Every time I decide to write one of these lists I’m shocked
that I can dredge up even more tales of odd and wonderful Christmastime
traditions, but here we are again and I’ve amassed five more of the weirdest
Yuletide customs from around the globe.
Don’t forget to check out Weird Christmas Holiday Traditions
and Weird Christmas Holiday Traditions: Part Deux!
In Scottsdale, Arizona hundreds of people from around the
community flock to the Scottsdale Gun Club to get a wonderful, traditional
photo with Santa. The big man in red isn’t so much the focus of the photos,
though. No, it’s probably the $80,000 Garwood mini-gun that the club has setup
in the background. This bad boy would make Arnie proud.
At $10 a pop, you and your family can be fitted with your
choice of machine guns, pistols, rifles, and racks upon racks of belt
ammunition. Don’t worry, I know what you’re thinking, “But, what I really wanted was a picture of Santa with a grenade launcher.
Christmas is ruined.” Fear not! Grenade launchers are also available at the
club. You can even go classic and get a picture with a good ol’ AK-47.
Described by the club as “… fun from those who support the
second amendment and those who don’t”, they state that, “Whether you’re a gun
advocate or not, you should have a lot of fun with it.” And who wouldn’t!
I don’t think anything properly expresses the true holiday
spirit like a rosy-cheeked child holding a high-powered boomstick, draped in
ammo like Rambo.
How many times have you been sitting in a nice steamy sauna,
the woes of your day evaporating slowly from your muscles, and thought to
yourself, “I really wish I had my family here to enjoy this with.” Well in
Estonia, your dreams can be answered.
Estonia has an interesting dichotomy to their Christmas
traditions. A blend of Pagan and Christian events are observed. There’s
mysticism, spirituality, and Christian themes at play, but everything looks
like a very traditional Christmas you’d see anywhere in North America.
The party starts on December 21st for Estonians
with St. Thomas’ Day and runs right until the Epiphany on January 6th.
In some areas it is stretched out one extra day, until St. Canute’s Day on the
7th. The Christmas Holidays, specifically, are celebrated from
December 24th to the 27th.
Known as jõulud,
the celebrations have as much to do with the Winter Solstice, and the
impending cold and dark, as they do with the birth of Christ. On Christmas Eve
many interesting traditions are kept, including fortune telling, but there was
one in particular that caught my eye.
After preparing the
traditional jõulud feast, and before church services are held, all the Estonian
families will find a nice sauna to spend the afternoon together in. How does
that all go down? Well first everyone gets naked, bathes, lathers themselves up
in honey, and then wile away the afternoon, whipping one another with birch
twigs to really massage and clear your skin.
I love spending
time with my family around the holidays, I really do, but I don’t want to get
naked with them and practice S&M right before church.
You might think that from a geographical standpoint that
South Africa wouldn’t really practice Christmas traditions, but being that it
was mostly populated by European colonies, the customs found a home there. From
what I can tell, in fact, Christmas is pretty traditional in South Africa. But,
like good ol’ Krampus, there’s nothing like a story of absolute terror to keep
those kiddies in line.
During the seemingly normal Christmas festivities, families
will gather up all of their children on Christmas Eve, to tell the story of a
young boy named Danny. You see Danny lived with his Grandmother and in
preparing for Christmas and Santa, she had baked a batch of delicious cookies
for the jolly old elf. Those cookies were so tempting that Danny couldn’t
contain himself, and he ate the whole batch.
So what did Grandma do? Did she tell Santa and have Danny’s
presents turned to coal? Nope. Did she scold him for what he’d done and make
him bake a fresh batch for the Claus? Wrong again.
No, in a fit of rage she brutally murdered her grandson.
Now, his ghost haunts South Africa during the Christmas holidays, reminding
young children that they need to be good, practice patience, and not be greedy
or their grandparents will take their lives
away from them.
Cuba has a pretty interesting history with Christmas. For 30
years it was outlawed by Castro after he declared the government atheist in
1969, and it was only in 1998, prompted by a visit to Havana from Pope Jean
Paul II, that Cubans were allowed to practice the traditions of Christmas once
again.
One of the more elaborate events in their Christmas
celebrations is Parrandas, which is essentially a huge carnival. The most
famous Parrandas celebrations happen in the city of Remedios, where Parrandas
was first conceived.
The story goes that a priest, Father Francisco Vigil de Quiñones,
wanted the townspeople of Remedios to come to midnight masses during the week
leading up to Christmas. In order to keep people from going to sleep Father
Francisco would send the altar boys from his parish out with pots and pans,
which they would bang while singing at the top of their lungs. Eventually this
turned into a kind of street party and that tradition has remained until this
very day.
Today’s Parrandas is a far cry from the street parties of
200 years ago. There are several events that take place during the carnival,
which begins at 10:00PM. The first is rumba dancing with fireworks known as palenques.
These fireworks are meant to be completely soundless in their launch, but burst
over the crowds of dancers, surprising and scaring them as they dance in the
streets below.
In the second event, massive floats are pulled into the city’s
plaza, each created and decorated by different cities surrounding Remedios. The
floats are decorated in your usual lighting and colours, but also each float
has actors who are meant to signify the theme for the year, and a story which
is read aloud as their floats make their way to the plaza. There’s one caveat:
the individuals on these floats are not allowed to move in any way as the float
is moving some 40m. It is considered a “demerit” to the district if the actors
move on their floats.
The final piece is a row of 20,000 rockets, which span up to
4 city blocks, and that are lit off and explode in the sky in a volley of
fireworks. After the rockets, mortars are launched (for good measure), which
are meant to be the exact opposite of the palenques set off at the beginning of
the carnival; they are loud and canon-like to announce the end of the
festivities.
For most of the the Americas Christmas is a time of warm
hearths, music, family, and all those gumdrop dreamin’ kids, but I’ve also
found another prevailing element to Christmas outside of North America: fear.
I’ve already visited the Krampus in my previous list, so you know this sort of thing exists,
but Austrians have it easy compared to Icelanders, who have to deal with a
broad menagerie of monsters trying to eat them at Christmastime.
First there’s the Yule Cat, or Jólakötturinn. A massive,
man-eating beast, the Yule Cat is said to prowl on - get this - those who have not received new clothes to wear
before Christmas Eve. In what has to be one of the most direct examples of fear
being used to drive the masses, wealthy farm owners used to give clothes to the
workers who finished their Autumn wool preparations. In order to make sure they
worked fast enough, they came up with the Yule Cat and the story that if they
didn’t finish by Christmas Eve they’d be devoured by a monstrous beast.
Over time the Yule Cat was enveloped by Icelandic folklore
and became the pet of the Giantess Grýla, a gruesome witch who lives in the
mountains of Iceland. Once a year Grýla descends from her lofty perch and using
her innate ability to detect misbehaving children, she captures bad kids all
over Iceland, brings them back to her cave, and makes them into her favourite
dish: a nice hot stew.
If that wasn’t enough, Grýla managed to entrap a few
husbands along the way. With her third husband, Leppalúði, Grýla birthed a
brood of child-eating troublemakers known as the Yule Lads, or Jólasveinarnir.
The Icelandic version of Santa Claus, for all intents and purposes, the Yule
Lads or usually portrayed as pranksters that cause all kinds of havoc in the
countryside. There are thirteen Lads in total, and in many ways remind me of
Snow White’s dwarves. Their names describe each of the Yule Lads’ specific
traits; there’s Sheep-Cote Clod who likes to torment sheep and sheepherders,
Bowl-Licker who, well… lick bowls, Sausage-Swiper who steals sausages, and
Stubby… you get the idea.
Although there seems to be a lot of fear-laden tradition
here, there is some good. The Yule Lads, for all their mischievery, also reward
good children. If a child has been good all year and places their shoes outside
their window-sills on the thirteen nights before Christmas Eve, they may receive
a present from one of the Lads. If they were bad, though, they might receive a
rotting potato! You know, if they don’t eat those children instead.
3 comments:
Nordic countries really are sauna-obsessed. I once worked with a Finnish woman who told me about how Finland used to actually have sauna competitions, until people started dying in the saunas trying to prove they could tough it out the longest.
As for Danny and the cookies, good lord. Bad enough when mythical creatures threaten to abscond with misbehaving children. But one's own grandmother? That's fucked up.
Great stuff. I'm glad the holiday season didn't pass us by without a Christmas themed list.
I'm not gonna lie, I would easily pay $10 for a picture of me holding a grenade launcher and Santa reloading. Ho-ho-hold your fire!
I love how blunt the Danny/cookie story is; don't be greedy or else Nanna will murder your ass. I hope there's an alternative version of the tale where Danny eats one of the cookies, discovers that it's raisin oatmeal and proceeds to murder his grandmother.
Also, while Bowl-Licker is pretty entertaining, my favourite Yule Lads are Battery-Flipper, Dust-Barfer, and Dog-Fister.
Merry Christmas, and keep the "Weird Christmas Tradition" tradition alive.
I think the story of Danny and his Grandmother's cookies shocked me the most, without a doubt. Especially when you consider South Africa's association with violent crimes. Kind of makes you wonder if there's any truth to it!
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