Thursday, September 15, 2011

harvest home...


Lore and Magick of the Harvest

by Asherah

As a child, I found the only harvest celebration I knew about, Thanksgiving, pretty pallid. It didn't involve the provocative personae of Halloween; you could dress up, but you had to be an Indian or a Pilgrim, and you only dressed up at school, and that only if there were a pageant. There, it was more socially acceptable to be a Pilgrim than an Indian; the Indians provided the food, but the Pilgrims ran things. But the Pilgrims wore boring outfits. I had no use for the affair.
I did like the image of the cornucopia, always full of fruit or vegetables, though not being overfond of vegetables I preferred other items of the type, for example the fairy-tale purse that always held money. But the cornucopia was sort of a Thanksgiving tag-along; you always ended up drawing turkeys, or Pilgrim hats.
Little did I know the harvest pageantry that got suppressed before it reached the Kansas City, Missouri, school district. The earlier me would have thoroughly appreciated the harvest dances and rituals done by American and European pagans, many still extant in partial form. Often pagan harvest celebrations involved a whole series of festivities, of which I still generally approve, starting with a rite offering up the first fruits and culminating with a ritual centering around the final harvest. The Iroquois of the northeastern United States have a typical succession, beginning in June and lasting through early November, including feasts for the spirits of the strawberry, raspberry, bean, green corn and ripe corn and a final thanksgiving for all types of food.
The pinnacle of the harvest celebration depends on the nature of the local produce. The South American Mataco and Choroti Indians' rituals center around the algarroba harvest; Native Americans from the Andes to the northeastern United States build rituals around corn; Mediterranean peoples celebrate the vintage; Lithuanians celebrate the rye harvest. The timing of harvest celebrations also depends on geographical location. Corn ripens for the Native Americans of Mexico in June, for the Iroquois around September, and the corn harvest celebration follows accordingly.
Harvest celebrations often include secular or religious dances. Two forms of harvest dance recur: actual or symbolic skirmishes, and serpentine dances. In a serpentine dance, a human chain, linked by hands, follows a leader in zigzags, figure eights or spirals; the spiral dance of witches is serpentine. The serpentine crane dance of Greece, called geranos, may have come from the Cretan labyrinth; the mystai at Eleusis danced serpentine forms. Many Native American dances also follow serpentine courses, especially Cherokee dances. Both Native American and European serpentines are associated with the celebration of a fertile harvest and especially with hopes of future fertility.
Other harvest ceremonies include invocations, divination, human sacrifice, the use of emetics and purificatory bathing. One facet of harvest ceremonies is constant: The final thanksgiving always concludes with a feast on the fruit celebrated, often to the point of gorging, still a Thanksgiving tradition in the United States.
A harvest celebration of many different North and South American Indian tribes was the corn dance, in some areas still performed. Corn dances contrast with male-dominated dances of Native American hunting tribes in that they feature women as prominent actors, both within the dances themselves and in the underlying mythology. The Pueblo Indians of the U.S. Southwest probably brought the corn dance to its most elaborate development; as now performed, the Pueblo Green Corn Dance contains fragments of many major ceremonies, but the bulk of the ceremonies are now enacted in secret in underground enclosures known as kivas. Former Southwesterners, the Aztecs also performed corn harvest rites, including human sacrifice, serpentine dances and skirmishes by priestesses dedicated to corn and other agricultural deities.
The corn dances of the Shawnee, Cherokee, Creek, Yuchi and Iroquois Indians all have a family resemblance. For the Cherokee-Shawnee in Oklahoma, the Green Corn Dance is a thanksgiving for crops and a form of worship of Our Grandmother. Among the eastern Cherokee and Creek, however, the dance's significance as a vegetation rite has died out, but it is still performed as a curative ceremony, including animal and "social" dances and divination. The social dances usually have serpentine courses and include planting gestures. The Iroquois Green Corn Festival lasts four days in early September and includes various thanksgiving rites and dances, including the corn dance proper. This dance is addressed to the spirit of corn, the most important of the three life-sustaining sisters, corn, beans and squash.
European harvest rites often centered around the end of the grain harvest. In rural England, all who helped with the harvest celebrated the Harvest Home, observed on last day of bringing in the harvest. It was also called the Ingathering or Inning, and in Scotland Kern.
In the Harvest Home celebration, the last load of rye, beans, wheat or another crop was decked with ribbons, flowers or green boughs and was brought home by men, women and children singing and shouting. The Harvest Home song generally ran something like:
Harvest home, harvest home!
We've plowed, we've sowed
We've reaped, we've mowed
And brought safe home
Every load.
As part of the Harvest Home celebration, the Harvest Queen, a doll made of the last sheaf of the harvest, dressed in woman's clothing and decked in ribbons, was either carried home on the last wagon or high on a pole by a harvester. When the last harvest load was brought into the farmyard, onlookers often pelted it with apples and drenched the Harvest Queen and the reaper carrying her with buckets of water. The head reaper was garlanded, and a feast ended the day, complete with drinking, dance and song.
People in early European societies saw the Harvest Queen or harvest doll as the embodiment of the spirit of the crop. Keeping her safe over the winter ensured fertility for the following harvest, provided that some part of her was given to cattle or horses to eat, strewn on the fields or mixed with the next crop's seeds. However, over time, the belief in the doll as the spirit of the growing grain incarnate gave way to its being merely a symbol of abundance.
In their heyday, harvest dolls popped up all over Europe. In Brittany, the harvest doll was called the Mother Sheaf; in Wales, she was the hag or wrach. In Pembrokeshire in Wales, she was carried home by one of the reapers, followed by the other reapers, who tried to snatch her away. If the man carrying her got her home safe, he kept her on his farm till the following year and, on the day of the first spring plowing, took whatever grain remained intact on her and fed it to his plow-horses or mixed it with the seed to be sown to ensure fertility.
In Scotland, the harvest doll was the carline wife, or in Gaelic the cailleac, the old woman or hag. In the Scottish Isle of Lewis, the cailleac's apron was tied full of bread, cheese and a sickle. In some Scottish districts, the cailleac was passed from farm to farm: The man who finished reaping first made her, passed her to his neighbor, who finished and passed her to the next neighbor, the cailleac thus ending up with the farmer who was last to finish harvesting. In these districts, her presence reproached procrastination. In the Hebrides, the cailleac was taken at night and placed in the field of a slow or lazy farmer.
In Poland, the harvest doll was Baba, or Grandmother; in some localities, the woman who bound the last sheaf was herself called Baba. She was dressed in the last sheaf, carried home on the last wagon, drenched with water and generally treated as a representation of the grain spirit.
In Germany, the harvest doll was sometimes the Kornmutter, or corn-mother, and sometimes the Kornwolf, or corn-wolf, invoked to frighten children. Often, the reaper who reaped the last sheaf was called the Wolf and howled and bit accordingly. In some places, the wagon that brought home the last sheaf was called the Wolf. Most commonly, the last sheaf was made into the shape of a wolf, kept until threshing was finished and then became the center of festivities. Usually the old Wolf was "killed" at the end of the harvest to make way for the new, but in some places the old Wolf was kept on the farm to renew fertility in the spring.
A similar figure was the Bullkater, or tom-cat, of Silesian peasant belief. In this case, the reaper who cut the last sheaf of rye became the tom-cat. He dressed in rye stalks and acquired a long, braided green tail. He chased onlookers with a long stick and beat them when he caught them, by so doing chasing away the old Bullkater, who had possessed spectators while they watched the reaping.
I'm not 10 anymore, but I still like to imagine pagan corn cats, dolls and dances taking over the elementary schools, and any other institutions you can think of. I say give me a cailleac or a corn wolf over a Puritan any harvest you like, and pass the crayons.

goodies for the season...merry samhain!...


October Cider Cake
Makes one 3-layer cake 
3/4 cup shortening
1 1/2 cups firmly packed brown sugar
3 eggs
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1 cup apple cider
1 tablespoon lemon juice

  • Cider Filling (recipe below)

  • Creamy Cider Frosting (recipe below)
Chopped pecans (optional)
Cream shortening; gradually add sugar, beating well. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.
Combine flour, baking powder, salt, nutmeg, cinnamon, and cloves; add to creamed mixture alternately with cider, beginning and ending with flour mixture. Stir in lemon juice.
Pour batter into 3 greased and floured 8-inch round cake pans. Bake at 350° for 25 minutes or until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool in pans 10 minutes; remove layers from pans, and cool completely in fridge.
Put a thin band of icing along the perimeter of each later, and then pool the Cider Filling inside. Put back in fridge to let it set completely or the filling will ooze out from the weight of the cake (trust me).
Spread top and sides with Creamy Cider Frosting. Garnish top of cake with pecans, if desired.

Cider Filling
1/2 cup sugar
3 tablespoons cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup apple cider
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
Combine sugar, cornstarch, and salt in a heavy saucepan; gradually stir in cider. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until thickened.
Remove from heat. Stir in lemon juice and butter; cool in fridge.

Creamy Cider Frosting
1/2 cup butter or margarine
1/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon apple cider
1/4 teaspoon salt
About 4 1/2 cups sifted powdered sugar
1/2 cup chopped pecans
Combine first 3 ingredients in a heavy saucepan. Boil 1 minute, stirring constantly.
Remove from heat; cool. Gradually add sugar until spreading consistency; beat until smooth.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

mooncakes...

"When the moon is full, mankind is one!"
Moon or Lantern Festival

In China and throughout many Asian countries people celebrate the Harvest Moon on the 15th day of the eighth month of their lunar calendar. The date in the Western calendar changes annually. This year, the Mid-Autumn festival falls on Monday, September 12, 2011.
The Harvest Moon or Mid-Autumn Festival (Zhong Qiu Jie) is a day of family reunions much like a Western Thanksgiving. Chinese people believe that on that day, the moon is the roundest and brightest signaling a time of completeness and abundance. During the Mid-Autumn Festival, children are delighted to stay up past midnight, parading multi-colored lanterns into the wee hours as families take to the streets to moon-gaze.
It is also a romantic night for lovers, who sit holding hands on hilltops, riverbanks and park benches, captivated by the brightest moon of the year!
The festival dates back to the Tang dynasty in 618 A.D., and as with many celebrations in China there are ancient legends closely associated with it.
In Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore, it's sometimes referred to as the Lantern Festival, (not to be confused with a similar celebration during the Chinese New Year), but whatever name it goes by, the centuries-old festival remains a beloved annual ritual celebrating an abundance of food and family.
Mid-Autumn Festival Foods & Festivities

Traditional foods for a Chinese Mid-Autumn feast are red — for good luck. Lobster and salmon are particular favorites along with apples, pomegranates, roasted peanuts, pomelo, chestnuts, fatt koh (sponge cakes) and moon cakes.
Similar harvest festivals with their own unique traditions also occur during the same time - in Korea during the three-day Chuseok festival; in Vietnam during Tet Trung Thu; and in Japan at the Tsukimi festival.
On the Web, learn more about Mid-Autumn festival celebrations in the U.S. and around the world and discover a rich source of food and recipes of the season, festive e-mail greetings, along with the colorful folklore, stories, music, poems and legends associated with the Mid-Autumn Festival...



Stories of the Mid-Autumn Festival...


Stories of the Mid-Autumn Festival

[edit]Houyi and Chang'e

Celebration of the Mid-Autumn Festival is strongly associated with the legend of Houyi and Chang'e, the Moon Goddess ofImmortality. Tradition places these two figures from Chinese mythology at around 2200 BCE, during the reign of the legendaryEmperor Yao, shortly after that of Huangdi. Unlike many lunar deities in other cultures who personify the moon, Chang'e simply lives on the moon but is not the moon per se.
There are many variants and adaptations of the legend of Chang'e that frequently contradict each other. However, most versions of the legend involve some variation of the following elements: Houyi, the Archer, an emperor, either benevolent or malevolent, and anelixir of life.
One version of the legend states that Houyi was an immortal and Chang'e was a beautiful young girl, working in the palace of theJade Emperor (the Emperor of Heaven, 玉帝 pinyin:Yùdì) as an attendant to the Queen Mother of the West (the Jade Emperor's wife). Houyi aroused the jealousy of the other immortals, who then slandered him before the Jade Emperor. Houyi and his wife, Chang'e, were subsequently banished from heaven. They were forced to live on Earth. Houyi had to hunt to survive and became a skilled and famous archer.
At that time, there were ten suns, in the form of three-legged birds, residing in a mulberry tree in the eastern sea. Each day one of the sun birds would have to travel around the world on a carriage, driven by Xihe, the 'mother' of the suns. One day, all ten of the suns circled together, causing the Earth to burn. Emperor Yao, the Emperor of China, commanded Houyi to use his archery skill to shoot down all but one of the suns. Upon completion of his task, the Emperor rewarded Houyi with a pill that granted eternal life. Emperor Yao advised Houyi not to swallow the pill immediately but instead to prepare himself by praying and fasting for a year before taking it.[2] Houyi took the pill home and hid it under a rafter. One day, Houyi was summoned away again by Emperor Yao. During her husband's absence, Chang'e, noticed a white beam of light beckoning from the rafters, and discovered the pill. Chang'e swallowed it and immediately found that she could fly. Houyi returned home, realizing what had happened he began to reprimand his wife. Chang'e escaped by flying out the window into the sky.[2]
Houyi pursued her halfway across the heavens but was forced to return to Earth because of strong winds. Chang'e reached the moon, where she coughed up part of the pill.[2] Chang'e commanded the hare that lived on the moon to make another pill. Chang'e would then be able to return to Earth and her husband.[citation needed]
The legend states that the hare is still pounding herbs, trying to make the pill. Houyi built himself a palace in the sun, representing "Yang" (the male principle), in contrast to Chang'e's home on the moon which represents "Yin" (the female principle). Once a year, on the night of the Mid-Autumn Festival, Houyi visits his wife. That is the reason why the moon is very full and beautiful on that night.[2]
This description appears in written form in two Western Han dynasty (206 BC-24 AD) collections; Shan Hai Jing, the Classic of the Mountains and Seas and Huainanzi, a philosophical classic.[3]
Another version of the legend, similar to the one above, differs in saying that Chang'e swallowed the pill of immortality because Peng, one of Houyi's many apprentice archers, tried to force her to give the pill to him. Knowing that she could not fight off Peng, Chang'e had no choice but to swallow the pill herself.[citation needed]
Other versions say that Houyi and Chang'e were still immortals living in heaven at the time that Houyi killed nine of the suns. The sun birds were the sons of the Jade Emperor, who punished Houyi and Chang'e by forcing them to live on Earth as mortals. Seeing that Chang'e felt extremely miserable over her loss of immortality, Houyi decided to find the pill that would restore it. At the end of his quest, he met the Queen Mother of the West, who agreed to give him the pill, but warned him that each person would only need half a pill to regain immortality. Houyi brought the pill home and stored it in a case. He warned Chang'e not to open the case, and then left home for a while. Like Pandora in Greek mythology, Chang'e became curious. She opened up the case and found the pill, just as Houyi was returning home. Nervous that Houyi would catch her, discovering the contents of the case, she accidentally swallowed the entire pill, and started to float into the sky because of the overdose.
Some versions of the legend do not refer to Houyi or Chang'e as having previously been immortals and initially present them as mortals instead.[citation needed]
There are also versions of the story in which Houyi was made king as a reward for killing nine of the suns and saving the people. However, King Houyi became a despot who either stole a pill of immortality from the Queen Mother of the West or learned that he could make such a pill by grinding up the body of a different adolescent boy every night for a hundred nights. Chang'e stole the pill and swallowed it herself, either to stop more boys being killed or to prevent her husband's tyrannical rule from lasting forever.[citation needed]

[edit]The Hare or The Jade Rabbit

According to tradition, the Jade Rabbit pounds medicine, together with the lady, Chang'e, for the gods. Others say that the Jade Rabbit is a shape, assumed by Chang'e herself. The dark areas to the top of the full moon may be construed as the figure of a rabbit. The animal's ears point to the upper right, while at the left are two large circular areas, representing its head and body.[4]

[edit]Overthrow of Mongol rule

According to a widespread folk tale (not necessarily supported by historical records), the Mid-Autumn Festival commemorates an uprising in China against the Mongol rulers of the Yuan Dynasty (1280–1368) in the 14th century.[5] As group gatherings were banned, it was impossible to make plans for a rebellion.[5] Noting that the Mongols did not eatmooncakesLiu Bowen (劉伯溫) of Zhejiang Province, advisor to the Chinese rebel leader Zhu Yuanzhang, came up with the idea of timing the rebellion to coincide with the Mid-Autumn Festival. He sought permission to distribute thousands of moon cakes to the Chinese residents in the city to bless the longevity of the Mongol emperor. Inside each cake, however, was inserted a piece of paper with the message: "Kill the Mongols on the 15th day of the 8th month" (traditional Chinese: 八月十五殺韃子; simplified Chinese: 八月十五杀鞑子).[5] On the night of the Moon Festival, the rebels successfully attacked and overthrew the government. What followed was the establishment of the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644), under Zhu. Henceforth, the Mid-Autumn Festival was celebrated with moon cakes on a national level.

[edit]

Sunday, September 4, 2011

burning man, schmerning man...

The Wicker Man is a giant effigy allegedly used by the Druids to perform human sacrifice, according to the writings of Julius Caesar. He mentions it as one method in which the Celts performed rituals, but other than Caesar's observations there is little scholarly corroboration. In today's neopagan practices, a Wicker Man may be used for celebration of a fire feast or at harvest time (although nowadays it's without the human sacrifice).