While many individuals enjoy a family feast on Christmas Day, a dedicated group of volunteers dedicates their day to ensure others are not left in solitude. Margaret Peacock, a Coleraine resident, has dedicated the past 40 Christmases to organizing a substantial community meal for those who would otherwise face isolation during the holiday. “People want to be with their families at Christmas and they don’t think about people who are alone,” she informed BBC News NI. On December 25, the pensioner aims to deliver “a good hot dinner, entertainment and a present for everyone.” Local businesses contribute some of the food, but apart from a modest annual subscription, Margaret, along with her family and friends, funds the gifts. “Last year I had to wrap 280 presents,” she stated. She begins collecting presents each January, ensuring that all her guests depart “with at least three presents each.” Her Christmas gatherings were inspired by her cherished uncle Jimmy, who assumed a paternal role after she lost her parents. “Uncle Jimmy took over from my parents,” she elaborated, explaining that even in her late teens, she still required the support of a loving older relative. Jimmy, who was unmarried and lived alone, passed away four decades ago. In honor of the benevolent bachelor, she arranged a festive banquet for individuals who had no one to celebrate with. “We begged and borrowed the first year,” she recounted. “We stayed up all night that Christmas Eve cooking turkeys and hams.” This year, she is hosting approximately 70 people at Rathain Fold for a full day of festivities. Her team commences cooking before dawn, welcoming guests around noon with tea, coffee, and biscuits. A substantial four-course lunch follows an hour later, featuring meats donated by the Quays restaurant, Portrush. “Last year, there were five different dessert choices, and some of them had the whole five,” Margaret chuckled. Live entertainment and bingo precede a “high tea” of homemade baked goods and Christmas pie in the late afternoon, before Santa arrives with personalized gifts. “That’s the end of the evening, and then the hard cleaning and work begins.” Margaret expresses gratitude for the assistance from her niece and other volunteers, which enables the continuation of these celebrations. Despite suffering from fibromyalgia and diabetes, she also requires a knee operation, which she has been “putting off to January” due to her demanding schedule. Her decades of voluntary service, both during Christmas and as a director of Fibromyalgia Support Northern Ireland, have garnered significant recognition. In 2022, she received an invitation to King Charles’ coronation, which she initially mistook for a scam. “I put the phone down on the man,” she laughed, adding that Buckingham Palace contacted her again to confirm its authenticity. Last year, Margaret was honored with an award from then-Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who commended her efforts to unite people as embodying “the true spirit of the festive period.” In Newry, Indian restaurant owner Gaurav Barot, alongside his wife and children, will be providing complimentary meals to anyone in need of a hot dinner on Christmas Day. “We want to give back to the community,” he affirmed. “We got good local support when we opened and we were welcomed really well in town.” His restaurant commenced operations in August 2023 but narrowly avoided the Halloween floods two months later, which caused extensive damage across central Newry. Gaurav noted his good fortune, having only to close for two days, and expressed being “100%” impressed by the local community’s support for flood-affected businesses. This experience motivated him to offer free takeaways last Christmas, a gesture he will repeat this year, serving around 100 meals from noon onwards. “A lot of people are struggling with money and we want to help out.” He intends to close at 16:00 GMT to return home for a traditional Christmas celebration with his extended family. “My wife is originally from Newry,” he clarified. “I’m Hindu but my wife is Catholic and our kids are growing up in a mixed religion – Hindu and Catholic.” He added, “My wife has a big family here… so we get together once we finish here and then we have a meal – her family join us as well.” In County Fermanagh, cafe manager Glenn Johnson sought approval from his wife and children before he began inviting people to join their family Christmases nine years ago. “At that time my youngest was 12 and my other two children were 14 and 16,” he recounted. “I had to ask them first because it affects them too, and they were happy to go for it.” The family now dedicates every Christmas Day to serving a community dinner at Ardess Parish Church hall in Kesh. “Our minister at the time was very much into ‘everybody has something to give’,” Mr Johnson stated. “And I suppose, I can cook, I can’t really do much else. So I thought: ‘How could I use my cooking skills to help the church?'” This Christmas, they anticipate approximately 30 guests, many of whom are annual attendees. “There are people there for different reasons. Some people are on their own, some are couples on their own, their family is away in Australia or somewhere like that,” Glenn explained. Initially, he viewed the event as “a life lesson for our children, to set them on a good path to help others.” However, his entire family now eagerly anticipates the dinner and the opportunity to “catch-up” with old friends. “They enjoy it, they love the banter and the chat,” Glenn added. “I think if we didn’t do it now people would be disappointed – and we’d be disappointed.”

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