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Easter Monday Information

Easter Monday is the day after Easter Sunday and is celebrated as a holiday in some largely Christian cultures, especially Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox cultures. Easter Monday in the Roman Catholic liturgical calendar is the second day of the octave of Easter Week.

Formerly, the post-Easter festivities involved a week of secular celebration, but this was reduced to one day in the 19th century. Events include egg rolling competitions and, in predominantly Roman Catholic countries, dousing other people with water which traditionally had been blessed with holy water the day before at Easter Sunday Mass and carried home to bless the house and food.

In the Eastern Orthodox Church and those Eastern Catholic Churches which follow the Byzantine Rite, Easter Monday is known as Bright Monday or Renewal Monday, and is the second day of Bright Week. The services are exactly the same as on Pascha (Easter Sunday), except that the hymns from the Octoechos are in Tone Two. It is customary to have a Crucession (procession headed by a cross) either after Paschal Matins or after the Paschal Divine Liturgy. It is customarily a day for visiting family and friends. Easter Monday is also the day when the feast day of St. George is celebrated, in years when St George's Day (April 23) falls during Holy Week or on Easter Sunday.

Contents

Australia

This section needs references that appear in reliable third-party publications. Primary sources or sources affiliated with the subject are generally not sufficient for a Wikipedia article. Please add more appropriate citations from reliable sources. (April 2009)

In Australia, Easter Monday is a public holiday. People enjoy outdoor sporting events, such as the Oakbank Easter Racing Carnival in South Australia, Australian Three Peaks Race in Tasmania as well as the Stawell Gift. They may also eat a chocolate bilby[1] or chocolate Easter eggs.[2]

Egypt

In Egypt, the ancient festival of Sham El Nessim (Arabic: شم النسيم, literally meaning "smelling of the breeze") is celebrated on the Coptic (i.e. Eastern) Easter Monday, though the festival dates back to Pharonic times (about 2700 BC). It is celebrated by both Egyptian Christians and Muslims as an Egyptian national holiday rather than as a religious one. Traditional activities include painting eggs, taking meals outdoors, and eating feseekh (fermented mullet).

Central Europe

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Handmade whip decorated with ribbons called pomlázka, in Slovakia called korbáč

hi

Dyngus Day or Wet Monday (Polish Śmigus-Dyngus or lany poniedziałek) is the name for Easter Monday in Poland. In the Czech Republic it is called velikonoční pondělí or pomlázka. In Slovakia veľkonočný pondelok (Easter Monday) is called Šibačka/Polievačka or Oblievačka. too. All countries practice a unique custom on this day.

In Poland, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic[3] traditionally, early in the morning boys awake girls by pouring a bucket of water on their head and striking them about the legs with long thin twigs or switches made from willow, birch or decorated tree branches; however, the earliest documented[citation needed] records of Dyngus Day in Poland are from the 15th century, almost half a millennium after Poland adopted Christianity.

Benedykt Chmielowski in Nowe Ateny cite after "Carolo Berthold" that this ritual was already in custom in 750, 250 years before Poland officially adopted Christianity. See religious syncretism.

One theory is that Dyngus originates from the baptism on Easter Monday of Mieszko I (Duke of the Polans, c. 935–992) in 966 AD, uniting all of Poland under the banner of Christianity. Dualism and "twins" are featured in Slavic pre-Christian paganism. Dyngus and Śmigus were twin pagan gods; the former representing water and the moist earth (Dyngus from din gus – thin soup or dingen – nature); and the later representing thunder and lightning (Śmigus from śmigać or to make a whooshing sound). In this theory, the water tradition is the transformation of the pagan water god into the Christian baptism. The custom of pouring water was an ancient spring rite of cleansing, purification, and fertility. It is alleged that the pagan Poles bickered with nature/Dyngus by means of pouring water and switching with willows to make themselves pure and worthy of the coming year. Others have suggested that the striking tradition is the transformation of the ritual "slap" of Christian confirmation. However, still others suggest that the Śmigus tradition is actually simply a youthful recapitulation of a Good Friday Polish tradition, in which parents wake their children with switches from twigs, saying the words of a Lent prayer "God's wounds" – "Boże rany".

Early, the Dyngus custom was clearly differentiated from śmigus: dyngus was the exchange of gifts (usually eggs, often decorated – pisanka pl. pisanki), under the threat of water splashing if one party did not have any eggs ready, while Śmigus referred to the striking.

Later the focus shifted to the courting aspect of the ritual, and young unmarried girls were the only acceptable targets. A boy would sneak into the bedroom of the girl he fancied and awaken her by drenching her with multiple buckets of water. Politics played an important role in proceedings, and often the boy would get access to the house only by arrangement with the girl's mother.

Throughout the day, girls would find themselves the victims of drenchings and leg-whippings, and a daughter who was not targeted for such activities was generally considered to be unattractive and unmarryable in this very coupling-oriented environment.

Most recently, the tradition has changed to become fully water-focused, and the śmigus part is almost forgotten. It is quite common for girls to attack boys just as fiercely as the boys traditionally attacked the girls. With much of Poland's population residing in tall apartment buildings, high balconies are favorite hiding places for young people who gleefully empty full buckets of water onto randomly selected passers-by.

Another related custom, unique to Poland is that of sprinkling bowls (garce) of ashes on people (starts men on women) or houses, celebrated a few weeks earlier at the "półpoście." This custom is almost forgotten, but still practiced in the area around borders of Mazuria and Masovia.

United States

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Though not largely observed in the United States, the day remains informally observed in some areas such as the state of North Dakota, and some cities in New York, Michigan, and Indiana. Easter Monday was a public holiday in North Carolina from 1935 to 1987. Texas schools often have two holidays on Good Friday and Easter Monday.

Dyngus Day in the United States

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Traditionally Polish areas of the country such as Chicago observe Easter Monday as Dyngus Day. In the United States, Dyngus Day celebrations are widespread and popular in Buffalo, New York, Wyandotte, Michigan, Hamtramck, Michigan, La Porte, Hanover, New Hampshire and South Bend, Indiana. Wet Monday is also celebrated at Jonathan Edwards College, one of the residential colleges at Yale University, when each year the freshman class storms the college with water weapons, where upperclassmen are ready to defend the college and ensure no one goes home dry.

Dyngus Day In Buffalo, New York

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The world's largest organized Dyngus Day celebration occurs in Buffalo, New York. In Buffalo's eastern suburbs and the city's Historic Polonia District, Dyngus Day is celebrated with a high level of enthusiasm.

Although Dyngus Day was celebrated in traditional Polish neighborhoods of Buffalo dating back to the 1870s, modern Dyngus Day in Buffalo had its start with the Chopin Singing Society. Judge Ann T. Mikoll and her late husband Theodore V. Mikoll held the first party at the Society's clubrooms in the Buffalo Central Terminal. The Society left the East Side in the 1980s and moved to new clubrooms in nearby Cheektowaga, where the festival attracted a new generation of revelers. In recent years, the focus of Buffalo's Dyngus Day celebration has returned to the Historic Polonia District in the form of large parties at the Buffalo Central Terminal, St. Stanislaus - Bishop & Martyr Church, the Adam Mickiewicz Library and Dramatic Circle, and at many family-owned Polish taverns. The World's First Dyngus Day Parade, inaugurated in 2006, makes its way through the Polonia District from the Broadway Market to Buffalo Central Terminal. In 2008, the parade attracted more than 25,000 people.[4]

In 2006, two-time Grammy Award nominated Polka band Jerry Darlak & the Touch recorded the "Everybody's Polish on Dyngus Day" polka. "The polka is meant to capture the uniqueness of the Buffalo Dyngus Day celebration," explained the song's composer, Ray Barsukiewicz. Lyrics include references to pussy willows, the sprinkling of water, polka dancing and parties that last until daylight. That same year, Lenny Gomulka and the Chicago Push released the "Dyngus Day in Buffalo Polka" to recognize Buffalo's time-honored traditions. Gomulka is regarded as one of the nation's premiere polka stars, having been nominated for 11 Grammy Awards.

In 2007, the world's oldest working fireboat, the Edward M. Cotter, received the honor of being named the "World's Largest Dyngus Day Squirt Gun". "This could explains [sic] why the Cotter is painted red & white," said Marty Biniasz, alluding to the colors of the Polish flag and the Cotter's current livery. "It's only right that The Dyngus Day Capital of the World should have the World's Largest Squirt Gun. We are proud to now make Buffalo's most-loved ship part of our Dyngus Day Buffalo tradition."

Dyngus Day in Indiana

In South Bend, Indiana, the day marks the official beginning to launch the year's political primary campaign season (particularly among Democrats)- often from within the West Side Democratic Club, the M.R. Falcons Club, and local pubs and fraternal halls. Notable politicos who have celebrated Dyngus Day in South Bend include the late Robert F. Kennedy; former Governor Joe Kernan; Senator Evan Bayh; former Congressman and New York University President John Brademas; former Maryland Lt. Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend; former Congressman, 9/11 Commission member and current Ambassador to India Timothy J. Roemer; former President Bill Clinton; and the late Aloysius J. Kromkowski, a long time elected St. Joseph County public servant, for whom the "Al Kromkowski polka" is named. [5]

Robert F. Kennedy's 1968 appearance was marked by his downtown rally attended by a crowd of over 6,000, his participation in the Dyngus Day parade, and his leading of the crowds at the West Side Democratic Club in the traditional Polish well wishing song Sto Lat (phonetic: 'sto laht') which means "100 years". Indiana was RFK's first primary and first primary victory, which set in motion momentum and victories that would have led to his nomination as the Democratic Party candidate for President had he not been assassinated. [6]

Starting in 2004, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Indiana began celebrating Dyngus Day at the request of South Bend students. The event includes free Polish sausage for students as well as a free concert. [7]

Easter Monday in North Carolina

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The Easter Monday holiday in North Carolina stemmed from the tradition in the early 20th century of state government workers taking the day off to attend the annual baseball game between North Carolina State College (Now North Carolina State University) and nearby Wake Forest College (now Wake Forest University and moved to Winston-Salem, NC). The holiday was enacted in 1935 and remained until 1988, when the official state holiday was moved to Good Friday to match the rest of the nation.

Easter Monday in Texas and Southwest

This section needs references that appear in reliable third-party publications. Primary sources or sources affiliated with the subject are generally not sufficient for a Wikipedia article. Please add more appropriate citations from reliable sources. (October 2009)

Many Independent and other type School Districts and Higher Education institutions in Texas and other southern and southwestern states do not conduct classes on Easter Monday, although it is not an official State of Texas holiday. Many, but not all Texas School Districts follow this practice. As many of the same Independent School Districts also do not attend classes on Good Friday, a mini-Spring Break of four days is often the result.

Elsewhere in the world

Official holiday

Easter Monday is an official holiday in the following countries (The Eastern Orthodox Church observes Easter on a different date due to use of the Julian Calendar vs. the Gregorian Calendar, which is used in the Western Church to determine the date of Easter each year. Nations on this list indicated as "Eastern Christian" observe Easter according to the Eastern Orthodox calendar, which will differ on most years from the Western observance)

References

  1. ^ "Even in chocolate, rabbit beats bilby". http://www.theage.com.au/national/even-in-chocolate-rabbit-beats-bilby-20090409-a254.html.
  2. ^ "Holidays: Easter Monday in Australia". Time and Date. http://www.timeanddate.com/holidays/australia/easter-monday.
  3. ^ Asiedu, Dita (2004-04-12). "Easter Monday Radio Prague special". Český rozhlas 7. Radio Praha. http://www.radio.cz/en/article/52649. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  4. ^ Borsa, John. Buffalo is Unofficial Dyngus Day Capital. WKBW-TV. 14 April 2009.
  5. ^ Archives, National Center for Urban Ethnic Affairs and numerous South Bend Tribune articles (e.g. Apr 12, 2009) available on microfilm and for purchase online.
  6. ^ Archives, National Center for Urban Ethnic Affairs and numerous South Bend Tribune articles (e.g. Apr 12, 2009) available on microfilm and for purchase online.
  7. ^ Archives, National Center for Urban Ethnic Affairs and numerous South Bend Tribune articles (e.g. Apr 12, 2009) available on microfilm and for purchase online.
  8. ^ Easter Monday in Canada
  9. ^ Easter Monday in Germany
  10. ^ (German) Partikularnorm Nr. 15 der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz. Accessed 2009-04-08.
  11. ^ Easter Monday in the United Kingdom
  12. ^ Easter Monday in the Netherlands
  13. ^ "Public Holidays Act, 1994 (36 of 1994, South Africa)" (PDF). 1994-12-07. http://www.info.gov.za/acts/1994/a36-94.pdf. Retrieved 2006-04-05.

See also

External links

Links to related articles
Holy Week
Lazarus Saturday · Palm Sunday · Holy Monday · Holy Tuesday · Holy Wednesday · Maundy Thursday · Good Friday · Holy Saturday · Easter Sunday · Easter Monday
Easter
Main Easter Sunday · Etymology · Controversies · Date · Observances · Traditions
Christianity Jesus Christ · Maundy Thursday · Good Friday · The Passion · Crucifixion of Jesus · Resurrection of Jesus · Easter Monday · Apostles' Fast · Easter Vigil · Good Friday Prayer · Last Supper · Good Friday 'Prayer for the Jews' · Great Lent · Lent · Lumen Christi · Myrrhbearers Bright Week · Dormition of the Theotokos · Epitaphios · Paschal Homily · Paschal Tide · Paschal cycle · Paschal greeting · Paschal trikirion · Paschal troparion · Pentecostarion
Traditions Easter Bunny · Easter Bilby · Artos · Crucession · Easter bonnet · Easter postcard · Gorzkie żale · Burning of Judas · Cascarones · Croatian pisanica · Easter Sepulchre · Egg dance · Egg decorating · Egg decorating in Slavic culture · Egg hunt · Egg rolling · Egg tapping · Egg tossing · Fasika · Holy Fire · Holy Week procession · Lieldienas · Pace Egg play · Polish pisanka · Pysanka · Radonitsa · Saitopolemos · Scoppio del carro · Sunrise service · Traditional Easter games and customs · Święconka · Easter egg
Media "Here Comes Peter Cottontail" · Here Comes Peter Cottontail: The Movie · Fiction · Songs
Related Computus · Dionysius Exiguus' Easter table · Paschal Full Moon · Ecclesiastical new moon · Easter Epic · Pussy willow · Easter controversy · Reform of the date of Easter
Related Days and times Palm Sunday · Maundy Thursday · Good Friday · Holy Saturday · Trinity Sunday · Easter Monday · Easter Tuesday · Easter Wednesday · Easter Thursday · Easter Friday · Easter Saturday · Easter Triduum · Easter Week · Eastertide · Mid-Pentecost · Octave of Easter · Pentecost · Pre-Lenten Season
Society Salzburg Easter Festival · Maslenitsa · Ēostre
Australia Public Holidays
New Year's Day · Australia Day · Good Friday · Easter Saturday · Easter Monday · Anzac Day · Queen's Birthday · Labour Day · Christmas Day · Boxing Day
Public holidays in Canada
Nationwide statutory holidays New Year's Day · Good Friday · Canada Day · Labour Day · Christmas Day
Statutory holidays for federal employees Easter Monday · Victoria Day · Thanksgiving · Remembrance Day · Boxing Day
Other common holidays Family & Community Day · August Civic Holiday · Remembrance Day
Public holidays in the Republic of Ireland
New Year's Day · Saint Patrick's Day · Easter Monday · Labour Day · June Holiday · August Holiday · October Holiday · Christmas Day · St. Stephen's Day
New Zealand Public Holidays
New Year's Day · Waitangi Day · Good Friday · Easter Sunday · Easter Monday · Anzac Day · Queen's Birthday · Labour Day · Christmas Day · Boxing Day
Holidays, observances, and celebrations in the United States
American Heart Month • Arbor DayAsh WednesdayAsian Pacific American Heritage MonthBlack History Month • Cancer Control Month • Carl Garner Federal Lands Cleanup DayCésar Chávez Day • Child Abuse Prevention Month • Child Health DayChristmas DayChristmas EveCinco de MayoColumbus DayConfederate History MonthConfederate Memorial DayConstitution DayConstitution WeekCourir de Mardi GrasDays of Remembrance of the Victims of the HolocaustEarth DayEaster SundayEaster MondayFather's DayFestivusFlag Day • Gay and Lesbian Pride Month • Gold Star Mothers DayGood FridayGroundhog DayHalloweenHanukkahHonor America DaysIndependence DayJuneteenthKwanzaaLabor DayMay Day (Law Day / Loyalty Day) • Leif Erikson DayLincoln's BirthdayLee-Jackson DayMartin Luther King, Jr. DayMardi GrasMemorial DayMother's DayNational Aviation DayNational Breast Cancer Awareness MonthNational Day of PrayerNational Defense Transportation DayNational Disability Employment Awareness Month • National Flag Week • National Forest Products Week • National Freedom Day • National Friendship Week • National Grandparents DayNational Hispanic Heritage Month • National Korean War Veterans Armistice Day • National Maritime Day • National Nutrition Month • National Poison Prevention Week • National Safe Boating Week • National School Lunch Week • National Transportation Week • New Year's DayNew Year's EvePalm SundayPan American Aviation DayParents' DayPassoverPatriot DayPatriots' DayPeace Officers Memorial DayPearl Harbor Remembrance Day • Police Week • Presidents DayRamadanRosh HashanahSaint Patrick's DaySaint Joseph's Day • Save Your Vision Week • Steelmark Month • Stephen Foster Memorial DaySusan B. Anthony DayThanksgivingThomas Jefferson's birthdayTruman DayValentine's DayVeterans DayWalpurgis NightWashington's BirthdayWhite Cane Safety DayWomen's History MonthWright Brothers DayYom Kippur
United Kingdom Public Holidays
New Year's Day · St Patrick's Day (Northern Ireland only) · Good Friday · Easter Monday · May Bank Holiday · Spring Bank Holiday · Orangemen's Day (Northern Ireland only) · Summer Bank Holiday · St Andrew's Day (Scotland only, optional) · Christmas Day · Boxing Day/St Stephen's Day · 2nd January (Scotland only)

Categories: Easter | Polish traditions | Catholic liturgy | Eastern Christian liturgy | Eastern Orthodox liturgical days | Religious holidays | April observances | May observances | Liturgical calendar

 

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from: Wiktionary: easter monday,
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