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Post Info TOPIC: Mother's Day : History and Traditions


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Mother's Day : History and Traditions


Mother's Day : History & Traditions
Origins of the Modern Celebration
Goddesses and Saints : Mothers of Us All


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Mother's Day History: Origin of the Modern Celebration

Mother's Day . . . Few of us are more than dimly aware
of the history of our modern celebration of these
extraordinary women. You can perhaps recall enouth of
the history of Mother's Day to know that it originated
in the hills of Appalachia and is now celebrated in
countries throughout the world. What you may not
realize is that the founder of Mother's Day eventually
confessed that she regretted ever starting the
tradition.

In the United States, Mother's Day originated nearly
150 years ago, when Anna Jarvis, an Appalachian
homemaker, organized a "Mother's Work Day" to raise
awareness of poor economic and health conditions
affecting the children in her community, a cause she
believed would be best advocated by mothers.

Fifteen years later, Julia Ward Howe, a pacifist,
suffragist, and author of the lyrics to the "Battle
Hymn of the Republic," proposed an annual event called
Mother's Day, but the idea received little support.
She organized a day encouraging mothers to rally for
peace, since she believed they bore the loss of human
life more harshly than anyone else.


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When Anna Jarvis died in 1905, her daughter (also
named Anna) wished to create a memorial to her
mother's work and began a campaign to institute an
official holiday to honor mothers. The first Mother's
Day observance was a church service honoring Anna's
mother and all mothers that Anna arranged. She
supplied the decorations for the service -- white
carnations, her mother's favorite flowers, chosen
because they represent sweetness, purity, and
endurance. Today the white flowers signify that one's
mother has died and red carnations in time became the
symbol of a living mother.


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Of Goddesses and Saints
The concept of Mother Earth arose centuries later in
Greece. In the 7th century BCE, the poet Hesiod gave
the "deep-breasted" earth mother the name Gaea, she
who "gave birth" to the sky, sea, and mountains, as
well as the ruling gods called the Titans. A few
centuries later, Gaea's daughter Rhea, was honored
each year with festivals called "Hilaria". The
festivities lasted for three days and by all accounts
were great family entertainment, with revelers
bringing gifts and flowers to honor the mother of the
Olympians. Throughout Asia Minor, similar Mother's
Day festivals were held in honor of her counterpart,
the goddess Cybele.

And here the stage was set for one of the great
struggles of all time, a battle that the cl****icist
Robert Graves described as one between the pagan
Goddess and the Hebrew and Christian God. Known as the
Magna Mater (Great Mother), Cybele was widely honored.
Her worship, however, was ****ociated with some rather
repellent rituals that eventually led to the
banishment of her followers from Rome, gravely
weakening the goddess religions.

Graves notes that the Christian church declared war on
the White Goddess, also known as the Triple Goddess,
the ancient European deity who appeared as the new,
full, and old moons, representing "The Female Goddess
of Birth, Love and Death". The Christian Trinity, said
Graves, eventually triumphed over the trinity of the
Goddess. The Western male conquered the Eastern and
agricultural female.


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In victory, the patriarchal Holy Roman Catholic Church
subsumed and welcomed its former opponents by calling
itself ''Mother Church.'' A new variation of Mother's
Day, was put in place, this time in honor of the
church itself. On the fourth Sunday in Lent, people
brought gifts to the church where they had been
baptized. This custom changed during late Medieval
times when many children had to move away from home in
order to find work and were only allowed one holiday a
year, and it was on this fourth Sunday that the
children went home to see their mothers. Thus the
custom of "Mothering Sunday" was begun.

Similarly, in the Celtic countries and the British
Isles, the powerful goddess Brigit was transformed
into her Christian successor, St. Brigid. Brigit's
sacred day, which was connected with the ewes coming
into milk, became St. Brigid's Day. Though formal
mother worship was never completely eliminated in the
British Isles, by the 17th century Mother's Day had
been almost completely submerged into Mothering Day.
Not surprizingly, with the disappearance of a female
deity, devotion to Mary, Mother of God, would soon
emerge as the new Mother cult.


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Mothers of Us All
However far away from its origins the celebration has
migrated, Mother's Day is still much more than just a
“Hallmark® holiday”. And certainly more than
remembering to send a card and flowers, or hanging out
with the family. More, even, than expressing
gratitude for the instrument by which you came to be.

It is an opportunity to recognize that we are part of
something universal, that we are all sons and
daughters of this earth, connected, with the same
blood flowing in our veins, and the same needs and
desires calling out to our hearts. It is about
honoring each other, and seeking the spark of Divinity
which resides in each and every one of us.

Though now commercialized, Mother's Day reminds us
that we ought to take pause to appreciate the triumph
and ferocity of motherhood that lies beneath the
holiday's sweet surface.



I just want to send out wishes of a wonderful Mother's Day to all mothers -- may this be a great day for all!!

Namaste
Fire

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