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Powered by Benchmark UK TV host Kaur says 2 per cent Christians in India celebrate X’mas like majority, echoes growing insecurity in Europe - Matribhumi Samachar English
Wednesday, February 04 2026 | 09:19:42 PM
Home / International / UK TV host Kaur says 2 per cent Christians in India celebrate X’mas like majority, echoes growing insecurity in Europe

UK TV host Kaur says 2 per cent Christians in India celebrate X’mas like majority, echoes growing insecurity in Europe

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A video shared from New Delhi by British television host and commentator Narinder Kaur has triggered a wide-ranging debate on religious coexistence, cultural expression, and double standards in multicultural societies, even as Europe enters the Christmas season under heightened security amid persistent terror threats.

Kaur, who is currently travelling in India, posted footage from the national capital showing Christmas decorations across hotels, shopping malls, and restaurants.

The visuals included decorated Christmas trees, Santa Claus figures, and hospitality staff wearing Santa hats. She expressed visible surprise at the scale of Christmas celebrations in a country where Christians constitute roughly two per cent of the population. “Around 2 per cent of the population of India is Christian, yet they are celebrating Xmas like its the majority! Its amazing! Respectful,” she wrote on ‘X’. In her social media post accompanying the video, Kaur described the Indian approach to Christmas as strikingly open and respectful. She highlighted what she saw as a widespread festive atmosphere cutting across religious lines, noting that Christmas-themed decorations and celebrations were visible wherever she travelled, including hotels and eateries.

“Everywhere I’ve gone, hotels, restaurants, they’re celebrating Christmas big time in India,” she said in the video. According to her assessment, the celebrations appeared to take place without anxiety, social tension, or political controversy.

Kaur contrasted this experience with what she described as a more polarised environment in the United Kingdom. She argued that if a comparable level of public celebration were extended to festivals such as Diwali in the UK, sections of the political right would react negatively. She drew particular attention to cultural symbolism, suggesting that Indian hospitality workers wearing Santa hats during Christmas were broadly accepted, whereas similar symbolic participation, such as British hotel staff wearing traditional religious headgear during Diwali, would likely provoke outrage. “Staff all have Santa hats on… can you imagine UK hotel staff wearing turbans during Diwali? The right-wing would have a meltdown,” she wrote.

She further observed that public Christmas celebrations in India seemed free from accusations that Christians or Western influences were dominating public space. “Now I think 2 per cent of the population of India is Christian, but they’re still celebrating, respecting, “She also said that public Christmas celebrations in India appeared to happen without fear or cultural anxiety. According to Kaur, there was no visible resentment or suspicion surrounding Christian symbols. “This is happening without any fear,” she remarked, adding that there was no sense of people complaining that “Christians or white people are taking over.” Kaur described what she saw as a relaxed and confident society, where Christmas decorations were treated as festive rather than threatening. Her comments suggested that India’s public culture allowed space for minority religious expression without triggering political outrage or identity-based conflict.

Europe enters Christmas season under heightened security

While debates over cultural openness played out online, authorities across Europe have moved to significantly tighten security around Christmas markets and holiday events, citing elevated threats to public safety.

Across Germany, France, and several other European countries, Christmas markets have reopened this year under reinforced security protocols, including concrete barriers, expanded video surveillance, and increased armed police presence. Officials have described Christian and Jewish festivals as potential soft targets for jihadist attacks, pointing to both recent incidents and a longer history of holiday-related violence.

In Germany, a recent survey by the Federal Association of City and Town Marketing indicated that spending on security for public events, including Christmas markets, has risen by approximately 44 per cent over the past three years. Berlin’s main Christmas market has launched this season behind reinforced barriers, with upgraded surveillance systems and a larger private security deployment. Smaller municipalities have warned that the rising cost of mandated security measures could force them to scale back or cancel Christmas markets in the coming years. While some towns receive partial public funding, many local councils and private organisers bear the majority of the financial burden. Local officials have increasingly called on Germany’s 16 federal states to assume greater responsibility for security costs, arguing that counter-terrorism measures serve national interests rather than merely local ones. These precautions follow a deadly SUV attack at the Magdeburg Christmas market last December, which left six people dead and more than 300 injured. Since that incident, German cities have revised crowd-control strategies, reinforced physical infrastructure, and expanded monitoring at large seasonal gatherings.

France and Other Countries Follow Suit

France has adopted a similarly cautious approach. Authorities cancelled the annual New Year’s Eve concert on the Champs-Elysees after police raised concerns about crowd management and what the Interior Ministry described as an extremely high terror threat level. Christmas markets and winter festivals have been officially classified as high-risk events, prompting cities to deploy additional officers, introduce new screening points, and impose access restrictions where necessary.

Other European countries have also reinforced security operations.

In Austria, the iconic Salzburg Christmas market, which attracts around 1.5 million visitors annually, is now monitored by round-the-clock private security teams and a network of dedicated surveillance cameras. In some regions, including Styria, organisers have cancelled markets altogether, citing an inability to afford the required safety upgrades.

In Prague, large concrete blocks have been placed along embankments and pedestrian zones, while police patrols have been intensified to monitor potential threats. Budapest has deployed additional plain-clothes officers among crowds to improve detection and response times during peak holiday footfall.

Terror Threats and Political Warnings

A report from the UK National Counter Terrorism Security Office has noted that terrorist attacks follow a strict seasonal pattern. However, the Christmas period presents particular vulnerabilities due to crowded public spaces and the religious symbolism attached to the season.

European authorities have expressed growing concern amid a rise in anti-Semitic and Islamophobic incidents following renewed conflict in the Middle East. EU officials have warned that polarisation linked to the Israel–Hamas war could heighten the risk of terrorist activity during the holiday season.

European Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson has cautioned that the international situation, combined with social polarisation, significantly increases the risk of attacks within the European Union.

Spain’s Home Affairs Minister Fernando Grande Marlaska has echoed these concerns, warning that global tensions could sharpen divisions and fuel terrorism at a particularly sensitive time.

These warnings follow a series of security incidents across Europe, including the fatal stabbing of a German-Filipino tourist near the Eiffel Tower in Paris earlier this month, and the arrest of two teenagers in Cologne suspected of planning an attack on a Christmas market or synagogue after posting calls for a holy war online.

A History That Shapes the Present Europe’s caution is rooted in a long history of holiday-season attacks. In 2016, a Tunisian national who pledged allegiance to the Islamic State drove a truck into a Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 people. In 2018, a gunman attacked the Strasbourg Christmas market, killing five in an incident later claimed by the Islamic State. Austrian authorities thwarted an ISIL-inspired bomb plot targeting a Vienna Christmas market in 2019. Against this backdrop, European governments argue that heightened vigilance is not optional but essential.

The contrast between India’s relatively relaxed public celebrations and Europe’s heavily securitised festive spaces has become a point of reflection for commentators and observers alike.

As debates over cultural tolerance and security continue, Kaur’s video has inadvertently highlighted a deeper global question that how societies balance openness, pluralism, and public celebration with historical memory, demographic realities, and persistent security threats in an increasingly polarised world.

Credit : Organiser Weekly

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