To look at it, Christmas in Japan looks pretty Western. There are Christmas
trees, lights, and even pictures of Santa adorning windows. There are some
differences, of course. Christmas cake is ubiquitous and you may be a bit
disturbed to discover that what you thought was a statue of Santa was actually
Colonel Sanders decked out in a red Santa outfit. It seems that many Japanese
think a proper Christmas dinner centers around a
bucket of KFC. But, such are the quirks of a holiday spread across the
globe. Cultures will interpret the joy of celebrating Christ's coming in their
own ways, right?
Except the Japanese don't. Japan is a country that is only
about 1% Christian, according to the Pew Forum
1.
Christmas isn't an officially recognized holiday at all; children still attend
school and businesses are open (especially KFC!) Yet, the trappings of a Western
tradition are there. So, why do the Japanese get into the decorations and the
trees at all? It seems those Christmas cakes provide some good insight into the
motivations for the Japanese celebration.
Pre-World War II Japan didn't have
a lot of exposure to Christians. The Roman Catholic Church had sent missionaries
to the island in 1549where they "soon established churches, hospitals,
orphanages and educational institutions, which became venues whereby the two
cultures could encounter one another."
2 Yet, crushing
martyrdoms and extended persecutions left Japan with only a sliver of Christian
believers who were forced underground for centuries.
3 The
nation was still feudal and agrarian, with only the elites having the wealth for
indulgence. Cultural scholar Hideyo Konagaya states that "Modernity and
affluence in Christmas were still not a realistic notion when rural lives and
feudalistic social systems still predominated."
4
Christmas as Affluence
After World War II, things were worse. According to an NPR article, the
economy was a disaster. People there did whatever they could to make ends meet,
but luxuries such as sugar or chocolate were in short supply. However, US
soldiers often had candy bars they distributed to children.
5
Konagaya writes, "Sweet chocolates, above all, given by American soldiers
epitomized the utmost wealth Japanese children saw in American lives. They
brought the message that affluence and happiness took American forms
(Fujiwara)."
6 Cake had also been previously linked to
western affluence and it was "available exclusively to the upper aristocratic
class or urban elite."
7
However, as Japan's economy
recovered and then boomed in the 1980's, "Christmas celebrations gave the
Japanese the most tangible pictures that could convey images of prosperous
modern lives in America" and the cake was the epitome of that symbol of
success."
8 Today, young urban Japanese see Christmas Eve
not as a day to celebrate at home with family, but as an
upscale night
on the town where tangible gifts to your beloved are expected.
Sometimes a Mirror is Uncomfortable to See
While the Japanese interpretation of Christmas may seem remote, I think
Konagaya was right when noting that the Japanese were simply trying to mimic
American values and traditions. They saw the commercialism, the emphasis on
stuff, the weight we placed on the trappings of the day and presented all of
that without any of the spiritual root that should be the focus of Christmas.
Was something lost in the translation? Perhaps. Yet, an imperfect mirror will
distort an image but it can highlight flaws you hadn't noticed before.
We
need to make sure in our Christmas celebrations that Jesus is the central focus
for the day. The Japan Times noted
this conversation where a Japanese woman enquired about the origin of
Christmas from an American man:
Young Japanese woman: Is Christmas celebrated to mark the birth of Jesus or
his death?
American man: Do people usually go shopping before a funeral?
At least she knows it has something to do with Jesus!
When my kids were
young, we used cake to celebrate Christmas as well. It wasn't a Japanese
Christmas cake; it was a birthday cake. We had a plastic Nativity set that the
kids could play with. We would set the Wise Men figures at the back of the house
and the kids would move them each day until their journey was complete on
Christmas Eve. We would also hide the baby Jesus figure until Christmas morning.
Later that day, we'd decorate the cake with birthday candles and everything. It
isn't much, but these traditions put the emphasis back on the coming of Jesus
instead of the coming of presents.
I pray that you and your family will
emphasize the amazing gift of the Savior, of God with Us, this Christmas. Make
sure that your outward celebrations show that aspect of the holiday. After all,
you never know who's watching.
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