Why do 250 million Christians celebrate Christmas on January 7?

Millions of Christians, including those in Eastern Europe and across the Arab world, such as Palestine and Egypt, are celebrating Christmas today.

Christmas Day commemorates the birth of Jesus Christ, who was born in Bethlehem.

However, for these communities, which number about 250 million people, the most important day of the season is not December 25, but January 7. In this visual explainer, Al Jazeera illustrates what cultural and historical reasons led to this difference in Christmas celebrations.

Why are there two Christmases?

The reason some Christians celebrate Christmas on January 7 is not because they believe Jesus was born on a different day, but because they are using a different calendar.

The difference in the timing of Christmas stretches back to 1582, when Pope Gregory XIII ruled that the Catholic Church should follow a new calendar, called the Gregorian calendar, to replace the less accurate Julian calendar.

The Julian calendar, which was introduced by Julius Caesar in 46 BC, overestimated the solar year by 11 minutes, causing the seasons to eventually drift out of place.

Where the Julian calendar loses one day every 128 years, the Gregorian calendar loses one day every 3,236 years, making it a much more accurate approximation of a true solar year.

To get back on track, the world had to essentially skip 10 days to make up for the missing time that had accumulated over the 15 centuries.

While most of the world adopted the new Gregorian calendar, many Orthodox and Eastern Christian churches have stayed with the Julian calendar to maintain their traditions.

(Al Jazeera)

Fast forward to today, and the Julian calendar is currently 13 days behind the Gregorian calendar. This means that December 25 on the Julian calendar actually falls on January 7 on our modern calendars.

Interestingly, if the Orthodox Church continues to use the Julian calendar, the date of Orthodox Christmas will shift to January 8 in the year 2101, as the 13-day gap increases to 14 days.

Who celebrates Christmas on January 7?

Of the estimated 2.3 billion Christians worldwide, about 2 billion celebrate Christmas on December 25. This includes about 1.3 billion Catholics, 900 million Protestants, and some Orthodox Christians who have adopted the Gregorian calendar.

The remaining 250-300 million Christians, primarily Orthodox and Coptic denominations, celebrate Christmas on January 7, which is also known as Old Christmas Day.

Notable groups that celebrate Christmas on January 7 include:

  • The Russian Orthodox Church: The largest group following this tradition.
  • The Serbian and Georgian Orthodox Churches.
  • The Coptic Orthodox Church: Based primarily in Egypt.
  • The Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Churches.

In Ukraine, Christmas has historically been celebrated on January 7. However, in 2023, the government officially moved the public holiday to December 25 to align more with Western traditions, though many citizens still observe the January date.

Other largely Orthodox countries, including Greece and Romania, shifted their Christmas day to December 25 to align with Western Europe following geopolitical changes after World War I. Bulgaria followed suit later, officially moving its church celebrations to the 25th in 1968.

In Belarus and Moldova, Christmas is celebrated as a national holiday on both December 25 and January 7, accommodating various Christian denominations. Different regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Eritrea also have holidays on both days.

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(Al Jazeera)

Why is the new year on January 1?

January 1 was established as New Year’s Day by the Romans in 153 BC, long before Christianity. This date marked the beginning of a new term for Roman government leaders to take office. Julius Caesar retained January 1 during his calendar reform in 46 BC, as the month was named after Janus, the god of beginnings.

The exact date of Jesus’s birth is not known for certain. Christmas, celebrated on December 25, was chosen based on early Christians’ belief that Jesus was conceived on March 25, marking the Feast of the Annunciation. Adding nine months to that date results in December 25.

The year does not start on Jesus’s birthday because of how Roman politics and Christian theology intersected.

The different types of calendars

A number of religions and cultures use different calendars, mostly based on the sun and the moon.

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(Al Jazeera)

Solar calendar

The solar calendar is based on the sun, using a fixed duration of 365 days to mark one year, or 366 days during a leap year.

The year is divided into 12 distinct months, with the English names primarily derived from Latin and Roman traditions. These names were preserved when the Roman calendar evolved into the Julian calendar and later the Gregorian calendar, which is used today.

The Gregorian, Kurdish, and Persian calendars are examples of solar calendars. Nowruz, meaning “new day” in Persian, is celebrated on March 21 each year, marking the beginning of spring.

Lunar calendar

The lunar calendar is based on the moon and comprises 354 days and 12 lunar months of 29 or 30 days, which is the time it takes the moon to pass through its phases.

Since the lunar calendar is about 10 to 12 days shorter than the solar calendar, the Lunar New Year falls on different dates each year.

The Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar, and in 2026, the start of the new lunar year, or the first of Muharram, is expected to be on June 16.

Lunisolar calendar

The lunisolar calendar combines features from both lunar and solar calendars.

It uses lunar systems for days and solar systems for months. This calendar is divided according to the phases of the moon, but is adjusted to align with the solar cycle.

Bangladesh to ‘work with ICC’ on T20 World Cup security concerns in India

Bangladesh’s cricket authorities and the International Cricket Council (ICC) have partnered to “work closely” together to address security concerns regarding their nation’s participation in the upcoming T20 World Cup in India.

Three days after declaring that its men’s team would not travel to the neighboring nation, the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) stated in a statement on Wednesday that it would work with the tournament’s organizers to ensure the nation’s participation.

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The ICC has assured that the board’s suggestions will be taken into account as part of the detailed security planning for the event and that it has expressed its willingness to work closely with the BCB to address the concerns, according to the BCB’s statement.

The BCB will continue to work cooperatively and professionally with the ICC and relevant event authorities to reach a mutually beneficial and practical agreement that will enable the team’s smooth and successful participation in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026, the statement continued.

In response to Bangladesh’s request for a change of venue for its games, the sport’s governing body and the BCB reportedly held a virtual meeting on Tuesday.

The 20-team tournament will be co-hosted by India and Sri Lanka starting on February 7, but all of Bangladesh’s group games were hosted by Indian hosts.

Bangladesh’s refusal to travel to India was the result of a recent controversy, when its star fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman was fired by his Indian Premier League (IPL) team Kolkata Knight Riders at the board’s direction.

Cricket fans and Bangladeshi administrators reacted in outcry, urging the BCB to take reciprocal action. In response, the BCB requested that its team’s travel to Sri Lanka be canceled due to security concerns.

With the opening match between Bangladesh and the ICC just over a month away and the ICC under the direction of former BCCI chief Jay Shah, the ICC and BCB arranged a call to discuss the matter.

The ICC informed the BCB during the meeting that Bangladesh would need to travel to India in order to avoid losing points, according to a report on ESPNCricinfo.

The BCB, however, refuted the report and called its assertions “completely false.”

The BCB has taken note of certain reports that appeared in media reports that suggested the board had received an ultimatum. According to the statement, “These claims are completely false, unfounded, and do not reflect the nature or content of the communication received from the ICC.”

The interim government of Bangladesh also prohibited the broadcast of the IPL, claiming that the unjustly humiliating dumping of a “star player defied logic” and “hurt people”

The latest climax of a growing conflict between neighboring India, which has now spanned both countries’ cricket ties.

A 25-year-old Hindu man was lynched and burned publicly in Bangladesh in response to accusations of blasphemy, which has caused tensions to flare in recent weeks.

As Hindutva activists staged a demonstration in New Delhi to protest the neighboring country’s failure to protect its Hindu minorities, they stormed the Bangladesh High Commission.

Since August last year, when former prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled to New Delhi from Dhaka after an uprising against her rule, diplomatic relations between the once-close allies have been severely hampered.

Press association condemns Israel’s continued ban on media access to Gaza

Despite the ceasefire in the troubled enclave, an international media organization has condemned the Israeli government’s continued refusal to lift its restriction on unrestricted media access to Gaza.

The government, which had previously told the Supreme Court two days earlier that the ban should be continued for “security reasons,” caused the Foreign Press Association (FPA) to issue a statement on Tuesday.

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Since the start of the war in October 2023, Israel has forbid foreign journalists from freely entering Gaza. In response, the FPA petition asked for foreign journalists to gain unrestricted access to the devasted area.

The group, which represents journalists from international news organizations operating in Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank, pledged to give the court a “robust response” in the coming days.

The government has once more decided to lock us out of Gaza in place of a plan that would allow journalists to work independently there and alongside our brave Palestinian colleagues. Even with a ceasefire now in place, this is true,” according to the FPA statement.

According to the Israeli government, which has limited permission for journalists working in Gaza with its military on a case-by-case basis, its court filing was “based on the defense establishment’s position,” noting that allowing journalists to enter the area might hinder the search for the remains of the last Israeli captive.

In September 2024, the FPA filed a petition with the court. The government has received numerous extensions from the court.

The government’s final deadline for presenting a plan for media access to Gaza was January 4 last month.

According to the International Federation of Journalists, Palestine was the country with the highest rate of journalist suicide in 2025, according to a report from the International Federation of Journalists.

Nearly 300 journalists and media workers have died in Gaza since the start of the conflict, according to Shireen. Shireen Abu Akleh, the veteran correspondent for Al Jazeera’s television network, was killed in the occupied West Bank in 2022, according to Ps, a monitoring website.

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[Al Jazeera]