Festivals and Feasts.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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The festivals of many ethnic and national groups are credited with the preservation of unique customs, folktales, costumes, and culinary skills.
An interesting recentdevelopment is the merging of the arts, lore, and customs of various regions in Africa in the cultural festival known as Kwanzaa (Swahili kwanza, ”beginnings”). Introduced from Africa into the United States in 1977, this festival is celebrated with feasts and songs in the home for seven days and nights from December 26 toJanuary 1.
The African colors, green for the future and black for struggle, are prominently displayed.
Parents play the key role in this celebration, which stresses familyunity and cultural self-determination, responsibility, purpose, creativity, and faith.
Communal feasts, as occasions for eating, drinking, and merrymaking, have a long recorded history, going back to early Greece.
The most famous contemporary eatingand drinking festivity is the Oktoberfest, which has been held in Germany annually since October 17, 1810, the wedding day of the future King Louis I of Bavaria.
It is afall festival celebrating the best in beer, food, and entertainment.
V CHANGING FESTIVALS
Halloween, associated historically with All Hallows’ Eve, is now, in the United States, primarily a “trick or treat” secular festival for children.
Formerly, the fun centered onplaying tricks on unwary neighbors.
Changing attitudes in communities resulted in Halloween becoming an occasion for small children, usually garbed in costume, to gofrom house to house for treats.
Older children still participate, but many forfeit treats to collect funds for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
As societies change, the characteristics of their traditional festivals and feasts may alter also; new ones often emerge as others decline in popularity.
Most likely,however, some festivals will remain unaltered for generations.
For participants they are a tonic.
For observers they offer a nostalgic experience.
Certainly communalcelebration—in its various forms—is part of the life-style of all peoples and makes a contribution to the living history of modern civilization.
Contributed By:Ruth W.
GregoryMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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