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December Global Holidays 2022: Most Popular That Are Worth Waiting For 

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December is the most joyous month of the year. All over the world, the month is acknowledged with various activities and festivals, such as cultural, religious, and even corporate celebrations. December is among the few months with as diverse celebrations as it does.

People catch up with their families and plan to welcome the new year.

December celebrations around the world holidays include Hanukkah, Yule, and many others. After a year damaged by the pandemic, many are looking forward to the December Global Holidays to end the year on a cheerful note.

Let’s have a glance at some of the world’s December Global holidays.

Here are the most popular December Global Holidays for 2022,

1. Hanukkah

  • Date of Celebration: November 28 – December 6
  • Category: Religious
  • Why It’s Celebrated: Celebrating the re-devotion of the Second Temple in Jerusalem.
  • Where It’s Celebrated: Israel and different Jewish people groups all throughout the planet.

Hanukkah is also recognized as Chanukah or the Festival of Lights. It is an eight-day Jewish festivity that starts on the 25th day of the Hebrew calendar month of Kislev. 

Every year, according to the Gregorian calendar, the first day of Hanukkah varies. The festival will be celebrated between November 28 and December 6 this year.

The chanting of unusual songs, such as Ma’oz Tzur, and the performance of the Hallel prayer, are also part of the Hanukkah celebration.

Eating oil-dried foods like potato pancakes (also recognized as latkes) and jam-filled donuts are also regular Hanukkah traditions (also understood as sufganiyot). The celebrants usually exchange gifts and play with dreidels.

2. World AIDS Day

  • Date of Celebration: Thursday, 1 December
  • Category: Health
  • Why It’s Celebrated: To bring issues to light on the scourge of HIV/AIDS
  • Where It’s Celebrated: Worldwide

In August 1987, James W. Bunn and Thomas Netter introduced World AIDS Day.

Bunn and Netter were serving for the World Health Organization’s Global Programme on AIDS as public information officers at the time.

The first World AIDS Day was celebrated the next year on December 1, which has continued the holiday’s official date ever since.

The purpose of World AIDS Day is to promote knowledge about HIV/AIDS and remember people hurt or affected by the disease.

There are various means to mark the event, including attending orphaned children, funding safe-sex programs, and urging governments to increase attempts to stop the spread of HIV.

3. Santa Lucia

  • Date of Celebration: Tuesday, 13 December
  • Category: Religious
  • Why It’s Celebrated: To honor Lucia of Syracuse.
  • Where It’s Celebrated: Scandinavia and in Italy

Santa Lucia was a saint from Italy who died as a martyr. In the gloomiest months of the year, she is regarded as a light of hope.

Every year on Tuesday, 13 December, Sweden recognizes and honors Santa Lucia as a figure of light and hope.

On this momentous day, meteorological concerts and processions are held, with musicians dressed in white and carrying headdresses with real flickering candles.

4. Yule

  • Date of Celebration: December 21 – January 1
  • Category: Pagan
  • Why It’s Celebrated: To honor the Norse god Odin
  • Where It’s Celebrated: Germany and different German people groups throughout the planet

Yule is often acknowledged as Yuletide. It is a Germanic festivity observed all over the world.

The festival has pagan roots, including links to the Norse god Odin and the Anglo-Saxon Feast of Modraniht. Yuletide is one of the earliest and most famous winter holidays globally, corresponding with the Winter Solstice.

Yule was observed by lighting a big log in a bonfire and spending the entire night outside.

Although log burning is still done today, most people observe Yule by building a Yule altar, producing an evergreen Yule wreath, or giving back to Mother Nature.

Candlelit dinners and Yule tree ornaments, as well as the exchange of nature-themed gifts, are famous.

5. Festivus

  • Date of Celebration: December 23
  • Category: Parody
  • Why It’s Celebrated: To advocate against Christmas commercialization
  • Where It’s Celebrated: Worldwide, especially in the United States

Festivus is a December global festival that reached popularity in 1997 due to a Seinfeld episode called “The Strike.”

The purpose of this false holiday is to promote awareness about Christmas materialism.

Festivus is celebrated by standing around a plain aluminum pole rather than buying an expensive Christmas tree. “Feats of Strength” and “airing of grievances” are two more famous Festivus traditions.

Some critics have pushed Festivus supporters, describing them as anti-traditionalists with false ideas about Christmas and its original significance.

On the other hand, the holiday has increased in popularity, particularly among budget spenders and minimalists.

6. Christmas

  • Date of Celebration: December 25
  • Category: Religious
  • Why It’s Celebrated: To celebrate the introduction of Jesus Christ
  • Where It’s Celebrated: Worldwide

Christmas is, without question, the most popular December holiday.

The day celebrates the birth of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom Christians consider sent to restore humanity from sin.

What separates Christmas from most religious celebrations is that it is universally observed even by non-Christians.

It’s worth knowing, though, that the correct date of Jesus’ birth is unknown. Christmas was adopted because it corresponded with the Roman calendar’s winter solstice.

Moreover, Christmas is celebrated as a cultural rather than a religious celebration in many countries. There are many ways to celebrate the occasion, such as giving Santa Claus or Father Christmas gifts.

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