Monday, January 14, 2013

Christmas markets


December. December.

Where clouds of work start to form on the horizon of a sunny student life (papers and presentations). In Germany, December is a month filled with Christmas markets, Glühwein (mulled wine), and gingerbread-like sweets. About a month out from Christmas, all German towns and cities fill their squares with little stands, selling almost every Christmas themed good possible. There were candies to be had, wooden nutcrackers to be bought, and warm drinks to be consumed.

Since this pre-holiday period in Germany is new to me, I would sometimes take the longer way home, stopping in the downtown area to peak around and envelope myself with the sights and sounds. The most memorable Christmas market event would have to be watching a figure, dressed with a horribly frightening witch’s mask, parade down a row of food stalls, stopping to hand out pieces of sweet bread to children. The children, all not more than four years old, naturally cried in terror and looking at the costume, I probably would have too. As an onlooker, the scene reminded me all too much of the Grimm Brother’s Hansel and Gretel, where kids are lured to a witch’s candy house only to be held captive.

UofM Alumni at the Augsburg X-mas market
At nights and on weekends, the Christmas market is also frequented by many to meet with friends, drink a Feuerzanganboule, and feel the cold biting at your toes before deciding on a warmer locale. For me, having grown up in the States, it was still odd to know that everything was solely geared towards Christmas and not the more general ‘holiday season.’