Christmas in Poland Wesolych Swiat Bozego - TopicsExpress



          

Christmas in Poland Wesolych Swiat Bozego Narodzenia!! (Good luck pronouncing that!!) In Poland, Advent is the beginning of Christmas Time. Its a time when people try to be peaceful and remember the real reason for Christmas. People try not to have excess of anything. Some people give up their favourite foods or drinks and parties and discos are not widely held. Some people also go to Church quite frequently. There is the tradition of the roraty, special masses (or communion services) held at dawn and dedicated to Mary for receiving the good news from the angel Gabriel. During Advent, people also prepare their houses for Christmas. Theres lots of cleaning and people wash their windows and clean their carpets very thoroughly. Everything must be clean for Christmas day! Before Christmas, children in schools and preschools take part in Jasełka (Nativity Plays). They are very popular and often more secular than religious. The Christmas story is also sometime put into modern times. The smell of tangerines in schools or workplaces is widely thought to mean that Christmas time is about to start! Poland is a largely catholic country and Christmas Eve is a very important and busy day. Its now often the most important day over Christmas - even though its not a holiday but Christmas and the 26th December are holidays! Traditionally it was day of fasting and abstinence (not eating anything) and meat is not normally allowed to be eaten in any form. Christmas Eve is known as Wigilia (pronounced vee-GHEE-lee-uh). The house is also cleaned and everyone gets washed and puts on their festive clothes. The main Christmas meal is eaten in the evening and is called Kolacja wigilijna (Christmas Eve supper). Its traditional that no food is eaten until the first star is seen in the sky! So children look at the night sky to spot the first star! On the table there are 12 dishes - they are meant to give you good luck for the next 12 months. The meal is traditionally meat free, this is to remember the animals who took take of the baby Jesus in the manger. Everyone has to eat or at least try some of each dish. For catholics the 12 dishes symbolize Jesuss 12 disciples. Like in many Catholic countries, Christmas Eve is often a fasting day meaning that some people dont eat anything until after sunset (when the Church day officially ends). So thats where the custom of the first star come from. Some people in central Poland say that at midnight the animals can talk. One of the most important dishes is barszcz (beetroot soup) and its obligatory to have it. If you really hate it, you can eat mushroom soup instead! The barszcz may be eaten with uszka (little dumplings with mushrooms) or krokiety (pancakes with mushrooms or/and cabbage, in breadcrumbs, fried on oil or butter). Carp is the main dish of the meal. The fish itself is traditionally bought a few days earlier alive and it swims in the bath until its killed by the lady of the house! Now most people just buy a fillet of carp instead (especially if you only have a shower and not a bath in your house!). The carps scales are said to bring luck and fortune and by some are kept for the whole year (e.g. in wallets) Some older ladies put them in their bras for the time of the supper and give them next day to the guest for good luck!!! Bigos is a dish which can be eaten either hot or cold. Its made of cabbage, bacon, sometimes dried plums - so it is saved for Christmas day or the 26th as it has meat in it. It is made about a week or so before Christmas Eve, because with each day it gets better. Herrings are very popular and usually are served is several ways: in oil, in cream, in jelly. Each household has their own recipe that that say is the best in the whole wide world! In most houses there is also kompot z suszu that is drink made by boiling dried fruits and fresh apples. The most popular desserts at Kolacja wigilijna are makowiec, a poppy seed roll made of sweet yeast bread, kutia mixed dried fruits and nuts with wheat seeds, piernik a moist cake made with honey (thats like gingerbread) and gingerbreads (which are usually dry and very hard). At the beginning of the meal, a large wafer biscuit called an Oplatek, which has a picture of Mary, Joseph and Jesus on it, is passed around the table and everyone breaks a piece off and eats it. Sometimes a small piece may be given to any farm animals or pets that the family may have. A place is often left empty at the meal table, for an unexpected guest. Polish people say that no one should be alone or hungry, therefore if someone unexpectedly knocks on the door they are welcomed. In some houses, the empty place is to commemorate a dead relative or for a family member who couldnt come to the meal. Sometimes straw is put on the floor of the room, or under the table cloth, to remind people that Jesus was born in a stable or cow shed. The worst part about the Christmas Eve supper is that you cant open the presents before it has finished! Older members of the family (who traditionally begin and end this meal) always make it last a long time. In most of the houses, before the presents are opened, the family sings carols together. Children really want to open the present and sometimes more carols are sung just to tease the children!
Posted on: Thu, 25 Dec 2014 21:57:49 +0000

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