7/20/2006

Stephen’s Day

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St Stephen’s Day (26 December)

***** Location: Christian communities worldwide
***** Season: Mid-Winter
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation

quote
St. Stephen's Day, or the Feast of St. Stephen, is a Christian saint's day celebrated
on 26 December in the Western Church and
27 December in the Eastern Church. Many Eastern Orthodox churches adhere to the Julian calendar and mark St. Stephen's Day on 27 December according to that calendar, which places it on 9 January of the Gregorian calendar used in secular contexts.
more in the wikipedia


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St Stephen was the first Martyr in Christian history. The manner of his death is recorded in the Bible (Acts of the Apostles, chapters 6 and 7 -- text see below). The fact that Christmas Day is immediately followed by St Stephen’s Day in the Christian calendar is significant, showing that, even after the birth, resurrection and ascension of Christ, the world remained a place of struggle, and Christianity would be continually challenged from both within and without.

St Stephen was a deacon, a servant and helper, not a priest. In many of the mainstream Christian denominations, ordinands are made deacons before they become priests, and they remain deacons throughout the rest of their lives. St. Stephen is the model of the servant in the church and of the people, and is revered for this quality as well as for his death by martyrdom.

Isabelle Prondzynski

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[© http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:St-stephen.jpg]

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The Arrest of Stephen

Stephen, full of grace and power, did great wonders and signs among the people. Then some of those who belonged to the synagogue of the Freedmen (as it was called), Cyrenians, Alexandrians, and others of those from Cilicia and Asia, stood up and argued with Stephen. But they could not withstand the wisdom and the Spirit with which he spoke. Then they secretly instigated some men to say, ‘We have heard him speak blasphemous words against Moses and God.’

They stirred up the people as well as the elders and the scribes; then they suddenly confronted him, seized him, and brought him before the council. They set up false witnesses who said, ‘This man never stops saying things against this holy place and the law; for we have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place and will change the customs that Moses handed on to us.’ And all who sat in the council looked intently at him, and they saw that his face was like the face of an angel.

The Stoning of Stephen

When they heard these things, they became enraged and ground their teeth at Stephen. But filled with the Holy Spirit, he gazed into heaven and saw the glory of God and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. ‘Look,’ he said, ‘I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God!’ But they covered their ears, and with a loud shout all rushed together against him. Then they dragged him out of the city and began to stone him; and the witnesses laid their coats at the feet of a young man named Saul. While they were stoning Stephen, he prayed, ‘Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.’ Then he knelt down and cried out in a loud voice, ‘Lord, do not hold this sin against them.’ When he had said this, he died.

Acts 6 : 8 - 15 and 7 : 54 - 60
http://bible.oremus.org/


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© artunframed.com
http://www.artunframed.com/images/artmis36/carpaccio81.jpg

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Worldwide use

In many countries, St Stephen’s Day is not celebrated as such, but is a public holiday called “Second Christmas Day” or “Day after Christmas” or similar. It may be celebrated as a church holiday, with special services continuing the Christmas theme.

Ireland
In Ireland, St. Stephen’s Day is the day for going out and visiting neighbours and friends, after the family-centred Christmas celebrations of the day before.

Isabelle Prondzynski

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In Irish it is called Lá Fhéile Stiofán or Lá an Dreoilín --
the latter translates literally as another English name used, the Day of the Wren or Wren's Day. When used in this context, 'wren' is often pronounced 'ran'. This name alludes to several legends, including those found in Ireland linking episodes in the life of Jesus to the wren. In parts of Ireland persons carrying either an effigy of a wren, or an actual caged wren, travel from house to house playing music, singing and dancing. Depending on which region of the country, they are called Wrenboys, Mummers or Strawboys. A Mummer's Festival is held at this time every year in the village of New Inn, Co. Galway. A popular rhyme, known to many Irish children and sung at each house visited by the mummers goes as follows:

The wren, the wren, the king of all birds,
On St. Stephen's Day was caught in the furze,
Up with the penny and down with the pan,
Give us a penny to bury the wren.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Stephen%27s_Day


In various parts of Ireland on St. Stephen's Day, December 26th, Wrenboys (Mummers) celebrate the Wren (also pronounced as the Wran) by dressing up in straw masks and colourful clothing and, accompanied by traditional céilí music bands, parade through the towns and villages. The tradition also exists (or existed) in various parts of Britain, especially Wales.

Some people theorise that the Wren celebration has descended from Celtic mythology. Sources suggest that Druids apparently studied the flight of the wren, amongst other birds, to derive predictions about the future. It may also have been introduced or influenced by Scandinavian settlers during the Viking invasions of the 8th-10th Centuries. Various associated legends exist, such as the Wren bird being responsible for betraying Irish soldiers who fought the Viking invaders in the late first and early second millennia, and for betraying the Christian martyr Saint Stephen, after whom the day is named.

This mythological association with treachery is a probable reason why in past times the bird was hunted by Wrenboys on St. Stephen's Day. A captured Wren was killed and tied to the Wrenboy leader's staff pole. Wrenboys no longer practice this aspect of the Wren, although the event is still referred to as Hunting The Wren. Devoted Wrenboys, with their colourful straw costumes and masks, and with the accompanying céilí bands, continue to ensure that the Gaelic tradition of celebrating the Wren continues to this day.
© http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrenboys

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Very good school page on wren boys :
http://www.sligogrammarschool.org/halostephenswrenboys.htm



[© http://www.sligogrammarschool.org/halo/stephensday/wrenboys.jpg]

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Great Britain

In Great Britain and many of the Commonwealth countries, St Stephen’s Day is known as “Boxing Day”, which has nothing to do with the sport of boxing. In England, the favourite sport for Boxing Day is in fact hunting or any other form of horse riding outdoors.

Isabelle Prondzynski.

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Quote from the Wikipedia

There are disparate theories as to the origins of the term. The more common stories include:

It was the day when people would give a present or Christmas 'box' to those who have worked for them throughout the year. This is still done in Britain for postmen and paper-boys - though now the 'box' is usually given before Christmas, not after.

In feudal times, Christmas was a reason for a gathering of extended families. All the serfs would gather their families in the manor of their lord, which made it easier for the lord of the estate to hand out annual stipends to the serfs. After all the Christmas parties on 26 December, the lord of the estate would give practical goods such as cloth, grains, and tools to the serfs who lived on his land. Each family would get a box full of such goods the day after Christmas. Under this explanation, there was nothing voluntary about this transaction; the lord of the manor was obliged to supply these goods. Because of the boxes being given out, the day was called Boxing Day.

In England many years ago, it was common practice for the servants to carry boxes to their employers when they arrived for their day's work on the day after Christmas. Their employers would then put coins in the boxes as special end-of-year gifts. This can be compared with the modern day concept of Christmas bonuses. The servants carried boxes for the coins, hence the name Boxing Day.

In churches, it was traditional to open the church's donation box on Christmas Day, and the money in the donation box was to be distributed to the poorer or lower class citizens on the next day. In this case, the "box" in "Boxing Day" comes from that lockbox in which the donations were left.

Because the staff had to work on such an important day as Christmas Day by serving the master of the house and their family, they were given the following day off. Since being kept away from their own families to work on a traditional religious holiday and not being able to celebrate Christmas Dinner, the customary benefit was to "box" up the leftover food from Christmas Day and send it away with the servants and their families. Hence the "boxing" of food became "Boxing Day".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boxing_Day


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


wrens and sparrows
flock to the bird table --
St Stephen’s day

Isabelle Prondzynski, 2006

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Related words

***** Christmas

***** .. .. Saints: Their Memorial Days Links to the Saints

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Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....

Back to the Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/

7/03/2006

Sports - soccer

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Sports - Soccer, Football (Fussball)

***** Location: Germany, worldwide
***** Season: Various, see below
***** Category: Humanity


and other Winter Sports


American Football, see below

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Explanation

Soccer World Cup in Germany, 2006


FIFA Worldcup.COM



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Worldwide use

Australia

Australian Football League season begins

kigo for autumn

Australian Football League
source : www.afl.com.au


a turnover
in the football match -
a leaf becomes yellow


- Shared by Myron Lysenko
Joys of Japan, 2012


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England

Football -
hardly ever called soccer in the uk, its home or the football world in general but always soccer in the USA - traditionally starts the season in very early autumn and these days it's getting eariler - so traditionally August - its the played right through autumn and winter and the season ends in spring.

FA CUP FINAL, U.K.
Kigo for Early Spirng always in May

Soccer World Cup
Kigo for Summer

paul conneally

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Germany

Fussball, Fußball
The most common group game in Germany.

Deutscher Fussball-Bund


topic for haiku

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India

squashed football
breeds white-ants
awaits empty air ~


Read more haiku by Narayanan Raghunathan

topic for haiku


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Japan

soccer, sakkaa サッカー
Kigo for All Winter

Originaly a common sport from England and later Germany, introduced to Japan after 1873. A competitive sport with two teams of 11 people.

Also called "Association Football" アッソシエーション・フットボール.

Around 1960, it was officially separated from
American Football アメリカン・フットボール and
Rugby Football ラグビー・フットボール.


Another related game in Japan is the Kick-Ball, Kemari
First Kick-Ball Game (kigo for New Year) Japan

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Kenya

There are various soccer events in Kenya.

Moi Golden Cup
Africa Cup of Nations



World Cup Haiku 2006 from The Bamboochas
Bahati Haiku Club Kenya

hot and fresh from the Bamboocha haiku kitchen!

a man on the roof
fixing the tv antena for clear vision--
world cup

Raymond Otieno

cellphones on ears
hullo are you coming one match
is about to start
Raymond Otieno

two teachers betting
on Brazil and Australia match
fifty shillings
Raymond Otieno

Patrick Sensei
gives his fifty shillings in bet
his team loses
Raymond Otieno

food grows cold on tables
Raymond is not eating as
his eyes are stuck on tv.
Raymond Otieno


pensive wives at home--
husbands away watching football
world cup in Kenya
Catherine Njeri

Croatia is defeated--
Zachariah is jubilant
i won the bet
Catherine Njeri

World Cup again--
Brazilian supporters in rapturous joy
the trophy is ours

Samson Onyango

happy faces
all over the world
watching matches
Nicholas Kasyoki

sleepless nights
watching football matches
on big screens

Maximilla Kasandi

happy Ghanians--
scoring many goals in
sweet cool Germany

Maximilla Kasandi

all eyes on screen
ears on radios
expecting winners
Lameck Odhiambo

happy football fans
keenly watching screens--
world cup again

Kennedy Odhiambo

people congested in bars
watching and hearing world cup
shouts of goal...goal
Anne Kanini

goal...goal everywhere
as Ronaldo scores the goal
World Cup in Germany

David Wandera

teams gather
Ronaldihno scores one goal
kenyans cheer

anonymous

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kenyasaijiki/message/151?l=1

... ... ...

July 5, 2006

Here in Kenya, the World Cup has taken a tragic turn.
A boy was killed in Kisumu over Brazil's defeat by France.

Brazil loses to France--
a Brazilian fan is killed
in Kisumu


Patrick Wafula, Kenya.


... ... ...


World Cup 2010


World Cup--
they drum the mabati walls
celebrating Ghana


*Mabati is a Swahili word for corrugated iron sheets.

Caleb Mutua, Kenya


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Latin America

Futbol is the most popular sport in Latin America.
Huge amount of teams, millions and millions of devoted fans. Sport pages in newspapers are mainly about futbol. The best futbol players are real "celebrities"
The activity is very intense as much as in Europe or Africa.

9 of the 18 World Cups held up until now, were won by South America's national teams (Brazil five times, Argentina twice and Uruguay twice). When this edition of the World Cup comes to an end, Europe will have also 9 won.

L Am soccer has given the world great players, such as Pele and Maradona to mention the most well known. My country in particular won the first World Cup played in the year 1930 and also the one in 1950 (against Brazil in Maracana).

Carlos Fleitas, June 2006

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Romania

-football season starts (Russia&Scandinavia)
kigo for (early) spring

-football season starts (most of the rest of the world)
kigo for early autumn

-end of football season (Russia&Scandinavia)
kigo for early winter

-end of football season (rest of the world)
kigo for late spring/early summer

(actually, for us in Romania, the week after the end of the last league matches is very interesting: you see people gradually shifting their conversation topics from "important matters" to planning their summer vacation)

-Euro Cups start
kigo for autumn
(actually for smaller countries they start much earlier; but mid-September is when they start in earnest and media attention turns to them)

-Euro Cup finals
kigo for late spring

-Intertoto Cup
summer kigo
(I discovered I have a soft spot for the Intertoto Cup; it has a sort of "wabi" to it; it involves small, lower-budget clubs who generally know they're never going to be champions of their country and who sacrifice their summer breaks in pursuit of a very ellusive dream: out of 100 or so teams starting this year, only 3 will get the questionable prize of being allowed to contest the UEFA Cup from September onwards.
It involves smaller communities getting excited about their team playing "in Europe" and hosting another team they previously never heard of. In the admittedly too money-driven world of today's football, it has a flavour of gratuitousness about it).

Cristian Mocanu
a haijin whose grandfather was afootball/soccer club president!

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Trinidad & Tobago

returning football team
a cheer rises
fireworks
Loot at it here !

World Cup 2006 ! Haiga


we celebrate
in T and T
flamboyant in full bloom

http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4379/2137/1600/We-celebrate.jpg


World Cup Soca Warriors Return

returning football team
a cheer rises
fireworks

http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4379/2137/1600/02-World-Cup-2006.jpg

Gillena Cox, 2006

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Things found on the way





. Soccer World Cup Daruma   



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HAIKU


an autumn haiku

first match
of the season
we follow the moon


paul conneally


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the world cup game
is still scoreless---
summer solstice


Fred Masarani, June 2006
http://hbfm.blogspot.com/

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Mahiri misses
his pre-mock exams--
angry Principals

Macharia misses
Bahati board meeting--
complains

form four
students dozing in class--
angry teachers

jammed video
shows in Soweto--
cheers and boos


Partrick Wafula, Kenya, 2006

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end of the game
Ronaldo cries like a baby
on Zizou's shoulder


Carlos Fleitas, June 2006 (World Cup in Germany)

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game over --
all become Italians
hooting with joy

France plays Brazil --
only the swifts are heard in
Brussels streets


Isabelle Prondzynski, July, 2006

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SHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOT !!!


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Related words

***** Winter Sports as Winter Kigo


ragubii ラグビー rugby



kigo for late winter

sukii スキー skiing, ski
sujiijoo スキー場(すきーじょう)ski resort
sukii ressha スキー列車(すきーれっしゃ)train transporting people with ski
sukii yado スキー宿(すきーやど)lodging for skiers
sukiiyaa 、スキーヤー skier
sukii boo スキー帽(すきーぼう)hat/cap for a skier
. . . CLICK here for Photos of a warm hat !

kigo words taken from the German language

gerende ゲレンデ Gelände, (skiing) slope
shantse シャンツェ Schanze, ski jump
shupuuru シュプール Spur, ski tracks, trail with one's skis


kigo for early spring

haru sukii 春スキー (はるすきー) skiing in spring


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kigo for late winter

sukeeto スケート skating, ice skating, Eislaufen
koorisuberi 氷滑(こおりすべり)
sukeeto joo スケート場(すけーとじょう)ring for skating
..... スケートリンク sukeeto rinku
sukeetaa スケーター , skaker, ice skater


aisu hokkee アイスホッケー ice hockey


bobusuree ボブスレー bob sley
riyuuju リュージュluge, toboggan
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

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kigo for late winter

kangeiko 寒稽古 (かんげいこ) practising (sports) in the cold
..... kanzarai 寒復習 (かんざらい), kanzarae 寒ざらえ(かんざらえ), kannarai 寒習(かんならい)

kangoe 寒声 (かんごえ ) shouting loud (during winter practise in the cold)


kandori 寒取 (かんどり) practising sumo in the cold
..... kanzumoo 寒相撲(かんずもう)
..... kanzumoo 寒角力(かんずもう)

kanchuu suiei 寒中水泳 (かんちゅうすいえい) swimming in the cold season
..... kansui 寒泳(かんえい), kan oyogi 寒泳ぎ(かんおよぎ)


kanbiki 寒弾 (かんびき) practising shamisen in the cold


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-Compiled by Larry Bole:

スケートの真顔なしつゝたのしけれ
sukeeto no magao nashitsutsu tanoshikere

So serious
The face of the skaters,
Yet so enjoyable!


--Yamaguchi Seishi, (1931) Tr. Blyth


スケートの 紐むすぶ間もはやりつつ
sukeeto no himo musubu ma mo hayari tsutsu

Even in the time
it takes to tie on ice-skates,
the heart beats faster.


--Seishi (1932)
Tr. Takashi Kodaira and Alfred H. Marks

Comment by Seishi:
The skating rink on top of the Asahi Building, near the Sumitomo Building. Since I had become expert at skating with 'geta' skates when I was in elementary school, I was able to master the use of shoeskates quickly. My heart would pound even as I tied the laces of the skates.

'Other points of interest':
the so-called 'geta'-skate has a single blade in place of the two usual "teeth" under the 'geta', and slipped onto the feet like thongs.


learning to skate
I was Hans Brinker
until I fell


--Larry Bole


quote
Hans Brinker, or The Silver Skates
(full title: Hans Brinker; or,
the Silver Skates: A Story of Life in Holland)


Hans Brinker tying on his sister Gretel's ice skates

The novel takes place in the Netherlands, and is a colorful fictional portrait of early nineteenth-century Dutch life, as well as a tale of youthful honor.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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. WKD : Names of Persons and Haiku .


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2/17/2006

Pansy (sanshoku sumire) and violet

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Pansy, pansies

***** Location: Europa, worldwide
***** Season: Late Spring, others see below
***** Category: Plant


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Explanation

The area of origin of this well-known spring flower is Europe. Since the 19th century there have been many variations developed for gardens and parks. It is also used for bouquets.

Latin Name : Viola tricolor

Gabi Greve

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http://www.mitomori.co.jp/hanazukan/hanazukan2.2.35panzie.html

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The Pansy, it would seem, is one of the most alluring of all garden flowers. Its little faces make most of us laugh when we look at them. The English have given the Pansy many nicknames, such as

Call-me-to-you, Love-true, Three-faces-under-a-hood, Pink-eyed-John, Tickle-my-fancy, Bird's-eye, Jump-up-and-kiss-me, God-father, Godmother, Love-in-idleness, Kiss-me-in-the-buttery, Rob-run-the-street, and Heartsease.

With such names, it is not strange that the French call it pensee, for this word means thoughts. Yet with all the Pansies' charms, there are some persons who do not grow them.
http://www.backyardgardener.com/annual/annual59.html

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Worldwide use

Germany

Stiefmütterchen "Little Stepmother"

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Japan

sumire 菫 violet

. . . . . and

"Three-colored violet", sanshoku sumire 三色菫
Viola Pansie, panjii uioora パンジー ウイオーラ
dancing butterfly-flower, yuuchooka 遊蝶花
butterfly flower kochooka 胡蝶花

Because the flowers are made up of three different colors, they have this name. Colors may vary and many artificial variations are now availabe.
Pansies have been introduced to Japan in the Edo period and are now well-loves and can be seen everywhere.

Because the flower also looks like a dancing butterfly to the Japanese eye, there is the special name.

Gabi Greve

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plant kigo for all spring

sumire 菫 (すみれ) violet
tsubo sumire 壷すみれ(つぼすみれ)
hime sumire 姫すみれ(ひめすみれ)、
akane sumire 茜すみれ(あかねすみれ)
oka sumire 岡すみれ(おかすみれ)、
yama sumire 山すみれ(やますみれ)mountain violet
noji sumire 野路すみれ(のじすみれ)violet by the roadside

hina sumire 雛すみれ(ひなすみれ)
fuji sumire 藤すみれ(ふじすみれ)、
sakura sumire 桜すみれ(さくらすみれ)

kosumire 小すみれ(こすみれ)small violet
Eizan sumire 叡山すみれ(えいざんすみれ)from Mount Hiei
hana sumire 花菫(はなすみれ)

sumiregusa 菫草(すみれぐさ)
sumireno 菫野(すみれの)

sumire tsumu 菫摘む(すみれつむ)picking violets

sumootorigusa 相撲取草(すもうとりぐさ)Sumo wrestling plant
sumoogusa 相撲草(すもうぐさ)
sumoobana 相撲花(すもうばな)

hitoyogusa 一夜草(ひとよぐさ)
hitohagusa 一葉草(ひとはぐさ)
futabagusa ふたば草(ふたばぐさ)

nioi sumire 香菫 (においすみれ) fragrant violet
yamasumire 山菫(やますみれ)mountain violet
baioretto バイオレット violet


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kigo for late winter

fuyu sumire 冬菫 (ふゆすみれ) violet in winter
..... fuyu no sumire 冬の菫(ふゆのすみれ)
kansumire, kan sumire 寒菫(かんすみれ) violet in the cold


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Things found on the way



. WASHOKU - Edible Plants
Viola Pansie, panjii uioora パンジー ウイオーラ



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HAIKU


in texas, we can have pansies all winter. they fade in the heat of late spring.

i have been planting white flowers for the bed visible from my own bed.

the last three nights, the plump bright moon has been overhead at night and has illumenated the white pansies, the silver dusty miller and the white cyclamen.

it has been thrilling.

white pansies
answering
the moon

susan delphine delaney
plano texas, USA

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20.04.2001 : Aprilwetter

Die Stiefmütterchen
Strecken, einfältig wirkend,
Die Köpfe hervor.


©  by Hans-Jürgen Murer, Germany
http://kurztexte.de/zKATJA/haiku/haiku04_01.htm

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winter pansies burst
white sugar crusts upon silk
vibrant faces anew

12/12/2003
Copyright © 2006 Wendy Sparling


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sumire すみれ【菫】 violet




うすくともはやいが勝と菫哉
usuku tomo hayai ga kachi to sumire kana

even the pale ones
get noticed -- violets
bloom early

Tr. Chris Drake

This spring hokku was written early in the 3rd month (April) of 1822, a few days before the birth of Issa's fourth child and third son, Konzaburo, who, like the first three children, would soon die young. Issa is 60, and his wife Kiku is 36, so Issa might be wishing he himself had learned from violets and married earlier than he did (when he was 52).

In any case, Issa praises the wise -- and canny -- violets because they somehow seem to know the importance of blooming early in spring, before the gaudy flowers and long grasses of late spring and early summer appear. Violets are known for their deep purple and other colors, but not all of them have strong colors. Even the pale ones, however, stand out in contrast to what grows around them early in spring. Issa uses an idiom in the second line that is usually translated "First come, first served," although the idiom is also similar to "The early bird catches the worm."

The to after the idiom, at the end of the second line, indicates the manner in which the violets grow -- but it can also indicate the manner in which the violets feel and think, so Issa seems to be attributing a certain level of awareness to the flowers. It's possible that Issa may be showing his affection for the violets by kidding them, suggesting jokingly that their early blooming shows they have a streak of vanity.

Chris Drake



世にそまばこくも薄くも菫哉
yo ni somaba koku mo usuku mo sumire kana

tinged with the world
deeper or lighter
ah, violets


This hokku is from the sixth month of 1824, a month after Issa, his first family completely gone, got married for the second time to Yuki, the daughter of a samurai on 5/12. The two were not well matched, and Yuki soon went home on 5/24. She returned to Issa's house on 5/29 but again went back to her parents' house on 7/12 then again on 7/27. Finally Issa signed the divorce document she wanted on 8/3. Is this hokku an oblique comment by Issa on his marriage? The hokku suggests that while most violets are purple, if they are moved here and there, the precise shades of a violet's color is affected by the environment and nearby colors. Their placement and contexts determine their exact shades. Issa seems to be speaking indirectly here about humans as well, about how people are influenced in various ways by the people they live with and meet.

People change in different surroundings and situations and among different people. Is Issa also obliquely suggesting that the shades of his own emotions have been influenced differently by his two different wives? And that perhaps Yuki's reaction to him is likewise influenced by shades of feeling she wasn't aware of when she was with her family? If so, he may be suggesting that the differences they are discovering between them, some quite deep, are natural and unavoidable.

Tr. and comment : Chris Drake


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菫程な小さき人に 生れたし
sumire hodo chiisaki hito ni umaretashi

love to
live as small
as a violet


Natsume Soseki
- Shared by Hideo Suzuki
Joys of Japan, March 2012


. Natsume Soseki 夏目漱石 .


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Related words


***** Pinguicula macroceras 虫取菫 mushitori sumire
"insect catching pansy"
Pinguicula vulgaris
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


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***** . PLANTS in all seasons - SAIJIKI


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2/05/2006

New Year's Day

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New Year's Day

***** Location: Worldwide
***** Season: New Year
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation

New Year's Day, ganjitsu 元日

This is the first day of the year, January 1st.
Lately, special festive events have become rare. The traditional mood has become a thing of the past and many people tend to simply stay home quietly. Nonetheless it is still considered a day when people welcome the new year with a refreshed mind.

The various terms which designate New Year's Day (元朝 ganchō, ganchoo; 元旦 gantan; 大旦 ōashita ooashita) particularly refer to the morning of the day, when the members of the family gather to celebrate by drinking spiced sake (屠蘇 toso).
gantan 元旦 : the kanji shows us the sun about to rise, so it refers more to "hatsu hi no de", first sunrise.
. hatsuhi no de 初日の出  .

Another related term that means New Year (歳旦 saitan) extends its meaning to the first three days of the New Year.

元日や晴れて雀のものがたり
ganjitsu ya harete suzume no monogatari

New Year's Day--
the sun shines,
the sparrows' story

Ransetsu 嵐雪

University Virginia Saijiki

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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


元日や神代のことも思はるる
ganjitsu ya jindai no koto mo omowaruru

New Year's Day -
How it evokes
the Age of the Gods


. Arakida Moritake 荒木田守武 .


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- - - - - Matsuo Basho - - - - -

元日に田毎の日こそ恋しけれ
元日は田毎の日こそ恋しけれ
ganjitsu wa tagoto no hi koso koishikere

quote
New Year’s Day:
Now I long to see
The sun over Tagoto.

Tr. Buntin

It is recorded that this haiku was composed on New Year’s Day of 1689, when Basho was 46 years old, at his residence in Ueno. The autumn before, Basho had made a journey to Mt. Obasute (in present-day Nagano Prefecture), as described in his book Trip to Sarashina. At the base of Mt. Ubasute there are many small rice paddies, tagoto in Japanese. The autumn moon reflecting off those paddies is a famous sight, and thus the area was given the place name “Tagoto.” Basho had long wanted to witness the scene of the autumn moon over the Tagoto rice paddies. After a difficult journey, Basho was rewarded with the view of his dreams.

When Basho saw the sun rising on New Year’s Day, ascending over the decorative New Year pine branches, it brought back fond memories of the moon’s reflection on the wet Tagoto rice fields, but at this time it would be the sun that was shining on the dry fields. By placing his distinctive signature within the circle--representing both the sun and the moon-–Basho suggests that his heart his would be equally captivated by the sight of either the moon or sun over the Tagoto rice fields.

Also, since tagoto can be taken to mean “the many rice paddies of Japan,” the haiku can be interpreted as meaning,
“A new year is dawning all over the land, each place receiving the light of the sun in a different manner, what a lovely thought that is, bringing back fond memories of the places I have visited.”
It is quite likely that this haiga was made on the actual day the haiku was composed; perhaps even haiku and painting were created together. It is browned with age but Basho’s brushwork remains bright and fresh. This is an extremely rare and fine Basho haiga.

Look at a tansaku script of this poem:
source : robynbuntin.com


On New Year's Day,
in every rice paddy
the sun is more dear.

Tr. McAuley


元禄2年元旦

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元日や思えばさびし秋の暮
ganjitsu ya omoeba sabishi aki no kure

First Day -
deep in thought, lonely
autumn evening

Tr. Barnhill


The First Day of the Year:
I remember
A lonely autumn evening.

Tr. Blyth


On New Year's Day,
now I think of it, how sad is
an autumn evening.

Tr. McAuley

Written in 1683 天和3年. Basho age 40.

On the first day of the year, many people stay at home and the village is more quiet than ever. It reminds the poet of the quiet sunset of a late autumn evening.
Written in the Danrin style of haikai.

. Matsuo Basho 松尾芭蕉 - Archives of the WKD .

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苦にやんだ元日するや人並に
ku ni yanda ganjitsu suru ya hito nami ni

all New Year's Day
I fight off my worries
like everyone else

Tr. Chris Drake

This hokku is from the 12th lunar month (January) of 1826. It was written several days before New Year's Day, so Issa may have been suffering fairly serious depression. He must have known what New Year's Day would be like because he already had serious anxieties about himself and his future and grieved for the souls of his dead family who once lived in his house with him. In 1823 Issa's wife Kiku died, and at the beginning of 1824 his third son Konzaburo died. This meant all four of his children had died young. To make things even worse for Issa, in the 5th month of 1824 he remarried a woman named Yuki, who very soon left him and in the 8th month forced him to divorce her. The shock must have been intense, since less than a month later Issa had a stroke that temporarily took away his ability to speak, and he had to spend the next four months recovering at the homes of various students.

Finally he recovered and returned to his empty house in the twelfth month. In 1825 Issa spent about 70% of his time at the houses of others, but the convivial atmosphere at his students' houses seems to have protected him against depression. After Issa returned to his empty home in his hometown in early January 1826, he became snowed in, and, if his hokku are any indication, his mood as he stayed alone in his house, surrounded by painful memories, seems to have become darker. Issa no doubt hoped to remarry and have a family, but at 62 his body was weakening markedly after a life of living mostly on the road, and he may have doubted he would ever marry again. In fact he did marry for a third time in the autumn of the following year, but he died in early 1828 before his last child was born.

In 1833 Issa's follower Souki edited Additional Hokku by Issa (Issa hokku-shou tsuika). It includes a variant of the above hokku with the word "Travel" written before it, so perhaps Issa wrote this version later, while he was visiting someone at New Year's. The original hokku, however, was written in the 12th month while Issa was at home.
His diary for the month says, "At home all thirty days."

Chris Drake

. Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶 in Edo .


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Haiku and Photos from Tomislav Maretic, Croatia
2006



foggy morning --
first sparrows
on the bare branches

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New year morning --
Sljeme mountain slowly
comes out from the fog

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firecrackers in the morning -
the sparrows shift
from tree to tree


oooooooooooooooooooooooooooo



rooster's crowing -
the new year day's
first felicitation

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

groggy morning -
some champagne still left
in the glasses

new year's day --
for our hangover
this vegetable soup

first coffee -
waiting for the concert
from Vienna


oooooooooooooooooooooooooooo



first mountain view!
while I find the camera
it's swallowed in fog


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Related words

***** New Year's Concert Vienna Austria

***** New Year (shin nen)


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2/03/2006

Nobel Prize

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Nobel Prize

***** Location: Europe, worldwide
***** Season: Autumn
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation

Nobel Prize 2006

The Nobel Committee has once again done a wonderful thing in awarding the Peace Prize to Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank :

http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/2006/


banker to the poor --
now feted by the poor
and the rich


Isabelle Prondzynski


Muhammad Yunus
© newsxtra nobelYunus1406

Please read the Daily Nation, Nairobi, 14 October 2006
Nobel Peace Prize 2006

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The Nobel Foundation

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The Nobel Prizes are prizes awarded annually to people (and, in the case of the Peace Prize, to organizations) who have completed outstanding research, invented ground-breaking techniques or equipment, or made an outstanding contribution to society in physics, chemistry, literature, peace, medicine or physiology and economics. They are widely regarded as the supreme commendation in their respective subject areas. Those honored with a Prize are known as Nobel Laureates.



The Prizes were instituted by the Swedish scientist Alfred Nobel through his will. They were first awarded in 1901, five years after Nobel's death. The prize in economics, instituted by the Bank of Sweden, has been awarded since 1969.

As of October 2006, a total of 781 Nobel Prizes have been awarded, 763 to individuals and 18 to organizations. A few Prize winners have declined the award. There are years in which one or more Prizes are not awarded; during World War II, for instance, no Prizes were awarded in any category between 1940 and 1942. Each Prize stipulates, however, that it must be awarded at least once every five years.

Prizes cannot be revoked. Since 1974, no award may be made posthumously, i.e. nominees must be alive at the time of their nomination.

© Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize


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Worldwide use

Norway

According to the will of Alfred Nobel, most of the Nobel Prizes are announced and awarded in Stockholm (Sweden) -- that is, all except the Peace Prize, which he decided should be decided, announced and awarded in Oslo (Norway).

The city is immensely proud of this privilege. Any conducted tour of Oslo shows the balcony of the hotel where the Laureates stay and from where they greet the people. There are several days of festivities organised around the award ceremony, which always takes place on 10 December, and the whole city (particularly its children) join in the celebrations. The presentation takes place in the presence of their Majesties the King and Queen of Norway, the Norwegian government, Storting representatives and an invited audience.

Isabelle Prondzynski

Here are the photo galleries of the most recent award ceremonies :
http://nobelprize.org/award_ceremonies/ceremony_oslo/photos/



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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


Wangari Maathai, Nobel Peace Prize
(10 December 2004)

digging the soil
planting another tree --
Nobel laureate

Isabelle Prondzynski


About Wangari Maathai, Kenya

http://greenbeltmovement.org/w.php?id=59
http://greenbeltmovement.org/c.php?id=9

(1 April 1940 – 25 September 2011)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wangari_Maathai


Photo : http://greenbeltmovement.org/images/content/wangari3.jpg
Photo : http://www.gbmna.org/slideshow/index.php?gal=oslo&s=l&id=15
Photo : http://www.gbmna.org/slideshow/index.php?gal=oslo&s=l&id=17
Many Photos : http://greenbeltmovement.org/gallery.php?s=5




Postal Corporation of Kenya, facebook


a bright smile
among blue and green -
Wangari Maathai


Gabi Greve
October





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Related words

***** Peace and War

***** Peace (Swahili : Amani) Kenya

***** World Peace Day International Day of Peace. Ahimsa: India



***** World Days ..... a growing list



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1/15/2006

Moon in Europa

nnnnnnnnnnnn TOP nnnnnnnnnnnnn

Moon in Europa

***** Location: Europa
***** Season: Various
***** Category: Heaven


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Explanation

Read the details of this kigo here:
.. .. .. .. MOON and its LINKS..


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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way


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HAIKU


Moon Haiku by Vasile Moldovan, Romania

Sitting all alone
facing a still white paper:
behind me the moon

Lacustrine carpet-
warped amongst all those algae
the summer moon's curls

Children covered up
under warm maternal love-
the moon in the bedroom

Through the silk gown
some moonbeams are stroking
the foetus in the womb

After the hunting
the gracious light of the moon
grooming a deer cub

In the Nature Book
the wind turns page after page
the moon is reading

Soul of woman:
through the double window the moon
sees what she looks like

The moon is setting.
Who knows for how many times
without witnesses?

Moonless nights-
singing crickets are blurring
the dark


© January 2006

Vasile Moldovan was born on June 20, 1949 in a farmhouse from a Romanian village.He gratueted from the Faculty of Journalism from Bucharest,where he lives. He published follows haiku books:
Via dolorosa (christien haiku),1998; The moon's unseen face, 2001; Noah's ark
(lirical bestiar), 2003; Ikebana, 2005 and a poetry book, Poem on line,2001.
His haiku appear frecventely on The Haiku Gallery, Tinywords,Asahi Shimbun,Mainichi Daily News,Haiku Albatros.

Together with Florin Vasiliu and Ion Codrescu, he is one of the founders of the Romanian Society of Haiku. Since the summer of 2001, the executive chairman of the society.

Romanian Society of Haiku
str. Bîrnova, nr. 8 bl. M110, App. 9
O.P. 51 Bukaresti

vasilemoldovan ...

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Related words

***** MOON as a KIGO - O-Tsukisama


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12/05/2005

Lent Fastenzeit

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Lent (Carême, Fastenzeit)

***** Location: Europe,
worldwide in Christian communities
***** Season: Early Spring
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation

The season of Lent is a 40-day period of fasting and prayer, which leads up to the great feast of Christ's resurrection, Easter, in the Christian calendar. Lent starts on Ash Wednesday and ends with Easter Eve, the day after Good Friday, when we remember Jesus resting dead in his tomb and prepare ourselves to celebrate his resurrection.

In Ireland, when I was growing up, Lent involved giving up sugar in one's tea, giving up smoking, giving up drink, giving up chocolate. St Patrick's Day (the Irish national holiday on 17 March) is a day of respite from the Lenten fast. In other countries, the respite (or "refreshment") Sunday is Laetare, the fourth Sunday of Lent.

Nowadays, the churches more and more counsel that Lent should be the occasion for taking on something, rather than giving up something. Take on a hospital visit, take on regular time for prayer, take on being patient with your parents -- or your children!

Several of the pictures on this page are from the Stations of the Cross in the Chapel of Hekima College, Nairobi. May they speak to you as they do to me -- and if it is Lent when you are reading this, have a holy and blessed Lent!

Isabelle Prondzynski

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Hekima College, Nairobi, Kenya



Father Angelbert M. Vang SJ from Yaounde, Cameroon was a well-known historian, poet, musician and designer. The Jesuit artist, theologian and historian who designed these stations of the Cross was himself murdered a few years after he expressed his own understanding of Christ's Passion in the African idiom he valued.

Vang was asked to design stations for the chapel Hekima College, in Nairobi, Kenya, shortly after the chapel was built in 1984-85 at the very beginning of the school for professional theological studies sponsored by the Jesuits of Africa.
http://sjweb.info/gallery/stations/stations.cfm

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The Teutonic word Lent, which we employ to denote the forty days' fast preceding Easter, originally meant no more than the spring season. Still it has been used from the Anglo-Saxon period to translate the more significant Latin term quadragesima (French carême, Italian quaresima, Spanish cuaresma), meaning the "forty days", or more literally the "fortieth day". This in turn imitated the Greek name for Lent, tessarakoste (fortieth), a word formed on the analogy of Pentecost (pentekoste), which last was in use for the Jewish festival before New Testament times. This etymology, as we shall see, is of some little importance in explaining the early developments of the Easter fast.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09152a.htm

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Lent
Lent is the period of forty days which comes before Easter in the Christian calendar. Lent begins on Ash Wednesday.

Why 40 Days?
40 is a significant number in Jewish-Christian scripture:

In Genesis, the flood which destroyed the earth was brought about by 40 days and nights of rain.
The Hebrews spent 40 years in the wilderness before reaching the land promised to them by God.
Moses fasted for 40 days before receiving the ten commandments on Mount Sinai.
Jesus spent 40 days fasting in the wilderness in preparation for his ministry.

Most Christians regard Jesus' time in the wilderness as the key event for the duration of Lent.

The colour purple
Purple is the symbolic colour used in some churches throughout Lent, for drapes and altar frontals. Purple is used for two reasons: firstly because it is associated with mourning and so anticipates the pain and suffering of the crucifixion, and secondly because purple is the colour associated with royalty, and celebrates Christ’s resurrection and sovereignty.

East and West
Both the eastern and western churches observe Lent but they count the 40 days differently. The western church excludes Sundays (which is celebrated as the day of Christ's resurrection) whereas the eastern church includes them. The churches also start Lent on different days.

Western churches start Lent on the 7th Wednesday before Easter Day (called Ash Wednesday).

Eastern churches start Lent on the Monday of the 7th week before Easter and end it on the Friday 9 days before Easter. Eastern churches call this period the 'Great Lent'.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/christianity/holydays/lent.shtml

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Station 9 from Hekima College Chapel, Nairobi

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S A C R E D S P A C E is a web site started by the Jesuits of Ireland in 1999 to help the faithful pray in Lent. It was so successful that it has continued ever since, and is now available, all year round, in 20 different languages.

http://www.sacredspace.ie/

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Call to fasting and prayer at the start of Lent

Brothers and sisters in Christ: since early days Christians have observed with great devotion the time of our Lord's passion and resurrection. It became the custom of the Church to prepare for this by a season of penitence and fasting.

At first this season of Lent was observed by those who were preparing for Baptism at Easter and by those who were to be restored to the Church's fellowship from which they had been separated through sin. In course of time the Church came to recognize that, by a careful keeping of these days, all Christians might take to heart the call to repentance and the assurance of proclaimed in the gospel, and so grow in faith and in devotion to our Lord.

I invite you, therefore, to observe a holy Lent, by self-examination and repentance; by prayer, fasting, and self-denial; and by reading and meditating on God's holy word.
http://www.ireland.anglican.org/bcp2004/misc/Ashwed.pdf

Almighty God,
whose Son Jesus Christ fasted forty days in the wilderness,
and was tempted as we are, yet without sin:
Give us grace to discipline ourselves
in obedience to your Spirit;
and, as you know our weakness,
so may we know your power to save;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen

Prayer

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Station 7 from Hekima College Chapel, Nairobi

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Worldwide use

Japan

kigo for late spring

. shishunsetsu 四旬節 (しじゅんせつ) lent  
..... taisaisetsu 大斎節(たいさいせつ)
rento レント、Lent
shijunsai 四旬祭(しじゅんさい), shijunsai 四旬斎(しじゅんさい)

junansetsu 受難節 (じゅなんせつ) lent. Passionszeit
..... jukusetsu 受苦節(じゅくせつ)

junan 受難の主日 (じゅなんのしゅじつ) Palmsunday, Palmsonntag
shuro no shujitsu 棕櫚の主日(しゅろのしゅじつ)
shuro no seijitsu 棕櫚の聖日(しゅろのせいじつ)
eda no shujitsu 枝の主日(えだのしゅじつ)
seishisai 聖枝祭(せいしさい)
paamusandii paamu sandii パームサンデー palm sunday

. Palm Sunday in Kenya .   


sei kinyoobi 聖金曜日 せいきんようび Good Friday, Karfreitag
sei kinyoo 聖金曜(せいきんよう)
junanbi 受難日(じゅなんび)
guddo furaidii グッドフライデー Good Friday
junan no kinyoobi 受難の金曜日(じゅなんのきんようび)
kunan no kinyoobi苦難の金曜日(くなんのきんようび)
kirisuto junanbi キリスト受難日(きりすとじゅなんび)



seidoyoobi 聖土曜日 (せいどようび) Holy Saturday
Black Saturday, Karsamstag, Ostersamstag
seidoyoo 聖土曜(せいどよう)


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Kenya

a blackbird swoops
over the purple altar---
Lent


Catherine Njeri


. Lent 2011 . . . by Catherine




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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


lenten gift
ciondo full to the brim --
we'll eat tonight!

Ciondo -- sisal baskets carried by women

Isabelle Prondzynski -- Lent 2006 (famine in Kenya)

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night before Lent
quick trip to store
last piece of pie


Molly Pufall


cookies in the freezer
wait to be eaten
until Easter


Juliana Helt


40 days
40 nights
. . . restraining himself


Ben Kress


my very best friend
murdered
so we can be together

Maureen Coady

© 2004, Randy Brooks , Millikin University

Kukai 4 Favorites -- Love, Mardi Gras & Lent
Global Haiku Tradition -- Haiku Kukai 4, Spring 2004
http://www.millikin.edu/haiku/courses/globalSpring2004/4kukaifavorites.html

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we are dust
to dust we shall return
Lent's lesson for all

Victor P. Gendrano
Published in World Haiku Review,
Vol. 1, Issue 3, November 2001
http://www.geocities.com/vgendrano/febhaiku.html

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Weniger ist Mehr - Less is More



http://www.aktion-verzicht.at/images/grafiken/plakat.gif

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Related words

***** Ash Wednesday

***** Laetare, Mothering Day

***** . Palm Sunday in Kenya .   

after Lent we come to

***** Easter


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. Christian Celebrations in Japanese Kigo  

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12/01/2005

Laetare

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Mothering Sunday, Laetare

***** Location: Ireland, Great Britain, Commonwealth
***** Season: Early spring (Northern Hemisphere),
........end of hot dry season (Kenya)
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation

Mothering Sunday
is an ancient church festival which, in some countries and in modern times, has become mixed up with the secular celebration of Mothers' Day. It is also in this modern day and age, that many women are not mothers, and that we have become more aware of the suffering of those who have wished to be mothers but could not, those who have lost their children and those who have lost their mothers, as well as those who cannot be with their mothers for one reason or another.

The church is therefore seeking its way back to the roots of the festival, the celebration of the mother church, bringing the opportunity to meet one's extended family on a day of pilgrimage and celebration.

The fourth Sunday in Lent is Laetare, also called Refreshment Sunday, the day when the Lenten fast is relaxed. For those in the Roman Catholic, Anglican or Lutheran traditions, the priests (including the Pope -- see the photos below) wear rose pink vestments, for one of only two occasions in the year (the other being Gaudete, the third Sunday of Advent).

Isabelle Prondzynski

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Origins of Mothering Sunday

In this commercial age, it is easy to think that Mothers' Day is yet another excuse for the greetings card industry to extract our money.

However, unlike the festival on the second Sunday in May, created in America in 1914, our Mothers' Day or Mothering Sunday has been celebrated on the fourth Sunday in Lent since the early church. Centuries ago it was considered important for people to return to their home or 'mother' church once a year, which inevitably became an occasion for family reunions. It was this that led to the tradition of children, particularly those working as domestic servants or apprentices away from home, being given the day off to visit and take gifts to their mothers.

Mothering Sunday was also known as Refreshment Sunday, because the fasting rules for Lent were relaxed on tha day. A food item especially associated with the day is simnel cake: a rich fruit cake with almond paste on top and in the middle. For strict adherers to the Lenten fast, the cake had to keep until Easter Day, which is when it is now more commonly found on our tea tables.
http://parish.ashtead.org/east04/mother.htm

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http://static.flickr.com/4/7596738_cd1c0bb37d.jpg?v=0

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From a Mothering Sunday sermon

I managed to discover that in days gone by it was considered important for people to return to their home or "mother" church once a year. So each year in the middle of Lent, everyone would visit their "mother" church, or the main church or Cathedral of the area. Inevitably the return to the "mother" church became an occasion for family reunions when children who were working away returned home. (It was quite common in those days for children to leave home for work once they were ten years old.)

And most historians think that it was the return to the "Mother" church which led to the tradition of children, particularly those working as domestic servants, or as apprentices, being given the day off to visit their mother and family.
As they walked along the country lanes, children would pick wild flowers or violets to take to church or give to their mother as a small gift.
http://www.ascensionbalhamhill.org.uk/Resources/MotheringSunday.htm

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http://www.themildredmittensmanufactory.co.uk/img176060.jpg

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A Foodie Festival

Mothering Sunday was also known as Refreshment Sunday because the fasting rules for Lent were relaxed that day.

Originally both Old and New Testament lessons on mid-lent Sunday made a point of food.

The Gospel reading from the New Testament told the story of how Jesus fed five thousand people with only five small barley loaves and two small fish.

Now there was much grass in the place; so the men sat down, in number about five thousand. Jesus then took the loaves, and when he had given thanks, he distributed them to those who were seated; so also the fish, as much as they wanted. (John 6:10-12)

Simnel Cake
The food item specially associated with Mothering Sunday is the Simnel Cake.

A Simnel cake is a fruit cake with two layers of almond paste, one on top and one in the middle.

The cake is made with 11 balls of marzipan icing on top representing the 11 disciples. (Judas is not included.) Traditionally, sugar violets would also be added.

Why Simnel?
The name Simnel probably comes from the Latin word "simila" which means a fine wheat flour usually used for baking a cake.

There's a legend that a man called Simon and his wife Nell argued over whether the cake for Mothering Sunday should be baked or boiled. In the end they did both, so the cake was named after both of them: SIM-NELL.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/christianity/features/mday/mday2.shtml

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More background, and a delicious Simnel cake recipe :

http://www.chippingnorton.net/Features/simnel%20cake.htm


http://www.chippingnorton.net/images/Simnel_Cake_2.jpg

http://www.chippingnorton.net/images/simnel.jpg
http://www.chippingnorton.net/images/simnel1.jpg


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The Pope in Rose

AP - Sun Mar 26, 2006, 7:36 AM ET
Pope Benedict XVI waves to faithful prior to celebrating Mass during his visit to God Our Merciful Father Church on the outskirts of Rome, Sunday, March 26, 2006. The pontiff took inspiration from his predecessor Sunday, reading what he said was a message of love and hope that the late Pope John Paul II had intended to read the day after he died.
http://www.splendoroftruth.com/curtjester/archives/006622.php

More photos of the Pope :


(AP Photo/Plinio Lepri)
http://michaeldubruiel.blogspot.com/2006/03/pope-in-pink-rose-laetare-sunday.html

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In some places, this Sunday is the only time during Lent in which Christian marriage may be solemnized. And let's not forget the rose vestments. Rose colored vestments apparently have two different explanations. The first is the that the color of rose comes from the floral gifts given to mothers on account of sons being able to see the mothers once again upon reunification with their families. The other more likely origin comes from the tradition of the Golden Rose.
On this fourth Sunday of Lent, the Pope would bless the "Golden Rose" to be sent to Catholic kings and queens. This Sunday became known as "Dominca de Rosa," and eventually rose colored vestments were introduced to complement the theme.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/1603625/posts


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Worldwide use

Germany
In Germany, Laetare is the Sunday when the Lenten fast is relaxed and the priests wear rose coloured vestments -- but there is no link with a celebration of motherhood :

Freudensonntag Laetare

Mitten in der Passionszeit, besser: in der „Fastenzeit", gibt es paradoxerweise ein Fest der Freude: Dieser vierte Sonntag nach Aschermittwoch (in diesem Jahr am 25. März) heißt lateinisch „Laetare", nach dem Anfangswort des liturgischen Gesangs „Freuet euch mit Jerusalem" aus dem biblischen Buch Jesaja.
Freude mitten in der Fastenzeit?
Das erklärt sich so: Traditionell ist die Fastenzeit von Zurückgezogenheit und Buße geprägt. Der Sonntag Laetare ermuntert die Christen dazu, sich auf den Palmsonntag zu freuen, der den Einzug Jesu in die Heilige Stadt zum Thema hat. Wenn sich an Laetare auch die Leidensgeschichte Jesu ankündigt, ist doch die Freude über die bevorstehende Erlösung der Menschen groß. Katholische und evangelische Geistliche dürfen im Gottesdienst eine ungewöhnliche Gewandfarbe tragen: Rosa. Während in der Passionszeit insgesamt die Farbe Violett vorgeschrieben ist, also die Farbe der Buße und Besinnung, symbolisiert das Rosa eine Erleichterung der Bußpraxis.
http://www.chrismon.de/cservice/clex_f-j.html

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Ireland
Mothering Sunday in Ireland is particularly associated with daffodils, which may be distributed to the women in the congregation during or after the Church Service. Mothering Sunday coincides with the day when the secular Mothers' Day is celebrated.

Kenya
In Kenya too, Mothering Sunday and Mothers' Day coincides, without, however, being a major festival or a commercial occasion beyond the major cities.

Isabelle Prondzynski.



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Things found on the way


Half way through Lent (on Laetare Sunday), La Louvière in Belgium wakes up with the sound of the drum roll and the Gilles' clogs clanking. Coming from a 150 year old tradition, the Carnival of Laetare takes place in the "Cité des Loups" (Wolves city, nickname of La Louvière) and brings along three days of intense entertainment around a warm and friendly folklore.

Lots of pictures, with carnival music :
http://www.laetare.be/index_uk.htm

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HAIKU


staying at home
but with thoughts in the church --
mothering sunday

Isabelle Prondzynski

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roses in her name
to climb out of our reach
Mothering Sunday


http://www.poetrymagazines.org.uk/magazine/record.asp?id=10506

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Laetare Sunday!
Champagne on the table,
The Anglican Way.

Bill Snyder
http://rathernot.classicalanglican.net/index.php?p=20


almost mother's day
my best daffodils bent low
in the constant rain


Paul Conneally
Loughborough UK

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Laetare Sunday . . .
waking to the sound
of lawn mowers


Elaine Andre
March 2013

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Related words

***** Mother's Day

Good page, with a link to Mothers' Days around the world :
http://www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/customs/easter/mothers.htm


***** Lent


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. Christian Celebrations in Japanese Kigo   



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9/14/2005

Insects

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Insects

***** Location: Worldwide
***** Season: All Autumn
***** Category: Animals


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Explanation

Insects (mushi 虫) are a kigo for all Autumn in Japan.

World Kigo Database : Insects (mushi)


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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


Three haiku and photos from Alenka



red traffic light
a fire bug enters
the underground passage


..... .....



rim of the lamp -
an unfamiliar insect
searches for its May

..... .....



mid-May eve ...
her naked shoulder leant
against the warm wall




Alenka Zorman, Slovenia, Summer 2006

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Related words

***** World Kigo Database : Insects (mushi)


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