Feasts and festivals serve to meet
specific social and psychological needs of the people of the country. Holidays
can be religious and secular, national and local, official and unofficial. The
dates that are memorable to every Russian citizen are Victory Day, May Day,
Constitution Day, Women's Day, and the Day of Sovereignty of the Russian
Federation. These are national holidays; people do not work on these days. The
most important date in Russia is Victory Day. Observed on May 9, it
commemorates the Victory of the Russian troops over the Nazi invaders. On that
day the veterans meet in the parks and squares of the cities to recollect the
days of war and exchange greetings. Wartime music is played everywhere. At
night fireworks are let off. May Day is also very popular in our country. This
is the day of friendship and support.
One of the biggest festivals of the
year is New Year. Peter I the Great decreed that New Year should be marked in
Russia on January 1. The coming of New Year is celebrated with a New Year Tree,
presents, Grandpa Frost, European Santa Claus, and a hearty meal. In our
country New Year is toasted in champagne at family gatherings. New Year's
feasts are widely covered by mass media.
Recently new national holidays have
been introduced in our country. These are Christmas and Easter. Christmas and
Easter are both religious holidays. Now they are officially marked throughout
our country. In Russia Christmas is celebrated on January 7. Easter is the most
important holiday for the Orthodox. Besides the religious significance, these
holidays have become the days of family reunion and happiness.
The major holidays in Great Britain
are New Year's Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Labour Day (May 1), Christmas
Day, and Boxing Day. Public holidays are called Bank Holidays, because on these
days banks, most of the shops and offices are closed. The Bank Holidays were
appointed by the Act of Parliament in 1871.
Christmas is the festival that
everyone celebrates on December 25. On Christmas people usually stay with their
families. On Christmas Eve children hang stockings at the ends of their beds
for Father Christmas to fill them with toys. Boxing Day, marked on December 26,
is the day on which boxes of presents are given to the people who have given
service during a year. New Year is marked in accordance with the family
tradition and personal taste.
Easter Peace Marches have become the
feature of the epoch. They are held during Easter Holidays. The first Easter
Peace March was held in 1958. The peak of the Easter Peace Marches was reached
in the 1960s. These Marches bring together the people who are concerned with
the global problems of the future of our planet. In Britain May Day, the day of
the workers struggle and solidarity, is observed with marches and rallies. It
marks a new stage in workers' efforts to win a better life.
On Whit-Monday (last Monday in May)
and the first Monday in August all parks and holiday-places are crowded. In
London some people go to Hampton Court Palace, to the Tower of London or to the
Zoo.
But besides public holidays the
British observe certain traditions on such days as Pancake Day, Bonfire Night
or Guy Fawkes Night, April Fool's Day, Mother's Day, which unless they fall on
Sunday are ordinary working days. Carnival-like celebrations were held in
England on Shrove Tuesday or Pancake Day, the day before the Lenten fast began,
until the 19-th century. Feasts of pancakes and much drinking followed the
contests; one of them was all-over-town ball game. Today the only regularly
observed custom is pancake eating. This tradition of merrymaking and feasting
continues also in the United States on Shrove Tuesday in Louisiana. The first
of April is known as April Fool's Day or All Fool's Day. It is the day of jokes
and any person can become a victim of traditional tricks of the undone shoelace
or a crooked tie or a false invitation to a party. For three centuries Mother's
Day has been the day of family reunion when adult children come back to their
parents with boxes of presents. A typical British festival takes place on
November 5. On that day in 1605 Guy Fawkes tried to blow up the Houses of
Parliament. He failed in doing so, but the children of Britain never forget
him. Every year, on "Guy Fawkes Night" they make "guys" to
burn on bonfires, and let off fireworks.
There are local festivals all
through the year. In spring, village children dance round the Maypole. Maypole
is an ancient fertility emblem of the beginning of summer. In ancient times it
was a pagan spring festival. It was celebrated with garlands and flowers,
dancing and games on the village green. A tall pole decorated with flowers,
maypole, was erected to which ribbons were attached and held by the dancers. In
autumn, people take vegetables and fruit to church for the Harvest Festival,
and once a year Lord Mayor of London puts on a show and rides through the
streets in the golden coach.
National festivals in the United
States include Thanksgiving Day, Independence Day, St. Patrick's Day, Mother's
Day, and Memorial Day. Independence Day is observed on July 4. On this day, in
1776, America adopted the Declaration of Independence, written by Thomas
Jefferson, and started the fight for freedom from the British rule. The
celebration of it began in the American Revolution. Since then it has been a
patriotic holiday. People go out into the streets on July 4, dress up and take
part in parades and open-air meetings. In the evening there are always parties
and fireworks.
Another big holiday in the USA is
Thanksgiving Day. It commemorates colonial celebrations following the first
successful harvests in 1621. The first national Thanksgiving Day, proclaimed by
George Washington, was celebrated on November 26, 1789. Abraham Lincoln revived
the custom in 1863. In 1941 Congress provided that Thanksgiving should fall on
the fourth Thursday of November. On this day American families meet for a
special dinner, usually with turkey and pumpkin pie. They give thanks to God
for the past year.
Children always have fun at
Halloween on October 31. They dress up like ghosts and witches. They cut up a
pumpkin to look like a frightening face and put a light inside. They go from
house to house and say "Trick" or "Treat"? If they get a
"Treat" (sweets or an apple), they go away happy. But if they don't,
they play tricks.
Memorial Day falls on the fourth
Monday of May. It is the day on which the Americans honour the dead. At first
it was the day on which flags or flowers were placed on graves of the soldiers
who perished in the American Civil War. Now it has become the day on which the
dead of all wars and all other dead are remembered. On this day veterans of
military services hold special ceremonies in cemeteries or at war monuments.
Parades or special programmes are held at schools or public meeting places. In
addition to the widely recognised holidays listed above, two Sundays are
observed in a very special way. These are the second Sunday in May, which is
always Mother's Day and the other is the third Sunday in June, which is
Father's Day.
In the USA there are 50 states, and
there are many holidays that are not observed nation-wide but are celebrated in
certain states only. Columbus Day is observed on October 12 in 34 states. It
commemorates the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus who landed in the
New World on October 12, 1492. The major celebration of the day takes place in
New York City, which holds a huge parade each year.
Until the mid-1970s February 22, the
birthday of George Washington, the first President of the USA, was observed as
a federal holiday. In addition many states celebrated the birthday of Abraham
Lincoln on February 12. In the 1970s Congress declared that in order to honour
all past presidents of the USA, a single holiday, called President's Day, would
be observed on the third Monday in February.
Labour Day is observed on the first
Monday in September. It has been a federal holiday since 1894, but it was
observed in some places before that date as a result of campaigns launched by
an organisation of workers called the "Knights of Labour". Its purpose
is to honour the working people of the country. In many cities the day is
marked by parades of working people representing the labour unions.
- How do Americans honour their war
veterans?
- Veteran's Day, originally called
Armistice Day, was established to honour those Americans who had served in
World War I. It falls on November 11, the day on which that war ended. Now it
honours veterans of all the wars in which the USA has been involved.
Organisations of war veterans hold parades or other special ceremonies. The
President or another high official places a wreath on the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington. The soldiers from
each war the United States has fought in since World War I are buried there.
- What holidays are celebrated
throughout the world?
- Feasts and festivals vary greatly
in type. Some of them are religious in character; others have flourished in
modern civilisations. Secular modern festivals are often mixed with previous
religious festivals. Christmas is the most important religious holiday for
Christians. They attend special church services to celebrate the birth of Jesus
Christ. On this day most banks and offices are closed and the workers including
government employees have the day off. May Day is a springtime fertility
festival that can be traced back to the Great Mother festival of Greco-Roman
times. It has become a festival of the labouring class of the world. At the
same time May Day commemorates the suppression of the workers in Chicago on May
1, 1886, who were struggling for an eight-hour working day. In 1889 American
Labour Unions decided to hold such demonstrations everywhere. This social
festival is observed in different countries. St. Valentine's Day is celebrated
on February 14. It is not an official holiday, but people in many countries
celebrate it in a very special manner. They send greeting cards to the people
they love. Such cards are called "Valentines". This day is named
after a Christian martyr, whose feast day is observed on that day. It is held
that Valentine before his execution sent a message of friendship to his prison
warden's blind daughter. Nowadays New Year is celebrated at midnight on 31st in
many countries. Although certain countries calculate time by other calendars,
most countries number their years according to the Gregorian calendar
introduced in the 16-th century by Pope Gregory XIII. Although certain
countries follow their national calendar, they always remember January 1. New
Year's Day is a cultural festival. Bells ring out around the world to welcome
New Year.
- Is there anything common in the
celebration of New Year's Day in different countries?
- New Year is a family day. On this
day everyone gives and receives presents. Both adults and children love it. People
believe that a miracle is a must on this day. They are also convinced that if
New Year begins well it will continue like that. On the New Year night people
visit their friends or stay at home and watch TV. The dancing goes on all
night. On January 1 business offices, banks, schools are closed so that people
can feast, dance, and generally enjoy themselves.
- Are there differences in the
celebrations and customs of New Year in European countries?
- In Scotland New Year's Eve is
called Hogmanay. It is notable for its Flambeaux Procession and the custom of
First-Footing. Most differences in European tradition are connected with a meal
or special food. Food is essential because most people prefer to stay up all
night to welcome New Year. In Switzerland special bread, rich in butter, eggs
and raisins is baked and a roasted goose is cooked. In Spain there is a custom
to eat 12 grapes at midnight. In Greece some people play cards believing that
they will be lucky the whole year if they win. In Turkey celebrations are held
in restaurants all night long.
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