St. Lucys Day
A modern holiday with ancient roots
By Emily Liz Helgersen
It seems that as soon as we swallow the last mouthful of turkey for
Thanksgiving at the end of November, we rush to prepare for Christmas
or, if we are Jewish, Hanukah. Between these two events, though, is
a holiday about which most North Americans know little but which is
widely celebrated in other countries: St. Lucys Day.
St. Lucys Day falls on December 13. This is the alleged date
of death of the original St. Lucy, a Christian martyr who lived in
Syracuse, Sicily in Roman times. According to legend, as a young woman
she took a vow of virginity to Christ, which did not please her pagan
suitor. After trying unsuccessfully to make her marry him, he stabbed
her to death in frustration. Another legend has it that once upon
receiving a comment from a man about her beautiful eyes, she gouged
them out in order to discourage other potential beaus. Her eyes were
miraculously restored to her, however. Lucy therefore became the patron
saint of the blind. She is often pictured holding a plate with her
eyes in it. Her association with vision, or lack of it, may stem from
her name, which comes from the Latin word lux or luc-
for light (as in the terms translucent and lucid).
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Switzerland
also holds St. Lucy celebrations
whereby a girl dressed as the saint goes around the
neighbourhood handing out gifts.
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St. Lucy gave her name to a song (the Neapolitan Santa Lucia),
a school for the visually impaired in Philadelphia, and even a nation,
Saint Lucia, a Caribbean island allegedly first sighted by Europeans
on December 13, 1502. But her best-known legacy is the holiday observed
on the date of her death. In Sicily - Lucys birthplace - this
day is celebrated by the preparation of a cooked wheat dish called
cuccia, sometimes eaten with fried cheese or eggs. There and in other
parts of Italy, torchlight processions again we see her name
associated with light take place on December 13. Switzerland
also holds St. Lucy celebrations whereby a girl dressed as the saint
goes around the neighbourhood handing out gifts. On the other hand,
in Hungary the holiday has a somewhat Halloweenish quality, with children
going door to door asking for treats or playing pranks. In next-door
Slovakia, people dress in white and paint their faces in flour, going
from house to house offering to sweep their neighbours floors.
While St. Lucys Day is observed throughout Europe, it reaches
its zenith in Scandinavia, especially Sweden. Known as Luciadagen
(Lucys Day) there, it is celebrated as a festival of lights,
at a time of year when light is particularly scarce at such northern
latitudes. According to Swedish tradition, one girl in the family,
generally the eldest daughter, dresses up as a Lucy in
a white gown, red sash and metal crown with lighted candles. She rises
early on the morning of December 13 to bring her family special treats
called Lussekatter (literally, Lucys cats), saffron
buns in the shape of cats. Some scholars believe that Luciadagen absorbed
earlier celebrations in honour of the Norse goddess Freya, who is
frequently portrayed sitting in a cart drawn by cats hence
the Lussekatter on this day.
St. Lucys Day in Sweden goes beyond the home, however. In some
towns a girl dressed as the saint is chosen to bring Lussekatter not
only to her family but to everyone in that particular village. In
larger cities young Lucies do the same for hospital patients, nursing
home residents and other people not fortunate enough to enjoy the
event outside. Stockholm even hosts a beauty pageant of sorts in which
a Lucy is elected by a jury (my father, who is Sicilian,
once remarked that the blondes who participate in this contest probably
look very unlike the original St. Lucy).
____________________________
Known
as Luciadagen (Lucys Day), it is celebrated
as a festival of lights, at a time of year when light is
particularly scarce at such northern latitudes.
____________________________
The holiday is also celebrated in many parts of Latin America, thanks
to the Spanish Catholic influence. In Puerto Rico it is observed as
the Day for the Blind. Most North Americans, on the other hand, do
not know much if anything about St. Lucys Day. Nonetheless,
some Swedish-American communities do take note of it. A recent article
in fact told of an Ikea branch in Los Gatos, California that held
a festival of lights on December 13 for local Swedish residents and
their families. The holiday receives notice as well in New Yorks
Little Italy as the feast of Santa Lucia.
Being of partial Scandinavian descent myself (Norwegian), this year
I have decided to pay tribute to St. Lucys Day by making some
Lussekatter. But whether you are Scandinavian or not, you might look
at this recipe for Lussekatter at www.kensmen.com/catholic/ and prepare
some for yourself and your family. So enjoy the Lussekatter and St.
Lucys Day but remember the woman who started it all!
This
article first appeared in the Trinity Times, the newsletter of Trinity
Evangelical Lutheran Church www.geocities.com/trinitytoronto in Toronto.
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Emily
Liz Helgersen is a secretary and musician based in Canada. When
shes not busy with her job, social activities and hobbies,
she likes to write about religion, music, culture or anything
else that happens to strike her fancy. In this picture here shes
trying to look composed despite the fact her brother is pinching
her arm. You can contact her at ehelgersen@hotmail.com
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