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  • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’ve got my outfit ready for a bit of midnight dancing on the Solstice. I’ve been wearing it all year! Might be a bit chilly to be outside in, though.

    Or do you mean the other one, the one the church stole and pretended was Jesus’ birthday?

    Edit: if whoever down voted this and commiewolf’s post dislikes the supposed blasphemy, we’re talking about Yule. A festival that predates Christianity, but which may have been borrowed by Christians, renamed, and reinterpreted. Odin worshippers would burn a huge log that would stay lit for so many days to keep the hall warm during the shortest days of the year. Hence the season’s best dessert: the Yule log. (It’s a tie with Panettone and mince pies.) As for which celebration came first, who knows, but the Solstices were significant long before the church was instituted and had formalised its calendar. This is not the only such festival. There’s also e.g. Samhain / Halloween and Eostre’s feast / Easter, with parallel, earlier stories of souls / ghosts, birth, rabbits / hares, and eggs.

    • ☭CommieWolf☆
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      81 year ago

      Didn’t know that about Halloween, I just assumed it was some bullshit made up by the Americans in the US about the ghosts of the natives they genocided coming back to haunt them or something.

      • @Coridimus@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        Nay. Samhein is Celtic in origin, if I recall correctly. It is worth reading up on, in my opinion. Later it became associated with All Hallows Eve and All Saints Day