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multicultural
holiday list |
| new
year's day |
jan.
1 |
| valentine's
day |
feb.
14 |
| easter |
april
16 |
| mother's
day |
may
14 |
| father's
day |
june
18 |
| rosh
hashanah |
sept.
23 - 24 |
| yom
kippur |
oct.
2 |
| haloween |
oct.
31 |
| thanksgiving |
nov.
23 |
| hanukkah |
dec.
16 - 23 |
| christmas |
dec.
25 |
| kwanzaa |
dec.
26 - jan. 1 |
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| New
Year’s is the world’s oldest and
most widely observed holiday. Evidence of New
Year’s gifts and messages has been found
in Egyptian tombs dating back to the 6th century
B.C. Early Romans are also known to have exchanged
gifts symbolizing good will, including pictures
on terra cotta tablets accompanied by inscriptions
wishing a happy and prosperous New Year.
The earliest known holiday greeting cards
appeared around 1450 in Germany. Cards from
woodcuts were the most prevalent, and often
involved the Christ Child bearing good wishes
for an auspicious New Year.
By 1770, greeting cards had evolved from
woodcuts to finely printed messages, and engravers
and printers supplied continental Europe with
vast quantities of New Year’s cards.
In modern times, the New Year holiday has
become an integral part of the holiday season,
and New Year’s cards are a popular expression
of hope for the future, used by businesses
and individuals alike.
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Tradition
holds that the first Valentine was sent in
270 A.D. by St. Valentine on the eve of his
execution for refusing to renounce Christianity.
Actually a note of appreciation to his jailer’s
blind daughter for bringing him food and delivering
messages during his incarceration, it was
signed "from your Valentine.”
The
Romans celebrated St. Valentine’s Day
as the Feast of Lupercalia, dedicated to the
pastoral god Lupercus and to the Goddess of
Love, Juno. Roman maidens placed their names
in an urn set up in the public square and
courageous bachelors drew from it to obtain
their "blind date" for the coming
year.
The
Christian Church denounced these "love
lotteries" as pagan rituals. During the
Middle Ages, love lotteries persisted in France
as "chance boxes" that allotted
couples one year to get married or part company.
In England, men wore the name of the girl
they drew on their sleeve, encircled with
a heart.
Written
Valentines appeared around the year 1400 as
quaint love missives, often given anonymously.
By the 1700s, the familiar "roses are
red, violets are blue…" verses
were popular, and by the 1850s, the French
began to ornament their Valentines cards with
gilt paper, ribbons, lace and other intricate
embellishments.
The
first Valentines in America were exchanged
during the Revolutionary days and were mostly
handmade with sentimental verses written in
flowing script. In 1840, Miss Esther Howland,
an imaginative artist and entrepreneur, became
the first regular publisher of valentines
in the United States, eventually heading her
own publishing firm that specialized in Valentine
cards.
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Easter commemorates the Resurrection of Christ
and is the most sacred of holy days on the
Christian ecclesiastical calendar. It is classified
as a "movable feast" meaning that
it is a religious celebration that changes
its date each year. The rabbit and the egg
are the most popular illustrations for Easter
cards. The Easter Bunny originates from pre-Christian
legends, in which rabbits were used to symbolize
new life. The custom of decorating Easter
eggs dates back to the Middle Ages.
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Passover celebrates the Exodus of the Israelites
from Egypt and begins on the fifteenth of
the month of Nisan on the Jewish calendar
in the Spring, and continues for seven days.
The name derives from the story when, during
the tenth and ultimate plague inflicted on
Pharaoh, God passed over the Israelites and
struck down only the Egyptian first-born.
That night, Pharaoh agreed to let the Israelites
go.
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Each year, the second Sunday in May is celebrated
as Mother’s Day, a holiday initiated
by Anna M. Jarvis of Grafton, West Virginia
in 1907 to honor her mother. Ms. Jarvis spent
a good part of her life, after the death of
her mother, in a crusade to have the date
declared a national holiday. In 1914, President
Woodrow Wilson signed a Congressional resolution
declaring, "The American mother is the
greatest source of the country’s strength
and inspiration."
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Mrs. John Bruce Dodd of Spokane, Washington
was the founder of Father’s Day in 1910.
She was one of six brothers and sisters raised
by their father, William Smart, a following
their mother’s death. Mrs. Dodd organized
the first Father’s Day celebration,
held in Seattle, and pushed for broader observance
of the holiday. In 1924, President Calvin
Coolidge recommended that Father’s Day
be observed throughout the nation as a holiday.
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| Rosh
Hashanah and Yom Kippur |
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Rosh
Hashanah is the first two days of the Jewish
month of Tishri (in the Fall), and is considered
the celebration of the beginning of the Jewish
New Year. It was referred to in the Torah
as the Day of Remembering and was not called
Rosh Hashanah– the New Year –
until Talmudic times.
Yom
Kippur falls on the tenth of Tishri on the
Jewish calendar and brings to close the ten
days of repentance and atonement begun with
Rosh Hashanah. It is the most solemn day of
the Jewish year.
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The Halloween observance originated with
the Celtic Druids in 700 B.C. The Druids believed
that the souls of the dead returned to inhabit
the bodies of the living on October 31. Villagers
donned masks and costumes and paraded to the
outskirts of town to trick roving spirits
into leaving. October 31 was later incorporated
into the Christian calendar as All Hallow’s
Eve, honoring martyrs and saints. Children
wearing costumes offered to fast for departed
souls in exchange for money or an offering.
Irish Catholics fleeing from the potato famine
in the 1840s introduced the Halloween observance
to the United States, including the practice
of carving jack-o’ lanterns.
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The autumn following their 1620 landing at
Plymouth Rock, the Pilgrims held a feast to
gave thanks after gathering their first harvest,
inviting the local Indians to share in the
celebration. This observance is commonly recognized
as the first official Thanksgiving in America.
The day has become a time to count our blessings
and give thanks. The family-oriented American
holiday is steeped in tradition, from the
festive dinner with all the trimmings to watching
the annual Thanksgiving parade and football
games.
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Hanukkah is the most historically documented
of the Jewish holidays from the First and
Second Books of the Maccabees and in the works
of Josephus and later accounts in the Talmud.
The story is one of the victory of the brave
Maccabees against the Greeks and of the miracle
of the cruse of oil that burned for eight
days instead of one. The major ritual for
the holiday is the lighting of one light of
the menorah each night of Hanukkah after sundown,
beginning with the 25th of Kislev on the Jewish
calendar (December). While a tradition of
giving Hanukkah gelt – money –
is an old one, the proximity to Christmas
has made gift giving an intrinsic part of
the holiday.
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Christmas
is the only religious holiday in America that
is also a legal holiday. December 25 was selected
as the date to observe Christmas by Pope Julius
in 349 A.D. While the legend of Santa Claus
dates back to the 4th-century figure of St.
Nicholas, Santa Claus did not become a popular
American folk hero until 1822, when Dr. Clement
Clarke Moore wrote "A visit from St.
Nicholas" for his children.
In
1863, cartoonist Thomas Nast used Moore’s
description to draw a Santa Claus for Harper’s
Weekly magazine. This became the model for
Santa Claus that most artists use today.
The
first Christmas card was produced by London
artist John Horsley in 1843, the same year
that "A Christmas Carol" was written.
The card, created for London businessman Henry
Cole, added "Happy New Year" to
its message of "Merry Christmas".
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Kwanzaa is a seven-day observance stressing
the unity of the African-American family.
It means "first fruits of the harvest"
in Swahili. The holiday was created by Dr.
Maulana Ron Karenga, Chair of Black Studies
at California State University, and is celebrated
December 26-January 1st. Each day of Kwanzaa
is dedicated to one of the seven Passerines
of Kwanzaa, each intended to serve as a guide
for daily living: unity, self-determination,
collective work & responsibility, cooperative
economics, purpose, creativity, and faith.
This is a time when families share symbolic
dinners and exchange handmade gifts with an
ethnic theme.
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