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The night before Christmas I was very sad, with none of the joy and
anticipation I always felt during the Christmas season. Christmas in my
village was time to prepare for the birth of Jesus. Relatives and
friends visited and shared dinners of rice, chicken, goat, lamb, and
fruits of all kinds.
Houses were decorated with crepe-paper ornaments; beautiful music was
everywhere. After Christmas Eve church service, a procession paraded
through the streets and greeted everyone with the word "Afishapa,"
meaning "Merry Christmas and Happy New Year."
This year was different.
I was eight years old, but I had aged greatly. Earlier in the year,
soldiers attacked us, taking young boys and girls away, and burning our
whole village. Families were separated; some were murdered. We were
forced to work and march for miles without food, losing all sense of
time and place.
One rainy night, we escaped from our captors. After weeks in the
tropical forest, we made our way back to our burned-out village. We were
sick, exhausted, and depressed. Most of our family members were gone. We
had no idea what day it was.
All at once, my grandmother noticed the flower we call "Fire on the
Mountain" blooming in the marketplace. As far back as she remembered,
the flower only bloomed at Christmas time. Somehow, it survived the
fires. But how could it be Christmas without my parents? How could we
celebrate after all we had suffered? As I thought sadly about these
things, I heard the horns of several cars approaching our village.
We thought the cars were full of men with machine guns, so we hid in
the forest. To our surprise, they were ordinary travelers. It was almost
dusk, and the travelers wanted to avoid land mines on the roads, so they
stopped in our village.
They were horrified at the devastation they saw. Many cried. They
told us it really was Christmas Eve, and they were traveling to
celebrate with family and friends. Now they would share Christmas with
us. They shared the little food they had with us, and helped build a
fire in the marketplace to keep us warm.
My pregnant oldest sister suddenly became ill. We had no medical
supplies, and were far from any hospital. People used their clothes to
make a bed for her near the fire. That night, my sister gave birth to a
beautiful boy.
This called for a celebration, war or no war. Africans have to dance,
so we danced and sang until the rooster crowed. When morning came, my
sister spoke for the first time since our village was attacked. "His
name is Gye Nyame," she said, which translates "except for God I fear
none".
So Christmas did come that year -- in the birth of my nephew. Despite
our suffering, we saw hope in what this little child could do. I learned
that Christmas comes in spite of circumstances; indeed the true spirit
of Christmas is always within us.
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