Malanka
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Malanka | |
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Date | 31 December |
Frequency | annual |
Malanka (Ukrainian: Маланка, or Ukrainian: Щедрий Вечір, romanized: Shchedryi Vechir, lit. 'bounteous evening') is a Ukrainian folk holiday celebrated on 31 December, which is New Year's Eve in accordance with the Gregorian calendar, formerly it was celebrated on 13 January corresponding to 31 December in the Julian calendar (see Old New Year). The festivities were historically centred around house-to-house visiting by groups of young men, costumed as characters from a folk tale of pre-Christian origin, as well as special food and drink. The context of the rituals has changed, but some elements continue to the present.
Origins, name and regional variations
[edit]The idea of house-to-house visits during the Christmas season is a pan-European one. Similar customs are observed in Ireland and England as "mummering", in Winterbräuche or Faslam in Germany, etc. In the West Slavic lands, even more closely related customs are found, with Poles even using many of the same stock characters in their house-visiting traditions.
The ritual is derived from a Christianized folk tale of pagan origins. The story is based on the daughter of the creator god Praboh, whose four sons included Veles (demonized as "the Devil"), Yarilo (or Yarylo, identified with St. George), Rai ('paradise'; St. John), and Lado or Mir ('peace').
His daughter Lada was mother Earth, who had two children: a son called the Moon and a daughter "Spring-May", later referred to as Mylanka because she was loving (Ukrainian: мила)[dubious – discuss]. In a version of the myth of Hades and Persephone, Mylanka's evil uncle (the Devil) desired her presence in the underworld and abducted her one day when the Moon was hunting. While Mylanka was gone, the Earth lacked the rebirth of spring, and once she was released from the vices of the Devil, flowers began to bloom and greenery spread around the world. Ukrainians celebrate Malanka to symbolize the onset of spring.[1] Another theory regarding the name of the character Malanka relates it to the Christian saint Melania the Younger, whose feast day is December 31: New Year's Eve.[2]
This holiday is also known as Bounteous Evening in much of Ukraine and Belarus, but this name can also be applied to Epiphany Eve (or Theophany Eve) in Western Ukraine.[3][4] A traditional way of referring to the holidays during the Christmas season in the Eastern Slavic languages is by which recipe of kutia (whole-grain sweetened porridge), the most symbolic ritual food, is used. A lenten (dairy-fee) version (bahata kutia, 'ample kutia') is associated with Christmas Eve, schedra kutia ('generous' or 'bountiful' kutia) with the Old New Year's Eve or Malanka, hence "bounteous evening", and a second lenten version ("hungry kutia") for Theophany Eve).[5]
Descriptions of this holiday from the nineteenth century mention the folk play with a character named "Malanka". They frequently also mention the tradition of driving a goat from house to house to bring good luck. In some regions of Western Ukraine and in Romania, a live goat is replaced by a dancer in a goat costume.
Ukrainian traditions
[edit]In some villages of Vinnytsia Oblast, on this day they prepare a traditional festive dish of blood sausage, which is also called "malanka". They also bake special breads which are called "Malanka" and "Vasyl".
On the morning of this day the second ritual kutia is prepared – the "generous" kutia. Unlike the "bahata" kutia on Sviat Vechir (Christmas Eve), it is made with non-Lenten ingredients. As is done on Sviat Vechir, the kutia is placed in the pokuttia – the corner of the house where religious icons are displayed, opposite the pich (stove). In addition, the women bake mlyntsi (pancakes), and make pyrihs and dumplings with cheese, to give as gifts to the carolers and "sowers".
Food is given a very important role: on Malanka, as it is believed that the more variety on the table that day, the more generous next year will be. The dishes should be very satisfying, but, for example, cooking fish is a bad sign, because happiness can "pour" out of the home. Pork dishes are definitely prepared, as this animal symbolizes abundance in the house. Traditionally, pork is prepared as kholodets (meat in aspic), kishka (blood sausage) and pork sausage, vershchaky (roasted pork marinated in beet kvas), salo (cured slabs of pork fatback), stuffed whole pig, and more.
In the evenings and until midnight, the carolers stroll by the houses of the village. According to ancient tradition, New Year's caroling by the "malankary", like Christmas caroling, occurs after sunset, that is, when evil spirits rule. Teenaged girls, alone or in a group, run around to their neighbors to carol. They are rewarded with food and sweets.
Young men also go about on Malanka. This is called "leading Mаlanka". Young men in masks express good wishes, and amuse with funny songs, dances, and skits. One of them is usually dressed in women's clothing and is called Melanka.
According to custom, after finishing their ritual rounds, the next morning the young men went to a crossroads to burn the "Did" or "Didukh" – a sheaf of grain that had stood in the pokuttia since Sviat Vechir – and then jumped over a bonfire. This was meant to cleanse them after dealing with the evil spirits all night.
The next day, (St. Basil's Day), the young men go to "sow grain" in the morning after sunrise. The grain is carried in a glove or bag. First they visit their godparents and other relatives and loved ones, then their neighbors. Entering the house, the sower sows grain and greets everyone with the New Year:
I sow, I sow, I sow, I greet you with the New Year!
Good fortune, and good health in the New Year,
May your fields bear better this year than last,
Rye, wheat and any grains,
Hemp piled to the ceiling in large rolls.
Be healthy for the New Year and Basil's Day!
God grant us this!
The first sower to visit on New Year's day brings happiness to the house. According to popular belief, girls do not bring happiness, only boys do, and therefore it is not appropriate for girls to go "sowing".
Malanka celebrations in North America
[edit]Among early settlers
[edit]Canadian folklorist Robert Klymasz identifies the Ukrainian tradition of Malanka as alike to the mummering practiced in Britain, Ireland and Newfoundland, but with several differences. For one thing, Ukrainian Malanka mummers were typically unmarried and always male, never female; they made a point of visiting houses that had unmarried young women, so the ritual had a function in courtship. The humour of the ritual came from the fact that the lankiest, most awkward young man was chosen to play the role of Malanka, and then all the song praised Malanka's supposed beauty and grace. The eligible woman of the house was scrutinized to see to which of the mummers she gave any gifts of money or food and drink as evidence of who she might like to marry. According to Klymasz, these house-visits were largely lost after the Second World War, and replaced by a modernized ritual.[2]
Modernized celebrations
[edit]In North America, house visits were largely replaced by Ukrainized versions of a Anglo-North American New Year's Eve ball after the Second World War. They typically occur a week after Christmas Eve (Old Calendar), but not necessarily falling on 13 or 14 January; they are usually held on an ensuing Friday or Saturday night. The characters from the mummery are now presented instead as a skit for an audience.[2]
These "Malanky" are mostly pure modernized recreation, but with enough distinctions to indicate their cultural background. The event would typically include a supper, raffles and door prizes, and end with a zabava (dance). At midnight, once everyone cheers for the New Year, individual and pair polka dancing is stopped and the kolomyika begins. When the kolomyjka is finished, everyone resumes to their previous dancing and continue to party the night away. Malanka is often the last opportunity for partying before the solemn period of Lent which precedes Easter.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ ab "Malanka". Uast.org. 18 July 2013. Archived from the original on 4 April 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
- ^ ab c Klymasz, Robert B. (January 1985). "'Malanka': Ukrainian Mummery on the Prairies". Canadian Folk Music Journal. 13. Calgary: 32–36.
- ^ "Щедрий Вечір — "другий Свят-Вечір"". Archived from the original on 12 November 2010. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
- ^ "Щедра кутя (13 січня) – Олександр Токар". otokar.com.ua. Archived from the original on 10 June 2016. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
- ^ Василь Скуратівський. Русалії. — Київ: Довіра, 1996. — С. 532—533. ISBN 966-507-028-2
External links
[edit]- Mercer Report: Ukrainian New Year
- "The roots of tradition in Ukraine's folk holiday Malanka" on The Washington Post
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Ukrainian. (December 2012) Click [show] for important translation instructions. |
- Ukrainian folklore
- New Year celebrations
- Entertainment in Ukraine
- Ukrainian traditions
- Russian traditions
- Observances in Ukraine
- Slavic Christmas traditions
- Folk calendar of the East Slavs
- January observances
- Winter events in Ukraine
- Belarusian traditions
- Observances in Russia
- Observances in Belarus
- Cross-dressing
- Rituals
- Canadian folk culture
- Matchmaking
- Ukrainian-Canadian culture
- Folk plays
- Supernatural beings identified with Christian saints
- Intangible Cultural Heritage of Ukraine
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