Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts

May 1 - May Day

 Posted on May 1, 2021

This is an update of my post published May 1, 2010:


In some places around the world, May Day is celebrated as the first day of summer or as a day of fertility—lots of flowers and dancing and so forth.



In other places, May Day is celebrated as Labor Day, a day in which to think and talk about workers' rights - and quite likely protest current working conditions!



(Interestingly enough, Labor Day  in the United States is NOT associated with May 1, but in many other nations, labor / workers' rights are associated with May 1 because of an event that happened in the U.S.!  The 1886 Haymarket Affair started with a general strike for better working conditions but ended with tragic violence and loss of life. Apparently, because the Soviet Union was among the many non-U.S. countries that honor workers on the anniversary of the Haymarket Affair, May Day being Labor Day was associated with communism. And that seems to be why the U.S. celebrates Labor Day at a completely different time of year, in September.)

Let's loo
k at one colorful May Day tradition, from Kingsand, Cawsand, and Millbrook in England:



People wear red and white clothes and decorate their houses with flowers. A model of the ship The Black Prince is covered in flowers and is paraded from the Quay at Millbrook to the beach at Cawsand and then cast adrift.


After the Flower Boat Ritual is over, there is Morris dancing and May pole dancing.

Morris dancing is a kind of folk dancing apparently performed by men. It has rhythmic stepping and choreographed figures (doesn't all dance?) and it is sometimes performed with sticks, swords, handkerchiefs, bells, or even tobacco pipes.


A May pole 
is a tall wooden pole decorated with long colored ribbons that are attached at the top, and also with festoons and wreaths of flowers and greenery. The May pole dancers weave the ribbons in and out and in this way make patterns.

Fun!



Celebrate with May baskets.


An old tradition that could easily be revived is making May baskets. Make small baskets filled with sweets or flowers (real ones are great, but they could be paper or chenille flowers), and leave them anonymously on your neighbors' front porches. If you make several, you could use inexpensive materials such as plastic strawberry baskets and shredded-paper or “Easter grass” to hold the sweets or flowers.

Here are some cute paper “baskets”—and lots of other May Day crafts!





Do some crafts.

Check out the DLTK website for more May Day crafts.

Color some pictures.

Illustrator Jan Brett has some really great coloring pages to print out and color. Here is one with Hedgie the Hedgehog and spring flowers, and here is one about a springtime bike ride.

Make May Day a play day!

Here are some May Day activity suggestions.

 



Did you know...?

May Day is Lei Day in Hawaii.

 




So, do your best to celebrate: workers and labor, spring and summer, flowers and leis. Whew!


Also on this date:

 










Loyalty Day









(First Saturday of May)



(First Saturday of May)

(First Saturday of May)



(First Saturday of May)



(First Saturday of May)



(First Saturday of May)


(First Saturday of May)


(First Saturday of May)





Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:
And here are my Pinterest boards for:



March 21 - Nowruz, or Persian New Year

Posted on March 21, 2021

This is an update of my post published on March 21, 2010:



Nowruz – Persian New Year

The beginning of spring is also the beginning of the new year on the Iranian (Persian) calendar.

The holiday's name means “New Day” in the Farsi (Persian) language, a
nd this ancient festival is celebrated as a holy day by the Zoroastrian and Bahai faiths.

This holiday is not only celebrated in Iran, but also in Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, and other areas in Asia and eastern Europe.

Uzbekistan

Kazakhstan

Iran

California, United States

The holiday name is variously spelled Norouz, Norooz, Narooz, Nawruz, Newroz, Newruz, Nauruz, Nawroz, Noruz, Novruz, Nauroz, Navroz, Naw-Rúz, Nowroj, Navroj, Nevruz, Neyruz, Наврӯз, Navruz, Navrez, Nooruz, Nauryz, Nevruz, Nowrouz. The fact that Persian is written in Persian script rather than the Latin (or Roman) alphabet we use probably explains so many different spellings.

Celebrating in Iran


Leading up to Nowruz, most families do a really thorough house-cleaning (spring cleaning) and buy new clothes and flowers. They stock up on pastry, cookies, fresh and dried fruit, nuts, tea, and sherbet.

On Nowruz itself, Iranian families gather around the Haft Sin table, exchange gifts, and then put on their new outfits to begin the 12-day rounds of visits to family, friends, and neighbors. Younger family members usually visit elderly relatives first, and most visits are reciprocated. (In other words, if Taraneh's family visits Touse's family, later in the week Touse's family will, in turn, visit Taraneh's.) And of course, all the goodies listed above are enjoyed during these visits.




You may wonder what the Haft Sin table is. It is a display of “the seven S's”—seven items that begin with the letter “S” (Sin) in Farsi. These items correspond to seven “elements of life” (Fire, Earth, Water, Air, Plants, Animals, Human), and to the major astronomical bodies known to the ancients (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Moon and Sun).

The seven items are wheat sprouts, a sweet pudding, dried fruit of the oleaster tree, garlic, apples, sumac berries, and vinegar. Other items that are often added to the display include coins, candles, a mirror, decorated eggs, goldfish, rosewater, national colors, and a holy book. Each item symbolizes something such as wealth or health or life.

In addition to the treats eaten during Nowruz 
visits, the traditional New Year's Day meal in some areas features rice with herbs (parsley, coriander, chives, dill, and fenugreek) served with fish. Other dishes include rice cooked with noodles and herb and vegetable soufflé.



Learn abou
t the ancient Persian empire.

Between the years 545 B.C. and 525 B.C., the Persians conquered nearby territories and established an empire about 3,000 miles wide. It was the largest empire of its time.
Cyrus the Great unified Persia and conquered
Babylonia.

Here and here are short videos about the Persian Empire. And if you have time, here is a long video!

There is this whole thing about Ancient Greeks vs. Ancient Persians. This video takes a look at this.


Check out the lovely Persian script here.




Words +
 Puzzles = Wuzzles

The word puzzles we call wuzzles had their start 2,000 years ago in ancient Persia. (Of course, they were the ancient Persian language!)

An example is this one:












.
.
.
.
.
What do you think it means?



ANSWER: 
Long underwear (because the word long appears under the word wear)


Here is another:












.
.
.
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ANSWER: An inside job


There are lots of wuzzles to try here.