Try These Holiday Traditions: Mummering, Chinese Food and Mari Lwyd

12/18/09  Print This Post Print This Post    6 Comments      Written by Candice Walsh
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Photo by *~Dawn~*

Looking to think outside the neatly wrapped box this year? Try these traditions on.

Everyone has those holiday traditions that conjure up nostalgic memories of years gone past. Some traditions are quiet and reflective, others are just downright strange. Here are a few new ones you should try if you’re looking to shake things up a little.

Get out and enjoy the quiet morning of December 25 – For those who don’t celebrate Christmas, like Matador Life’s Jewish editor Leigh Shulman, December 25 isn’t filled with frenzy. Instead, she likes to get up before the rest of the world and take a walk, especially in New York City:

“The streets are cold, sometimes I’m lucky and there’s a new dusting of snow on the ground. Since the rest of the city will either be sleeping in or heading to their presents under the tree, the only footprints in the snow are mine. There are no cars or people around, the only sounds I hear are people in their homes, making breakfast in the kitchen. I can hear kids squealing as they open their gifts. Sometimes you can smell burnt sugar and coffee wafting from the windows as you walk by.”

Get creative with your tree – Sick of the garland, tinsel, gaudy ornaments and flashy stars? How about a lobster trap tree, or a giant Pac Man ensemble?

Mummering, or Jannying – This is without a doubt one of the most absurd holiday traditions from my Canadian province, Newfoundland.

Mummering entails a group of individuals going door to door in a community, dressed in absurd disguises of pillowcases over heads, mitts on feet, bras on the outside of clothes, and anything else that will render a person indistinguishable.

At each home, the hosts guess the identities behind the masks, and a party breaks out with whiskey and fiddle music. For a better idea of this monumental ocassion, check out Simani’s music video.

Photo by NealeA

Order Chinese food – Whether you celebrate Christmas or not, combining two cultures reflects the harmonious spirit of the holidays. Swap the turkey and cranberry sauce with chow mein and sweet and sour chicken.

Attend a Midnight Mass – I’m not a religious person, but attending midnight mass at my town’s Catholic church with my grandmother was something I looked forward to every year. It’s hard to not feel moved among family and friends as you’re standing inside your town’s most prominent structure, surrounded by hundreds of lit candles, with the choir raising the hair on the back of your neck.

Picnic and swimming – If you live where it never snows, make like the Australians and head to the beach. Pack a picnic basket loaded with a fancy dinner, and enjoy a meal in the sand without having to worry about the conditions of the roads or if the driveway needs to be shovelled.

Mari Lwyd, the “gray mare” – This pagan midwinter custom hails from the Wales and is kind of like carolling, except with a horse’s skull and a person dressed up in costume. The horse skull and entourage go to houses or pubs, singing introductory verses outside the front door, and then engaging in challenges and rhyming insults with the household/pub until someone finally backs down.

COMMUNITY CONNECTION

Do you or your family have any strange and unusual holiday traditions? Share them below!


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About the Author

Matador ID: candicew86

Candice Walsh is a technical writer for a deep sea technology company. When she isn’t writing about sonar equipment, she’s shooting whiskey and hitting on men, or eating nachos and dreaming about travel. She’s currently stationed in St. John’s, Newfoundland. Check out her blog, Candice Does the World.

6 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Yana replied on December 18, 2009

    In regards to the chinese food: All Russian Jews in the USA, at least that I know of, celebrate Christmas by ordering chinese food. I’m not sure why, but it certainly has nothing to do with combining cultures. More like they’re too lazy, most likely. I’ll have to look into that…

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    • Leigh Shulman replied to Yana on December 19, 2009

      It was always the joke in my community growing up (not just Russian jews, but from everywhere) that we always go out for Chinese on Christmas. I always thought it was because Chinese restaurants tend to be the only ones open, and then it becomes tradition.

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  • joshua johnson replied on December 18, 2009

    I am tempted to go Mummering around downtown Seattle, but I am afraid I wouldn’t remain outside police custody for long…and horse skulls?

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    • Candice Walsh replied to joshua johnson on December 19, 2009

      Maybe you can combine the two and create an original Seattle tradition!

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  • Leigh Shulman replied on December 19, 2009

    There’s a tradition to eat fried foods on Chanuka meant to commemorate the miracle in the Chanuka story when one days’ worth of oil burned for eight days.

    In Israel, we made sufganiot, jelly donuts (although I like the ones filled with caramel better). Everywhere, we make latkes. What I like best about the tradition is making them with family. My mom makes them with Lila. Lila gets together with her cousins and makes them with her great aunt. Then we all get together as a family to eat.

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  • Chris replied on December 20, 2009

    I’ll be living the typical aussie tradition back home especially if the weather stays warm. Kicking back in my shorts and singlet while woofing down a feed of seafood and the like. Now I just need to find a few friends for a bit of backyard cricket….

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