Hyvää pääsiäistä! is Finnish for Happy Easter!
Because of this card, I became interested in
how Easter is celebrated in Finland and I found this article at (www.finland.fi)
Finnish
Easter traditions mix religious references with customs related to the
long-awaited arrival of spring. If you answer the door on the Sunday before
Easter, you may be confronted by endearing little witches offering to bless
your home in return for treats.
In the
most popular family tradition, young children (especially girls) dress up as
Easter witches, donning colourful old clothes and painting freckles on their
faces. “The little witches then go from door to door, bringing willow twigs
decorated with colourful feathers and crepe paper as blessings to drive away
evil spirits, in return for treats,” says children’s culture expert Reeli
Karimäki of the Pessi Children’s Art Centre in Vantaa, just north of Helsinki.
Like many
Finnish householders, Karimäki keeps a basket of small chocolate Easter eggs
ready by the door to pay off the marauding witches. Other families reward them
with sweets or small change – or keep their front doors resolutely closed.
Eastern and western witches
Willow twigs like this (see photo) are cut and decorated
by kids to give as gifts when they go door to door as Easter witches.
The witches recite a traditional rhyme at the door: Virvon, varvon, tuoreeks terveeks, tulevaks
vuodeks; vitsa sulle, palkka mulle! (In translation: I wave a twig for a
fresh and healthy year ahead; a twig for you, a treat for me!)
“This Finnish children’s custom interestingly mixes two
older traditions – a Russian Orthodox ritual where birch twigs originally
represented the palms laid down when Jesus entered Jerusalem on Palm Sunday;
and a Swedish and Western Finnish tradition in which children made fun of
earlier fears that evil witches could be about on Easter Saturday,” explains
Karimäki.
To this day, the little witches are more likely to roam
on Easter Saturday in western Finland, but on Palm Sunday in other regions.
Karimäki adds that, as Easter approaches, Finnish
children also plant grass seeds in shallow dishes of soil and place birch twigs
in vases of water, and watch eagerly for green shoots and “mouse-ear” buds to
appear symbolising the springtime reawakening of life. Easter eggs and Easter
bunnies – both pre-Christian symbols of fertility – also abound in Finland,
though these are more recent cultural imports.
Seasonal
cuisine
Roast
lamb is the most common main course for a Finnish Easter Sunday family dinner.
Two seasonal local desserts are also widely enjoyed. Mämmi is a sludgy-looking
dark brown pudding made of malt and rye flour (see below for a link to Finnish
Easter recipes).
Mämmi
was traditionally served in birch bark trays, but is now available in food
stores round the country every spring in prepacked in cardboard cartons.
“Though it looks a bit unappetising, it tastes delicious and children love it,
especially served with cream and sugar,” says Karimäki.
Pasha
is a creamy-coloured pudding made of sweetened homemade cheese, eggs, cream and
seasonings left overnight to solidify – traditionally in a mould decorated with
religious motifs, especially in eastern Finland where the influence of Orthodox
Christianity is more prevalent.
Easter is
the most important annual feast day for Finland’s Orthodox Christians, who make
up approximately 1 percent of the population, but it is also a time of holy
celebration for active members of the majority Evangelical Lutheran Church,
which has more than four million members.
Passion
plays, oratorios and bonfires
“Evening
mass on Maundy Thursday, commemorating the Last Supper, is still one of the
most popular church events of the year,” says Iiris Kivimäki of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church communications centre. “During Holy Week before Easter concerts
such as Bach’s Passion oratorios are also performed in many churches.”
Passion
plays and processions have also recently become popular among church-goers. “In
Helsinki the processional Via Crucis Passion Play, which ends up at the
Lutheran Cathedral on Senate Square, is performed on Good Friday. As many as
15,000 people follow this reenactment of Jesus’s passion and crucifixion every
year,” adds Kivimäki.
In many
western Finnish villages, bonfires are still lit to drive away evil spirits on
the evening of Easter Saturday, when well-attended church services are also
held to prepare to commemorate the Resurrection.
The whole
country meanwhile enjoys a four-day weekend, perhaps searching outdoors for the
first signs of spring – or just as likely sheltering indoors if the weather
relapses and late snows fall.
I received
this elaborate and beautiful Easter Card from Susanna (22 April 2014) of
Finland (Swap-bot Direct Swap).
What a wondeful text! Warm Regards,Susanna
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