little differentl­y for everyone. For some, it’s at the first sight of a parol. For others, when the FM radio deejays put Mariah Carey back into their playlists. For others, it’s the sudden realizatio­n that no particular bad news has been showing up on one’s Facebook feed for a while now.

It is becoming harder to tell now the difference between the law of nature and the things that violate it.

*** What common knowledge won’t tell you, what perhaps your history teachers won’t tell you, is that the unofficial Christmas truce of 1914 didn’t pacify everyone. Threats of disciplina­ry action from higher ranking officers prevented total ceasefire along the Western Front, and hostilitie­s continued. Even those who participat­ed in the ceasefire, in the football matches, went back to business eventually.

*** It was Gerard who emailed me first, though. Speaking as a former anti-Marcos activist, what he told me was, “You have to nurture the idealism of the youth in you.” He didn’t want to bother changing my mind, encouragin­g me instead to nurture my conviction­s. I don’t hear these kinds of narratives anywhere else. I don’t know what it means, and I haven’t figured out yet what to say to him. But he asked me to just call him Tito Jerry, so that’s what I’ll call him the next time I need something notarized. I guess he was feeling the Christmas spirit.

I hope you’re doing well, Tito Jerry. Merry Christmas. Peace.

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Art by ina jacobe
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