Yearly-Cycle Rituals
Spring Rituals
Maslenitsa (M.):
M. is a week long holiday roughly equivalent to the
Carnival in Brazil, Fasching in Germany and Mardi Gras in New Orleans.
It is around the time of the old folk calendar New Year of Mar. 1. It
allows for a period of license before the Great Fast, Lent, begins. It
is called M., which means butter week, because during this festival,
people do not eat meat. They do, however, consume a great deal of sour
cream, butter, caviar, cheese, pickled and smoked fish. The primary
ritual food of M. is blini, which are thin, small
(4 inch) pancakes fried in butter. They are filled with cheese or fish
and
covered in sour cream and jam.
Recall that the point of spring rituals is to
celebrate the sun, which is regaining its strength. The blini is an
excellent sun symbol--it is round and made of eggs, itself a symbol of
the sun with its yellow yolk. In addition, it symbolizes a blending of
the essences of life: grain from the earth, eggs from an animal, fish
from the water, cooking over fire. Thus, blini not only represent the
renewed power of the sun, but of animals as well.
They are fed to animals to increase their fertility and productivity.
On
the last day of M. before Lent begins, blini were placed on their
family’s graves, which indicates that the souls of the dead are
returning from the land of the dead. A similar ritual occurs after
Easter. They were also used by unmarried girls in a divination ritual
to tell who they would marry. At sunrise, they put a blini on their
head and walked outside. The first thing or person she saw would give
her a clue as to who she would marry.
The most important aspect of this holiday is
overeating. This behavior exemplifies sympathetic magic, that is, if a
person overeats now, s/he won’t be hungry later. It is most important
that the priest overeats. He goes from house to house in the village,
eating a meal at each one. He had to eat the fattiest food in the meal.
Usually, he ended up in a wheelbarrow by the end. There was also
another example of sympathetic magic, in which boys were allowed to
push girls in swings. The higher they were pushed, the higher the crops
would grow.
M. also included had sexual license as part of a
ritual drama. First, a M. dummy was made. He was usually made of straw,
dressed in
women’s clothes and wore a mask with a nose in the shape of a phallus.
As
the women carried him around the village, the married men and women
sang sexually
explicit songs and told obscene jokes. Lots of alcohol was consumed
during
this portion of the ritual. The men and women would get into a playful
tug
of war over the dummy. Finally, on the last day of M., Sunday, the
dummy was
destroyed, in a copy of a ritual sacrifice, by ripping it apart,
burning it
or drowning it.
Once Lent begins, there were no rituals at all. Lent
in the Orthodox tradition, means no meat, no oil, no dairy products.
They
ate beans, grains, what little veggies they had from the last harvest,
usually pickled, and fish.
Easter (E.):
Holy Week begins, as you know, with Palm Sunday.
This is problematic in Russia, because they have no palm trees. They
had Pussy Willow Sunday instead. The pussy willow was chosen, because
not much is blooming at that time of year in Russia. However, the
willow blooms earliest of all, so it was a good symbol of the spring
vegetation. Another important characteristic of the willow that makes
it a perfect symbol for vegetation fertility, is that if you cut a
branch of a willow and stick in the ground, it will sprout roots and
grow, unlike other trees. It also had characteristics of an animal,
being fuzzy, so it was a good symbol for the birth of animals as well.
In fact, infertile women used to eat the buds so that could conceive a
child.
The pussy willow branches were taken home after
church, dried and placed over the icon. On the way home from church,
young boys would wait with their pussy willow branches and chase girls,
hitting their legs with the willows. This is a good example of a period
of license, since the usual roles of public behavior and sexual
propriety were abandoned, resulting in a release of tension between the
sexes. Another ritual related to leaving church was to light a candle
in church and try to walk home without it being blown out. Then a cross
was burned on the front door to bring prosperity for
the upcoming year.
On Thursday of Holy Week, Russian traditionally had
a spring cleaning ritual, in which all food left over from the previous
year was thrown away. This was also done in Rome and may be a remnant
of Indo-European
agrarian practice. On this day, E. eggs were decorated. On Good Friday,
the
Russians went to church and lit a candle in memory of the dead. This
light
served to attract the souls of the dead, who returned to earth during
the
E. period. They also kissed the coffin of Christ, which was a shrouded
picture
of box representing his coffin. They would confess their sins.
They
also made the two most important foods for the feast on E. sunday:
kulich,
a yeast-risen eggy cake cooked in a tubular shape and decorated with
white
frosting and fruit. Each person in the family had their own, large for
the
oldest people, small for children. This cake is a symbol of both animal
(the
eggs) and vegetable (the grain) fertility, baked in the shape of a
phallus
(human fertility). The second food was syrnaya paskha, which is made of
a
curd cheese (like cottage cheese with no liquid), fruit, eggs and sugar
or
honey in the shaped of a pyramid. It has the initials XB on it, which
are
the abbreviation for Christ is risen. This cheese dish was also a
symbol
of new growth and life: the fruit is a seed, representing new life,
while
the milk indicates the ties of kinship (remember that Russians say
milkline,
not bloodline). On Saturday, the priest blessed the food for the feast
and
the E. eggs. All of the food for the feast was brought to the church,
even
the salt. If it was not blessed, it could not be eaten. Some of this
blessed
food was left on the family’s graves. This was a day of total fasting.
No
food at all was consumed.
E. service lasted from late evening to dawn. At
midnight, the priest would lead everyone out of the church, and they
walked around it
three times saying, Christ is risen. While they were walking around,
the altar
boys were unshrouding the church, which had been covered to indicate
Christ’s
crucifixion. The uncovering of the icons, altar and flowers and
lighting
the candles indicates his resurrection. Once the service ended, the
people
broke their fast with the blessed food for the feast. This is the only
ritual
meal that includes sweet food, the paskha and the babka, with meat,
usually
sausage, lamb or ham. Leftovers from the blessed meal were either fed
to
animals or birds, thrown in running water, or buried. Since the meal
had
been blessed, they could not just put it in the trash or let it spoil.
On the Sunday after E., St. Thomas’s Sunday, each
family went to its grave site and had a picnic. During the week before
the picnic, the graves were cleaned (usually women did this) and new
flowers were put on them. The leftovers from the E. meal may also be
eaten during this picnic. This ritual marks the fact that the
ancestors’ souls have been on earth since before Lent and honors the
ancestors. Extra food was left on the graves for the dead. The entire
E. period is associated with honoring the ancestors and
appeasing them with food on the graves, so that they will help the
crops to
grow. The dead were considered to have a close tie to the earth they
were buried in. The bodies of the dead were seen as a sacrifice to the
earth goddess, much like a ritual sacrifice of the god or of the dummy
standing in for him.
E. and the holidays surrounding it were primarily
for married couples and the family. Couples would visit their
relatives during this period. They were allowed and encouraged to kiss
publicly. Unmarried people were actually punished. Recall that girls
were hit after church with willow branches. Unmarried boys had logs
tied between their legs on the same day and had to run from married
men.
Eggs:
The most important symbol of E. was the egg. It
symbolized the sun, as noted above, and animal fertility (women who
wanted to conceive often ate eggs to help). It was also similar to a
seed, since it held life within it. It was a magical food, used to cure
various ills, when mixed raw with sugar or honey and drunk. Note that
this breaks a standard for Russian food, since meat (or animal
products) were usually not sweetened. Similarly, Russians did not eat
raw protein, even milk. Thus, the rawness of the egg is special. The
eggs decorated at this time dated back to 2000 B.C. and have been found
in the foundations of houses from that period.
The method of dyeing was particularly symbolic and
represented the magic of the sun’s rebirth. The colors are put on from
dark to light, like from darkness to light. You will see a film on the
dyeing and waxing technique. Then they were inserted into fire to
reveal the colors of the sun
and new life. The same colors were used on the eggs as in embroidery,
etc.
and have the same symbolism. You will have a handout summarizing the
symbolism
of the designs and colors. The beeswax used in the process was
particularly
important, since the bee was an animal sacred to God and honey was the
only
product from earth that appears on his table.
The eggs were not eaten. They were exchanged as
gifts, and the givers wished prosperity, luck and fertility to the
receivers, which would last as long as the egg did. Children rolled
them (the longest roll got all the other eggs) or hit them against each
other (the winner’s egg did
not crack).
Note that there were three apocryphal stories about
Christ and eggs during his crucifixion ordeal. 1) stones were thrown at
him which turned to eggs; 2) a woman with a basket of eggs gave him
water; 3) Mary tried
to trade eggs for Christ’s life. Pilate refused and the eggs rolled all
over
the world to spread the Christian message.
Summer Rituals
Semik (S.)/Troitsa (T.):
S., which means the seventh, was the 7th Thursday
after E., T., or Trinity, was on Sunday. Since E. varied in its date,
so too did this holiday. However, basically it was around the half way
point between the spring equinox and the summer solstice. Unlike spring
rituals, the summer rituals were clearly for unmarried people. They
were also characterized by an even greater period of license and was
almost exclusively pagan, despite the church service. The agrarian
focus of the holiday is perhaps because there
was no major religious holiday; perhaps because it was warmer and
easier to
celebrate; perhaps because it was closer to the actual agricultural
growth period. Recall that summer months were those of peak fertility.
On S., they baked cookies in the shapes of ladders
and larks. The birds were a symbol of rebirth, resurrection and the
soul. They were given to children, who tied them on strings and threw
them into the air,
sometimes off the roof of the house. The higher the cookies went, the
more
fertile the fields would be. These cookies were also fed to cattle to
improve
their fertility and health. On the same day the priest blessed cattle
and
the seeds which would be planted that year.
S. was a day of female solidarity. Unmarried girls
of marriageable age would go to the forest outside of the village. They
hid from
everyone and decorated a birch or willow tree with ribbons and the bird
cookies.
They tied weeping willow or birch branches into wreathes and used them
to
tell their fortune. They threw them into the water. If they floated up
or
downstream, that was the direction your husband would come from. If
they
floated in one place, without moving, you wouldn’t marry that year. If
they
sank, you would die that year. They also kissed each other through the
wreaths
and pledged eternal friendship to each other and good luck on finding a
husband.
They ate a meal of fried eggs under the decorated tree. In some cases,
they
would return to the tree on T. and cut it down, in a type of sacrifice.
T. was a holiday to improve veggie fertility. They
brought as many varieties of vegetation into the house (and the church)
as was possible. Also, at dawn on T. people would gather dew and herbs
that were to be used in medicine.
This period was also called the rusalie, after the
rusalka spirit. At this time of year, the rusalki would hold dances in
the fields. As a result, it was dangerous to go to the fields at night,
because they might
trap you. Recall that the rusalka is an example of abundant fertility,
since
she was a pregnant woman who had drowned and was associated with water.
This
ritual takes advantage of that fertility, but also helps to deal with
the
fear of the rusalka.
Two rituals connected with the rusalka were also
performed, called provody rusalki, the leading of the rusalka. Much
like on Maslenitsa, they made a male phallic dummy, dress in women’s
clothes, out of straw on S. Another type of rusalka dummy was made out
of a young willow tree dressed in women’s clothes. They held a
ceremonial cutting of a tree, which already had buds on it, put it up
in a field and danced around it, like a May pole. The dummy was carried
from house to house, field to field to bring good fortune and fertility
to each place. On T., it was destroyed (either by burning, drowning
or ripping it apart).
Another ritual associated with the rusalka was: a
pubescent girl was named rusalka. She walked out the fields on the
hands of the women in the village. She could not touch the ground. When
she arrived in the fields, where the men were, she jumped down and
chased them, trying to tickle them. She also scattered grain from the
previous year. They chased her off and then
she had to sneak home, so that no one would see her.
Here we see a type of motif and variation in the
spring and summer rituals. Both rituals had a sacrificial offering of
some sort: the tree, the dummy and the girl. They generally had
characteristics of both sexes: women’s clothes with a phallic nose;
pubescent girl who is not of marriageable
age has no clear sexual status. They were somehow destroyed: by fire,
water,
being torn apart, chased off (note that this contradicts Frazer, who
said
such sacrifices and destructive rituals were usually limited to the
fall
rituals, but the Russians had them also in the spring and, as we will
see,
in the summer). Thus, the Russians, perhaps because of their cold
climate
and concern for the success of crops, had sacrificial rituals and
rituals
related to the dead at all times of the year. There is also a motif and
variation
on laughter; these rituals have ritualized laughter as part of the
period
of license, as with the obscene joke telling as well as with the
tickling.
Ivan Kupalo (IK.):
Ivan Kupalo took place at the summer solstice. IK.
is the holiday celebrating John the Baptist. The major symbols, unlike
in the earlier rituals, are not magic to increase vegetation and animal
fertility, but fire and sun magic, since this is the longest day of the
year. Now the earth and sun are strong and we can celebrate them. The
main celebration included
the first hay cutting (which would then be cut every two weeks).
Everyone
gathering the fields for the cutting; men used scythes, women used
sickles.
The first stalk of hay cut was called the First Snop. It was dressed as
a
woman and its “beard” was braided by women. This beard was called the
beard
of Elijah (recall that he is the saint associated with Perun) or of
Christ
(see Semik for the gender ambiguity motif). The snop was saved. It was
either
used as a Christmas tree under the icon corner; left in the field and
buried
with bread, salt and some vodka the next year (in this case, it
represented
the life of the fields and was essential for them to be reborn); or the
grain
from it was baked into a loaf of bread at the end of the winter and
after
everyone ate a small piece, the remaining bread was scattered in the
fields.
There was also a dummy, Kostromo, during this
ritual. Like the others, it was a straw dummy with exaggerated male
sexual features, dressed in women’s clothing. The men and women would
fight over it, making jokes about sex, insulting each other and
laughing. It was also destroyed by fire or water.
This was a period of license for unmarried people.
It was designed to give them a great deal of freedom to rebel against
social controls in an accepted way The unmarried people of marriageable
age set bonfires
after dark. They would jump over it, holding hands. If they didn’t let
go
of each other, they would marry. This bonfire was especially magical.
If
a child was sick, his clothes were burned in the bonfire to help with a
cure.
Animals were driven through the ashes to improve their health. The
ashes
were also used as medicine (they were either eaten by or rubbed on the
body
of the sick). They often burned nettles (a burning plant) in the
bonfire.
They also used nettles for healing purposes, by eating them, rubbing
them
or inhaling their smoke while burning.
Since this was a transitional point of the year, it
was highly magical. The young people, who got to stay out together all
night (a
serious break in normal sexual rules), would gather 12 different herbs
at
midnight. These herbs were especially powerful in magic and medicine.
Women
who could not have children would also roll in the dew in the fields to
help
conceive.
Another legend associated with this day was that at
midnight a special fern would bloom with a fiery flower. In that spot,
there was buried treasure. The young people were also “looking” for
this fern.
On this day, one could not eat watermelon, because
it was similar to the head of John the Baptist.
Kids played a game that was a dramatic performance
of crop cultivation and the dying and resurrected god theme. Everyone
stood in
a circle with one child in the center. That child imitated plowing,
sowing, tending and harvesting, etc.. Those in the circle sang a song
describing his
activities. Then at the end, the child falls down and pretends to die,
when
the grain was harvested. Those in the circle sang him back to life. He
jumped
up and chose another person to be in the center. This is the second
ritual
in which children performed an important role in the ritual.
Fall Rituals
Russian harvest rituals are much less extensive than
rituals in the other three seasons. There is no major fall ritual, but
only
a series of minor ones. As we will see, the major ritual of the fall is
the
wedding, which overshadows all other rituals and serves both as a
yearly
cycle ritual for the entire community as well as a life cycle ritual
for
the bride and groom. The minor fall rituals are: Yablochnyi/Medovoy
Spas;
Ilya Den’ (St. Elijah’s Day); Yegrov Den’ (Saint Igor’s Day); Pokrov;
Yarmorki.
Yablochnyi/Medovoy Spas:
Spas means savior. Yablochnyi and medovoy mean apple
and honey. This is a cross quarter holiday, approximately halfway
between
the summer solstice and the fall equinox. This day celebrates the
wealth
of the harvest. Spas marks the day when fruit and honey are ready to be
gathered. The first fruits and honey picked on this day are brought to
the church and blessed. The bee hives were also blessed on Spas.
Ilya Den’:
Ilya (or Elijah), recall is the saint closely
associated with Perun, the thunder god. Both he and Perun ride through
the sky in a chariot,
throwing thunderbolts. This day marks the official entrance into fall.
After
this day, swimming is not allowed. Ilya curses all those who swim after
his
feast day.
Yegrov Den’:
This day is the one day on which the serfs (before
serfdom ended) were allowed to move. Even after serfdom ended, it was
the day on which
workers and soldiers would leave their village to begin factory work or
to
begin their tours of duty. As such, it was a mournful holiday. Women
lamented
the departing men.
Pokrov:
Pokrov is the Feast of the Protection of the Virgin.
It marks the end of the harvest/fall and beginning of winter. At this
point, the harvest is essentially over and the last fruits to ripen,
the pumpkins, are picked on this day. In agrarian times, this holiday
honored Mokosh, the goddess of the earth, who had provided her fruits,
so that the people could survive.
The Pokrov holiday also included the ritual of the
Last Snop, which was even more prevalent than the First Snop ritual on
Ivan Kupalo. The Last Snop was the last sheaf of wheat from a year’s
harvest. It was not cut down, but was decorated with ribbons and left
standing in the field, until
the following spring, when it was plowed under. The Last Snop
represented the field’s fertility and abundance. Its burial, a type of
symbolic sacrifice, ensured that the field would bear more wheat the
next year.
Yarmorki:
An additional event which occurred in the fall were
the yarmorki, the market fairs. They had a distinct ritual character,
in which all the villagers would gather in the main village to sell
their goods before winter set in. Yarmorki were essentially a
celebration of the harvest. Wandering minstrels (we will discuss them
when we study epic) with their trained bears as well as travelling
puppeteers arrived to perform for the gathered villagers. In addition,
livestock was blessed at the yarmorki. The fairs marked the official
beginning of the wedding season, and the end of the year’s growing and
work
cycles.
Winter Rituals
Recall that in the agrarian cycle, the winter
solstice marked the death of an old year, which included the death of
the sun god, and the birth of a new year, i.e., the rebirth of the sun
god. The sun was at its weakest on the shortest day of the year, so
rituals had to be performed, so that it could be reborn, get stronger
and bring warmth in the spring. In
the Christian period, much of this symbolism was subsumed into the
Christmas and New Year’s rituals. Recall that the Russian yearly cycle
holidays alternated between an emphasis on married and unmarried
people. The ritual acts of summer and winter solstice holidays centered
on unmarried people. The spring and fall holidays, i.e., weddings,
focused on married people.
Christmas (C.):
Recall that in the Orthodox calendar, Easter is the
high point of the year, the peak of the year’s religious celebration.
Nevertheless, C. in Russia is still a major ritual. Recall that Russian
Christmas is 12 days behind ours, on January 6. Thus, it occurs after
the traditional date of New Year’s in our calendar. However, the
Russian peasants celebrated New Year’s 6 days later as well, so we will
discuss the two holidays in that order.
The C. Feast:
C. began with a 40 day fast, like Lent. Meat and
milk products could not be eaten during this period. On Christmas Eve,
as on Easter eve, one could not eat at all. At sunset, the youngest
child in the family went out to look for the first star, called the
star of Bethlehem. This star was not only a sign of Christ’s birth, but
was also a sign of the rebirth of the sun god in pre-Christian times.
Once the child saw the star, s/he returned to house
and announced its arrival. Then the family began their feast. The feast
was made up of 12 different dishes. Two dishes which were always
included: a stewed fruit compote, sweetened with honey, over wheat
berries and poppy seed milk (poppy seeds ground with warm water) with
bread or crackers.
The Ancestors:
The table was set for each member of the family,
with one extra place for the ancestors. Recall that as at Easter time,
the souls of dead return to the Earth for this holiday. Straw,
representing the dead fields and bodies of the dead, was placed under
the table. Other acts to acknowledge
the presence of the ancestors were: leaving a plate of food on the
window
sill, so that they could share the feast; removing or covering all
sharp
objects, which spirits do not like; heating the bathhouse, called
“warming
the ancestors”, because the heat and light would attract the spirits
out
of the dark and cold of death.
The C. Tree:
While the Russians now have a C. tree, recall that
then they would use the First Snop as a tree. It was decorated and sat
under the icon corner.
Kolyada:
The major event of the C. celebration was kolyada,
or carolling. Children carried a papier mache hollow star, lit with a
candle from house to house. The star originally was round, to represent
the sun, and then was transposed with the star of Bethlehem in the
Christian period. As they went around the village, they would gather
food. One person was designated to carry the bad, which was filled with
sausages, pirozhki (fried stuffed dough like won tons), salt pork and
other fatty items. Recall that this was after a 40 day fast, during
which meat and dairy were not allowed, so that the fat and meat were a
great treat, in addition to representing abundance and fertility for
the upcoming year.
The carols varied. They described the setting and
what they saw at the house; then they threatened the owners, singing
that they would harm the house, if they did not get some food; after
they received their
reward, they would sing good wishes for crops, cattle and people (in
that
order).
New Year’s (NY):
Like the C. holiday, NY included a great deal of
conspicuous consumption to ensure plenty in the upcoming year. At NY,
there was feast, which centered around pork. There was no preliminary
fast before this feast, which was called shchedraya kutya, the generous
binge. A pig was slaughtered and roasted. It was necessary to eat as
much of the pig as possible. What was not consumed was made into
sausage, ham, pickled pig’s feet, etc. The entire pig had to be used in
some product.
Gifts:
Gifts were exchanged on NY and not on C. Grandfather
Frost, a thin, old, bearded winter spirit, accompanied by his daughter,
the
beautiful Snow Maiden Snegurichka, brought gifts to children on NY Eve.
Fir
trees were decorated for NY, and gifts were placed beneath it. There
was
also a belief in an old woman who brought presents to children at this
time
of year.
Shchedriviki/Mumming:
Shchedriviki, meaning generous ones, were the songs
sung by groups of mummers between the C. and NY period, with the height
of the singing on NY itself. They were similar to the C. carols, but
were much more secular in content, with no references to Christ’s
birth. Mummers were young unmarried men who dressed in bird and animal
costumes, especially as birds or bears, or as women. They carried
sabres and carved phalluses on sticks. They also went from house to
house singing songs, collecting food and trying to touch women with
their sticks. Mumming was essentially an erotic game designed
to impart fertility. They often wore bells to ward off evil spirits, at
this
darkest time of the year when the dead, both good and evil, walked the
earth.
Fortunetelling:
At this transitional time of the year, the doorways
into other worlds were easy to penetrate. For that reason, the souls of
the ancestors and other spirits were on the earth. In addition, one
could more easily read the future at this time of year. There were
several types of fortunetelling that occurred at or around midnight on
NY Eve:
1) girls of marriageable age went out to the
bathhouse or barn and stick their hand between a the wooden logs. It
they felt the furry
part of the barn or bath spirit’s hand, it meant they would marry that
year.
If they felt the skin, it meant they would die. If nothing happened,
they
would not marry that year;
2) they also burned paper or melted wax and read the
ashes or shapes, which predicted their future;
3) they slept on a log and whomever they dreamed of
would be their husband;
4) they tossed a shoe up in the air and where it
landed indicated from which direction their husband would come;
5) they baked a cake with various tokens in it. The
token they received told their future for the next year. A coin
indicated wealth; a ring meant marriage; coal meant death, etc.
NY Plays:
At NY, there were both professional and amateur
dramatic performances, including:
1) Professional puppeteers performed both religious
and slapstick plays. The slapstick plays were basic comedies, for
amusement alone. The religious plays were more symbolic and
significant. One such play, Tsar Maximillian tells the story of a pagan
tsar who kills his Christian son, Adolf.
The father laments, while Adolf is buried by two incompetent grave
diggers,
who are blind, clumsy and nearly deaf. This particular scene is like
slapstick,
full of jokes and sexual puns. Finally, one of these men stumbles,
sticks
his thumb into Adolph’s mouth and he comes back to life. The play ends
in
a celebration and conversion of the father.
2) mock funeral play. The actors come to a house
carrying a coffin with a “dead” man inside. They stage a funeral for
this man. In a
reversal of the normal funeral, a man dressed as a woman laments. The
funeral service is conducted by a woman dressed as a priest. The
laments are humorous and full of erotic references, generally
indicating that the man died while having intercourse. At the end of
the funeral, the corpse jumps out of the coffin and runs away;
3) xozhdenie s kozoy, walking with a goat. The
villagers led a goat or a person dressed as a goat around the village
and through the fields to make them fertile and prosperous;
4) blacksmith play. One man, wearing only a leather
apron, plays the part of the blacksmith. He stands by a huge “forge”
constructed for the play and makes new body parts for those who have
body parts of inadequate size, especially those with small butts.
Epiphany:
Epiphany, six days after NY, is the last major
holiday of the winter period and marks the end of mumming for the year.
On this day, the priest and a wandering minstrel led a procession to
the river or lake. A cross the size of an adult was cut into the ice. A
crucifix was thrown into
the hole, and the young men dived in to retrieve it. The priest blessed
the
water, took some water from the hole and blessed those present with the
holy
water. This water was collected and saved to be used in potions to heal
or
to increase crop, animal and human fertility.