nPosted December 20, 2018
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Key Points
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n(December 16 – 24)
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nGroup of people knocking at the door:
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nIn the name of heaven / I ask you for shelter,
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nFor my beloved wife / can go no farther.
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nThose answering the door:
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nThis is not an inn, / Get on with you,
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nI cannot open the door, / You might be a rogue!
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nThis is the beginning of the song sung by folks participating in Las Posadas. Do you recognize it as the story of Joseph and Mary trying to find shelter when it’s time for Mary to give birth – but there’s no room at anywhere?
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nI’ve already written about Las Posadas in an earlier post – but that was years ago, and this colorful holiday tradition deserves a revisit!
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nPosadas are held in Mexico and some other Central American countries and in neighborhoods with many Hispanic residents elsewhere in the world. It lasts nine nights, and each night starts with a procession of people holding candles and singing Christmas songs.
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nOften, two of the marchers / singers are playing the part of Joseph and Mary from the Christmas story. The procession winds through the neighborhood until it arrives at the house selected for that’s evening’s festivities – a different house each of the nine nights, of course!
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nIt is at that house that the special song I quoted from above is sung. Over and over again, the people in the procession sing their request, in different words each verse, introducing themselves, asking for charity, revealing that they are worn out… And over and over again, the people in the house turn them away, saying such things as “Don’t bother me anymore” and “Let me sleep.” But of course eventually the song changes, with the people in the house welcoming them and the people in the procession thanking them.
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nOnce they are inside, there is a celebration that varies from a small gathering of friends to a huge fiesta. Some people start the party with a short Catholic service – a Bible reading or a prayer about one of the good qualities we all try to cultivate.
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nnThe party always involves food and drink, often tamales and hot punch or atole (a corn- and masa-based drink).
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nMany parties include dancing and music, and most end with breaking piñatas and giving out candy to the kids.
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nPosadas are celebrated much more widely now than they were when they began in the late 1500s, probably near Mexico City. As with so many other Christmas traditions, they are a melding of Christian stories and earlier non-Christian traditions. In this case, the Aztecs used to have special meals and celebrations around the time of the winter solstice, and the Catholic friars from Spain took advantage of those celebrations to encourage interest in Christianity.
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nPosadas are often held as just one-night events at schools or organizations, as well as nine-night events in neighborhoods.
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nAlso on this date:
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nDay of Mourning in Panama
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nAnniversary of an innovation that led to corrugated cardboard
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nAnniversary of Elvis being drafted into the army
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nElectricity theme day
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nAnniversary of first cantilever bridge over Niagara Falls
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nPoet Laureate Day
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nPlan ahead:
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Check out my Pinterest pages on:
Check out my Pinterest pages on:
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nDecember holidays
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nDecember birthdays
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nHistorical anniversaries in December
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nAnd here are my Pinterest boards for:
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nJanuary holidays
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nJanuary birthdays
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nHistorical anniversaries in January
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