Six of the Best: Unusual Christmas Traditions
Fermented
auks, horse skulls and setting the table for ghosts... just a few unusual
Christmas customs from around the world.
If your children think their family's weird for
standing up for the Queen's speech, get them to take a look at these traditions.
It might make them look at their nearest and dearest in a whole new light!
Yugoslavia
On the second Sunday before Christmas, children creep in and tie
their mother's feet to a chair, shouting 'Mother's Day, Mother's Day,
what will you pay to get away?' Surprisingly, she then gives them presents.
Children play the same trick on their father the following week and the
children get more presents. Unfortunately, parents don't get to do the
same to their children the week after.
Greenland
Kiviak is a gastronomical Christmas treat from Greenland which,
for some reason, hasn't been adopted by many other nations. It's made
from the raw flesh of an auk which has been buried under a stone in sealskin
for several months until it's achieved an advanced stage of decomposition.
Apparently, it smells like old blue cheese and tastes very pungent.
Iraq
In the Christian homes, a child reads the story of the Nativity
from an Arabic Bible while other family members hold lighted candles.
As soon as the story has been read a bonfire made of dried thorns is lit
and the family sing a psalm. If the thorns burn to ashes, the family will
have good fortune during the coming year. When the fire has burned down,
everyone jumps over the ashes three times and makes a wish.
Wales
Ever wondered where the phrase 'putting the bite on' comes from?
At Christmastime, in some rural areas of south Wales, the Mari Llwyd is
a person hiding under a horsehair sheet (a brethyn rhawn) whilst carrying
a horse's skull on a pike .The Mari Llwyd wanders the streets with a band
of mummers and anyone 'given the bite' by the horse's jaws must pay a
cash fine.
Lebanon
The Labanese plant chickpeas, wheat grains, beans and lentils
in cotton wool, a fortnight before Christmas. They water the seeds every
day and at Christmas, the sprouted shoots are used to surround the manger
in nativity scenes.
Portugal
In Portugal, the 'consoda' feast takes place on the morning of
Christmas Day. Extra places are set at table for the souls of the dead
and they are offered food to these souls to bring luck to the family during
the forthcoming year.
|