Today is a day that I admit I never once paid the least bit
attention to when I lived in Georgia, but has taken on a certain significance
for me since I moved to Finland. It's päivänseisaus,
which in the literal English translation would be "the stopping of
day", or as I like to think of it, "the day that day stood
still". (To be exact, this is talvipäivänseisaus,
or “the winter stopping of day”. I know,
but it makes a big difference.)
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Sunrise at Stonehenge. Photo: Mark Grant. |
I’m happy to see the solstice and encouraged that this
is now as dark as it gets, and can understand why (without all the New Age nonsense) this day was important enough
for prehistoric people to go to elaborate means to observe its occurrence. Stonehenge very possibly was
built with this in mind, as it is aligned to the direction the sun sets at the winter
solstice. In Ireland, I have visited a similar site even older than Stonehenge. Newgrange is a circular earthen mound with a narrow tunnel that allows sunlight to fill a tiny room deep in its interior, but only once a year – at sunrise on the winter solstice.
Without all the artificial light that we now take for
granted, the end of longer nights must surely have been a cause for celebration
for the ancients. And so it was. Different cultures all over the world have long marked
the solstice in various ways. It’s why
we celebrate Christmas at this time of year, instead of whenever Jesus may have
actually been born.
The pagan Finnish celebration
of kekri, an autumn harvest festival that may not be directly related to the solstice, was likewise incorporated into Christmas,
though it lived on as the main wintertime feast (not Christmas) in rural
farming communities well into the 1800s, with elements of it still existing today.
Newgrange, a neolithic mound in Ireland. Photo: Shira. |
While I wouldn’t go so far as to say that the true meaning
of Christmas is that the darkest days of winter are behind us, knowing this is so does
give me a lot of cheer.