Classroom lesson · Festival · 🇵🇦 Panama

Christmas in tropical Panama

Warm-weather Christmas with parades, fireworks and family meals

A Panamanian Christmas parade with floats and dancers in summery weather

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Christmas in Panama is celebrated in warm, sunny weather - often 30°C or hotter. Many Christmas traditions look familiar (lights, trees, presents) but they happen in shorts and sandals. The Christmas Eve dinner, called 'Nochebuena' (the good night), is the big family meal of the year.

Tell me more

Panamanian Christmas often kicks off with a 'Desfile de Navidad' - a big Christmas parade through Panama City - in late November or early December. Floats covered in lights drive slowly through the streets, marching bands play, and people line the pavements with their families.

On Christmas Eve, families gather for a huge late dinner. The traditional food includes roasted pork (or chicken), tamales (corn dough stuffed with chicken and steamed in plantain leaves), and arroz con guandú (rice with pigeon peas). The meal often runs until midnight, when fireworks go off across the country.

Children open presents at midnight on Christmas Eve, not on Christmas morning - so 12 a.m. is the big moment. Some kids try very hard to stay awake; others nap on the sofa until their parents wake them up to open their gifts.

Even though Panama is hot, lots of homes put up artificial Christmas trees and decorate them with snowy white ornaments. Some children write letters to Papa Noel (Father Christmas) and post them in special letter boxes set up in shopping centres.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How might celebrating a holiday look different in a warm country compared to a cold one?
  2. 02Many Panamanian families open presents at midnight on the 24th. What time does your family do something special?
  3. 03What food do you think of when you imagine a big family celebration?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design a Christmas card to send to a class in Panama. Think about what you would draw given they will be in shorts in 30°C heat. Then design another card from a Panamanian class to your own. How are they different? Compare in pairs.