The Wren Boys
It's been a long time since I posted anything here. I feel like I am getting further away from my Ukrainian roots as I have no one to speak or reminisce with. So I'll post here some observations about holiday traditions that I've noticed have similar roots in Ireland and Ukraine.
In Ireland, we celebrate three days of Christmas: Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and St Stephen's Day. Christmas Day is the big one in Ireland, whereas Christmas Eve is the big one in Ukrainian tradition. Ukrainians celebrate with a twelve-course meatless meal, except it includes fish of course. We used to celebrate Christmas by the Julian calendar on the 7th of January, but most of the Catholics switched to the Gregorian calendar. The Orthodox still use the Julian calendar. As we are in Ireland now and Alex's mother is German, we celebrate German Christmas on the 24th, Irish Christmas on the 25th and Ukrainian Christmas on the 7th. I know it's complicated, but we only give presents once. We really should have given presents on the feast of St Nicolas.
The feast of St Nicolas, the patron saint of sailors, is observed on 6 December in Western Christian countries, and on 19 December in Eastern Christian countries using the old church calendar. It is the feast day of Nicholas of Myra with emphasis on his reputation as a bearer of gifts. That's when gifts were given to all the good children, but the bad children received a lump of coal or a switch with which they'd be spanked. Saint Nicholas' Collegiate Church, founded in 1320, is the largest medieval parish church in Ireland; Christopher Columbus is said to have prayed there in 1477 and Cromwell's men desecrated it in 1652. It is magnificent and in the heart of old Galway.
We also celebrate Malanka (Маланка, or "Shchedryi vechіr"/"Щедрий Вечір") a folk holiday celebrated on 13 January, which is New Year's Eve in accordance with the Julian calendar. We never did change that one. It is still celebrated on the 13th of January with lavish balls.Few know that not only is this originally a Ukrainian folksong but a folksong that was performed one hundred years ago all over Europe and the Americas in Ukraine’s first-ever cultural diplomacy project. It's about a small bird like a wren or a swallow. The fledgeling Ukrainian National Republic sent the group Ukrainian Republic A Capella on a worldwide tour in a bid to promote Ukrainian culture around the world and preserve the statehood of the country – and ended up giving a timeless gift of Ukrainian music to the world.
Mummers in Sligo |