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Toujours France
1 Radnor Street
Camberwell VIC 3124
Australia
Ph: +61 03 9889 1885
Mobile: 0413 055 360
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Bonjour !
Toujours France vous souhaite un joyeux noël et bonne année!
I hope that by now you will have had an opportunity to explore our new website. We added new photos to the photo gallery shortly after launching, and will continue to update these regularly throughout the year. We have also this week added a new page relating to Si Italy tours. Si Italy are specialists in guided small group travel in Italy, and for the last eight years we have been recommending each other’s tours, confident that we share similar philosophies of travel and service to clients. We now have a loyal group of clients who alternate between Si Italy and Toujours France tours, depending on whether they’re visiting Italy or France. We are thrilled that we are now even more strongly affiliated, as we have now become official booking agents for Si Italy's tours. Have a look at their fabulous website at www.siitaly.com.au
Sandra and Linda at Si Italy are always available to advise you on the right choice of holiday for you in Italy, and then we will take your booking and organise any pre and post tour accommodation, tours and sightseeing. Pan Australian Travel, our wonderful agency support team, are the people to speak to for air fares, train travel, car hire etc for your Italian holiday. Why not combine a beautiful tour in Italy with one of our fabulous French itineraries?!
Personally I am really looking forward to my special trip with Ian Parmenter in May 2009, “Tasting Provence”. Ian's trips are always unique and it is a wonderful opportunity to really discover the food, wine and rich culture of France, and in this case, the stunning region of Provence, with the most charming chef and host in Australia! This tour is half full already so please consider contacting us to show your interest if you have this tour in mind.
I attended a soirée last week with a group of guests from one of our tours this year - it was such a lovely experience to get together and remember our experiences, swap photos, etc. It is one of the nicest things about my job, seeing how many people make close friends during our tours, even to the point of coming back and travelling together on subsequent tours.
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Excellent specials in 2009! |
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Don't forget to have a look at our new Paris Hotels page and our Specials page, as two of our favourite hotels in Paris, the chic Bel-Ami in the St Germain area, and the more traditional Chateau Frontenac just off the Champs Elysees, are offering “pay & stay” specials over Summer 2009.
There are also some excellent airfare specials out and Don or Stephen at Pan Australian Travel (03) 9347 9677 can help you with these - again, this helps alleviate that worry of deciding whether or not to travel in 2009!
Most of our tours in September are very full now and May/June is filling up quickly too. I know that the recent economic situation has made some people wary of booking early this year, and this is totally understandable. However I have two thoughts for you on this, which if not something you can act by, are at least a more cheerful thought to take you into the New Year:
My new motto: I am NOT participating in this recession!
And..... IF THE WORLD IS REALLY COMING TO AN END, LET'S ALL END IT TOGETHER UNDER THE EIFFEL TOWER IN PARIS!
Do try not to miss out on our tours in 2009! There are many advantages to travelling in 2009 - one of them being that there will be less crowds and tourists in France, as the American market has slowed down enormously. AND there are sure to be more and more specials coming out on accommodation, as there will be less demand for hotel space.
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In France, Christmas is a time for family and for generosity, marked by family reunions, gifts and candy for children, gifts for the poor, Midnight Mass, and le Réveillon.
The celebration of Christmas in France varies by region. Most provinces celebrate Christmas on the 25th of December, which is a bank holiday. However, in eastern and northern France, the Christmas season begins on 6 December, la fête de Saint Nicolas, and in some provinces la fête des Rois* is one the most important holidays of the Christmas season. In Lyon, 8 December is la Fête de lumières, when Lyonnais pay hommage to the virgin Mary by putting candles in their windows which light up the village.
*In most countries, Epiphany (la fête des Rois) is the 6th of January, whereas in some places in France it is celebrated the first Sunday after 1st January.
French Christmas Traditions
French children put their shoes in front of the fireplace, in the hopes that Père Noël (aka Papa Noël) will fill them with gifts. Candy, fruit, nuts, and small toys will also be hung on the tree overnight. There's also Père Fouettard who gives out spankings to bad children (sort of the equivalent of Santa Claus giving coal to the naughty).
In 1962, a law was passed decreeing that all letters written to Santa would responded to with a postcard. When a class writes a letter, each student gets a response.
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Christmas in France (continued) |
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Le Réveillon
Although fewer and fewer French attend la Messe de Minuit on Christmas Eve, it is still an important part of Christmas for many families. It is followed by a huge feast, called le Réveillon (from the verb réveiller, to wake up or revive). Le Réveillon is a symbolic awakening to the meaning of Christ's birth and is the culinary high point of the season, which may be enjoyed at home or in a restaurant or café that is open all night. Each region in France has its own traditional Christmas menu, with dishes like turkey, capon, goose, chicken, and boudin blanc (similar to white pudding).
Throughout the French Christmas season, there are special traditional desserts:
• La bûche de Noël (Yule log) - A log-shaped cake made of chocolate and chestnuts. Representative of the special wood log burned from Christmas Eve to New Year's Day in the Périgord, which is a holdover from a pagan Gaul celebration.
• Le pain calendeau (in southern France) - Christmas loaf, part of which is given to a poor person.
• La Galette des Rois (on Epiphany) - round cake which is cut into pieces and distributed by a child, known as le petit roi or l'enfant soleil, hiding under the table. Whoever finds la fève - the charm hidden inside - is King or Queen and can choose a partner.
French Christmas Decorations
The sapin de Noël is the main decoration in homes, streets, shops, offices, and factories. The sapin de Noël appeared in Alsace in the 14th century at a time, decorated with apples, paper flowers, and ribbons, and was introduced in France in 1837.
Another important aspect of French Christmas celebrations is the crèche filled with santons, which is displayed in churches and many homes. Living crèches in the form of plays and puppet shows based on the Nativity are commonly performed to teach the important ideas of Christianity and the Christmas celebration.
Mistletoe is hung above the door during the Christmas season to bring good fortune throughout the year.
After Réveillon, it's customary to leave a candle burning in case the Virgin Mary passes by.
Source: http://french.about.com/cs/culture/a/christmas.htm
A CHRISTMAS JOKE
As a little girl climbed onto Santa's lap, Santa asked the usual, "And what would you like for Christmas?" The child stared at him open mouthed and horrified for a minute, then gasped: "Didn't you get my E-mail?"
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The Spirit of Christmas celebrated in the Christmas Truce of 1914 |
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In a place where bloodshed was nearly commonplace and mud and the enemy were fought with equal vigor, something surprising occurred on the front for Christmas in 1914. The men who lay shivering in the trenches embraced the Christmas spirit. In one of the truest acts of goodwill toward men, soldiers from both sides in the southern portion of the Ypres Salient set aside their weapons and hatred, if only temporarily, and met in No Man's Land.
Some of those who went out to meet the enemy in the middle of No Man's Land on Christmas Eve or on Christmas Day negotiated a truce: we won't fire if you won't fire. Some ended the truce at midnight on Christmas night, some extended it until New Year's Day.
One of the main reasons Christmas truces were negotiated was in order to bury the dead. Though some had died recently, there were corpses out in No Man's Land that had been there for several months. Along with the revelry that celebrated Christmas was the sad and somber job of burying their fallen comrades. On Christmas day, British and German soldiers appeared on No Man's Land and sorted through the bodies. In just a few rare instances, joint services were held for both the British and German dead.
Yet many soldiers enjoyed meeting the un-seen enemy and were surprised to discover that they were more alike than he had thought. They talked, shared pictures, exchanged items such as buttons for food stuffs. An extreme example of the fraternization was a soccer game played in the middle of No Man's Land between the Bedfordshire Regiment and the Germans. A member of the Bedfordshire Regiment produced a ball and the large group of soldiers played until the ball was deflated when it hit a barbed wire entanglement.
This strange and unofficial truce lasted for several days, much to the dismay of the commanding officers. This amazing showing of Christmas cheer was never again repeated and as World War I progressed, the story of Christmas 1914 at the front became something of a legend.
An excerpt from a soldier's letter home:
They finished their carol and we thought that we ought to retaliate in some way, so we sang 'The first Noël', and when we finished that they all began clapping; and then they struck up another favourite of theirs, 'O Tannenbaum'. And so it went on. First the Germans would sing one of their carols and then we would sing one of ours, until when we started up 'O Come All Ye Faithful' the Germans immediately joined in singing the same hymn to the Latin words 'Adeste Fidéles'. And I thought, well, this was really a most extraordinary thing - two nations both singing the same carol in the middle of a war.
On November 11th 2008 a plaque to the Christmas Truce was unveiled in the French village of Frelinghien. It is the first official memorial to this remarkable event.
You can find out more about the Battlefields of the Somme and Belgium on our website.
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND WE HOPE TO SEE YOU IN FRANCE IN 2009!!
Sue Heine, Managing Director
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