Showing posts with label Saint Nicholas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saint Nicholas. Show all posts

December 5 - Sinterklaas in the Netherlands (and elsewhere!)

Posted on December 5, 2020

This is an update of my first December 5 post - from 2009!

Day of the Ninja (a.k.a. Creep Like a Ninja Day)

This is the day to wear black and be silent and stealthy.

This holiday was created in response to Talk Like a Pirate Day (September 19). Apparently pirates and ninjas have a fierce online rivalry; there is even a Wikipedia page on the conflict, which began with an online debate on the question, "Who would win in a fight: pirates or ninjas?" 


So, if pirates get a special day, those on Team Ninja
demand a special day as well!
 

For more information on Day of the Ninja, go here.






Sinterklaas (in the Netherlands and elsewhere)



This is the evening before the name day of the patron saint of children. It is largely celebrated in the Netherlands and countries associated with it (Belgium, Suriname, etc.), but some Germans, Americans, French, and others also have this holiday—with lots of varying traditions, of course.

One tradition is Sinterklaas arriving on horseback or - sometimes - by steamship! Some stories say that Sinterklaas travels by a flying horse. Not a Pegasus - there are no wings involved in the horse's flying! - more like the flying reindeer of later Santa Claus traditions.


In the Netherlands, Sinterklaas (which is basically St. Nicholas' Eve) is the main occasion of gift giving. Children receive their presents from St. Nicholas, and everybody enjoys a feast.

In Belgium, children do not receive their gifts in the evening, but instead put their shoes in front of the fireplace (or somewhere like), hopefully with  carrots for Sinterklaas's horse in the shoes! Of course, they find the carrots replaced by presents in (and around) the shoes in the morning of December 6th.

Find out more about Sinterklaas here.




There's a 
Sinterklaas coloring page available here, and there are lots of different coloring pages available here. On MamaLisa. com there are lyrics and sheet music for Sinterklaas songs. Here is a recipe for Dutch pepernoot cookies. 

Sinterklaas traditions were brought to America by the Dutch colonists, who started a colony called New Amsterdam. Today the site of that colony is a bustling U.S. city. Do you know which one?

New York City!

Sinterklaas in Brooklyn, NYC, New York

Because of New York's old ties with the Netherlands, there are usually Sinterklaas celebrations in NYC and in Rhinebeck, NY.




December 24 – A Variety of Gift Bringers

Posted on December 24, 2019

The holiday of Christmas is religious and secular, Christian and pagan, ancient and modern, heartfelt and commercial, a celebration of giving and charity and a celebration of greed and materialism! Being celebrated so near the shortest day of the year, it's often celebrated with lights - yule logs, candles, and nowadays electric lights!

Above and below: Christmas lights in New York City 



Naturally, many people in the world do not celebrate Christmas. Even though just about every common custom associated with the holiday comes from pagan, pre-Christian traditions, the holiday IS associated with Christianity, and therefore many Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, atheist, or other non-Christians avoid all things Christmas. On the other hand, because so many people celebrate the holiday in a secular way, it is becoming less entangled with religion (just like Halloween is), and more and more people are participating in traditions that appeal to them.

Christmas is, in many parts of the worlds, one of the biggest gift-exchanging holidays of the year. (And that makes it, for many retailers, the most important time for sales and promotions.) Of course, the most common way for people to give gifts is to simply sign a card or gift tag and give them in person or to mail them to the recipient. But there are also stories about a variety of magical gift givers, including these:

Goblins called nissar in Denmark



Yule Lads in Iceland

A witch named Befana, on a broomstick, in Italy (gifts given on January 6)


Sinterklaas, on a white horse, in the Netherlands and Belgium


A grandfather named Jultomten and Julnissar elves in Sweden



St. Nicholas, often on a horse, in a variety of European countries (gifts given on December 6)


Christkind, Baby, or Baby Jesus in Germany, Czechia, and other European countries


Père Noël in France


Father Frost and Snow Maiden, on a sleigh, in Russia


Also in Russia, an old woman named Babushka


Joulupukki, or Yule Goat, in Finland


Three Kings (Los Reyes Magos) in Spain (gifts given on January 6)


Father Christmas in the U.K.


Santa Claus in a reindeer-pulled sleigh in the U.S. - and spreading to other nations, particularly English-speaking nations



An old man with a stick, Gwiazdor, in Poland, maybe accompanied by a Snow Maiden


Tió de Nadal - or Christmas Log - in Catalonia