Posted by R. Ann
Siracusa
The Holidays are upon
us. May the world rejoice in peace.
Most of us living in
the North America, South America, US and Europe know the common Christmas
traditions of the western world. Although Christmas is a Christian religious
celebration, it's surprising to find it is celebrated throughout the world. Sometimes
it is celebrated not as a religious holiday and sometimes in places we wouldn't
expect.
The manner in which
the Christian religion is mixed with local traditions, ancient pagan beliefs
and festivals is fascinating. I’ve posted this blog before, but I update it
annually and in 2018 I found some new, interesting and, in a few cases, irreverent “traditions.”
SWEDEN – "GOD JUL AND (OCH) ETT GOTT NYTT AR!"
In Sweden the Christmas
is all about time spent with family and friends and eating lots of food and
sweets. The festivities start with the St. Lucia ceremony on December 13, the
Winter Solstice on the old Julian calendar. But we’ve already looked at the
traditions that go with St. Lucia festival.
I’ve run on to another
rather recent “tradition” in Sweden: The Gävel Goat. Actually, Gävel is the
name of the city where this event takes place. The goat is bocken (boken), in
Swedish.
The Yule Goat
The Yule goat is a
Scandinavian and Northern European Christmas symbol, a goat made of straw,
which is one of the most popular Christmas decorations in Sweden.
The prevalent theory is
that the origin dates back to ancient pagan festivals, in particular the
worship of the Nose god Thor, who rode the sky in a chariot drawn by two goats.
After the advent of Christianity, the Yule goat morphed into a goat which was
supposed to help Santa Claus deliver presents. On occasion, Santa rode the goat
instead of flying in his sleigh.
Photo source:Wikipedia
Photo source:Wikipedia
The Gävel Goat
Perhaps the city of
Gävel, Sweden, used straw Yule Goats in their city’s decorations for Christmas
in Gävel’s Castle Square. I couldn’t find out.
However, in 1966, Stig
Gavlén, an advertising consultant, came up with the idea of building a giant
straw version of Yule Goat in Castle Square. The first giant goat was
constructed by the Gävel Fire Department as were those erected each year from
1966 to 1970 and 1986 to 2002.
For the last fifty years
the giant goat has been a Christmas tradition and is dedicated at the beginning
of Advent. The event now draws tourists from all over the world.
As the years passed, the
goat has grown in size. The one built in 1985 by the Natural Science Club of
the School of Vasa reached 41 feet in height and made it into the Guinness Book
of Records. In 1993, it reached 49 feet, setting another record.
But our giant goat has a
problem. Despite the efforts of the city of Gävel, the goat has been destroyed
thirty-six times, the most recent incident in 2016. Usually it is torched, but
because the fire station is nearby, they have always managed to save the wooden
frame. At least once it was hit by a car and collapsed. More recently the police
foiled an attempt to steal it by helicopter.
Since 1986, two goats have
been built, one by a society of Southern Merchants and the other by the Natural
Science Club of Vasa, so there is a standby. Sometime both get destroyed.
Photo: Mikael Johansson/Wikimedia Commonshttps://www.thelocal.se/20151126/five-weirdest-attacks-on-swedens-straw-yule-goat ▼
Although the
city has taken many measures to protect the goat. Fences, guards, spotlights and
cameras don't seem to work. The
biggest deterrent of all is that it is illegal to burn down the goat, with
serious consequences for those caught.
In 2001, a 51-yearold American tourist, Lawrence Jones, set the goat on fires after supposedly being convinced by his Swedish friends that it was a legal game the town officials played with the populace. He ended up with a $14,700 fine and an 18 day prison sentence for his efforts.
The photo is the goat which was set on fire during a blizzard in 1998.
In 2001, a 51-yearold American tourist, Lawrence Jones, set the goat on fires after supposedly being convinced by his Swedish friends that it was a legal game the town officials played with the populace. He ended up with a $14,700 fine and an 18 day prison sentence for his efforts.
The photo is the goat which was set on fire during a blizzard in 1998.
Of course, despite all
this and other efforts, half the fun of the tradition (The Dark Tradition, if
you will) is seeing and betting whether or not the goat can stay intact until
Christmas.
MEXICO – “Feliz Navidad”
Mexican celebrate in many of the same ways as other countries. In
Mexico, las posadas begins on December 16. The ninth evening of las posadas is Buena Noche, Christmas Eve. The children lead a procession to the
church and place a figure of the Christ Child in the nativity scene there, Then everyone attends midnight mass.
And of course, the Christmas dinner. In Mexico, it just isn’t Christmas without tamales.
La Noche de Rábanos - The Night of the Radishes
However, if you spend
Christmas eve in Oaxaca, Mexico, you’ll enjoy an interesting tradition you may
not be familiar with. The night of December 23 is “The Night of the Radishes” (La Noche de Rábanos),
one of the annual Christmas customs in Oaxaca, Mexico.
In this
festival, competitors carve nativity scenes and other Christmas themes into
large radishes, which are proudly displayed at the Christmas market in the town
square. Oaxaca has land dedicated to cultivating special vegetables just for
this event.
The competition’s
origins date back to when holiday market vendors tried to make their vegetables
more enticing by making sculptures with them.
It was such a hit that
the governor, Vasconcelos, decided to create an official contest in 1897.
It’s been a tradition in Oaxaca ever since. All kinds of sculptures
can be seen—saints, musicians, buildings, even a tiny cemetery where little
radish people are celebrating the Day of the Dead.
To ensure fair competition, everyone uses vegetables grown by the
government for the festival. And these radishes are big. Some grow 1.5 feet long
and can weigh almost seven pounds.
The festival starts in
the morning, when everyone can see the artists working on their sculptures, but
wait until night if you want to see the finished masterpieces.
The festival
also features concerts around the city, fireworks, and light shows. Photo by: Lair Lobo-https://www.atlasobscura.com/ ▲
Photo by: W. Scott Koenig 2013
The Spanish celebrate with a number of traditional events such nativity scenes (they like large ones), midnight mass, dinners and special deserts, the Three Kings, but there are a few somewhat irreverent traditions also.
● Caga Tió or Tió de Nadal (Pooping
Log)
This Catalan Christmas tradition is called the Pooping Log. The word Tió means
log.
Children decorate a small log by adding legs, a face, and a red Catalan hat ('barretina') and sometimes a red cloth or blanket. They are for sale everywhere around Christmas time.
Children decorate a small log by adding legs, a face, and a red Catalan hat ('barretina') and sometimes a red cloth or blanket. They are for sale everywhere around Christmas time.
From the 8th
of December until Christmas the children feed the log small pieces of bread or
fruit, take care of it and keep it warm. As Christmas approaches, the parents
replace the first log with a bigger one, and then bigger. The children believe
if they take good care of the log, it will grow bigger and they will get bigger
presents.
On Christmas
Eve or Christmas day the children sing a special song to make the log
“poop”, then they beat him with a stick.
After giving
the log a good beating and still singing, they leave the room, giving parents
the opportunity to put candy and presents in the hallow log or under the
blanket. Traditionally, when the log has nothing
left to poop, it finishes the deed with a salt herring, a head of garlic, an
onion, or it 'urinates' by leaving a bowl of water.
These days the presents pooped out by the log are candy, sweets and turrón nougat, and maybe one gift, since the big day for gift giving in January 6, the Epiphany.
These days the presents pooped out by the log are candy, sweets and turrón nougat, and maybe one gift, since the big day for gift giving in January 6, the Epiphany.
●El Caganer (The
Defecator)
All Spaniards seem to
like nativity scenes, big and small. You find them everywhere. Some families
buy a nativity scene rather than a Christmas Tree. A second Catalan tradition I’d
never heard of is the Caganer.
It’s a small figurine of a man wearing a red Barretina squatting
with his pants around his ankles, defecating. (That doesn't sound like a very good Christmas tradition to me.)
Photo source: 2012 Article by Barbara Weibel holeinthedonut.com/2012/caganers ▼
Photo source: 2012 Article by Barbara Weibel holeinthedonut.com/2012/caganers ▼
The Caganers are for
sale everywhere at Christmas time, and have become so popular you can find a
caganer figurine with the face of every celebrity in the world.
In a 2012 article,
Barbara Weibel writes, “No one knows for sure how the Caganer originally
came into being and even today, opinions are divided on what it symbolizes.
Some insist that excrement is symbolic of fertilizing the earth.”
According to the
ethnographer, Joan Amades, it was a “customary figure in pessebres in the
19th century, because people believed that this deposit fertilized the ground
of the pessebre (a manger,
crib, nativity scene)…placing this figurine in the pessebre brought good
luck and joy and not doing so brought adversity.”
Others believe the act
of defecation is symbolic of the equality of all people, regardless of status,
race, or gender (i.e. everyone does it). The explanation Barbara Weibel says
she likes best is the reference to an old Spanish proverb which translates as “Dung
is no saint, but where it falls, it works miracles.”
THE PHILIPPINES – “Maligayang Pasko” (in Tagalog, 1 of 8 Philippino
languages)
"Malipayon nga Pascua” in Ilonggo;
“Maayong Pasko” in Sugbuhanon or Cebuano;
“Maugmang Pasko” in Bicolano;
“Maupay Nga Pasko” in Warey arey
“Maabig ya pasko” in Pangalatok;
“Magayagan inkianac” Pangasinense
“Maayong Pasko” in Sugbuhanon or Cebuano;
“Maugmang Pasko” in Bicolano;
“Maupay Nga Pasko” in Warey arey
“Maabig ya pasko” in Pangalatok;
“Magayagan inkianac” Pangasinense
Christmas is a major
holiday in the Philippines because over eighty percent of the population is
Roman Catholic, and you can say “Merry Christmas” in eight Philippino
languages. The people make the season last as long as possible, and some of the
shopping and caroling begins in September.
Many of the Christmas
traditions came from Europe with the missionaries in the 1500’s but there are
some traditions unique to the Philippines.
The parol,
the most popular Christmas decoration, is a bamboo pole with a lighted star
lanterns on it. Made from bamboo strips and colored paper or cellophane, it
represents the star of Bethlehem which guided the Wise Men.
Originally these
lanterns were simple, and only about eighteen inches in diameter. Now they are much bigger.
The Lantern
Festival (Ligligan Parul Sampernandu) is held each year on the Saturday before
Christmas Eve in the city of San Fernando – now known as the “Christmas Capital
of the Philippines.” The festival attracts spectators from all over the country
and across the globe. Eleven villages take part and compete for the most
elaborate lantern. Today these lanterns are about 6 meters in diameter lighted
from within by electric bulbs that sparkle in patterns.
AUTHOR R. ANN SIRACUSA
AUTHOR R. ANN SIRACUSA
Travel to Foreign Lands for Romance and IntrigueFacebook Twitter GooglePlus Website AmazonLink
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What a great post! I learned a few thing. The goat was fascinating as was the other traditions. I should have a caganer for my house.
ReplyDeletedebby236 at hotmail dot com from FL
Somehow...I just can't get enthusiastic about "pooping" as part of my holiday celebrations! Thanks for the intriguing facts about celebrations in other countries and Happy Holidays, RAS!
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