Day 62 #100DaysOfOldDays
Today’s post is also for Marsha Ingrao’s WQW #15 Observing Religious Holidays inΒ April.

Here’s some old Easter traditions and beliefs that I’ve gathered up.
π₯Confessions was a must on Good Friday and people would have a period of quietness from mid-day to 3pm.
π₯They would plant some crop seed to bring good luck and blessings.
π₯It was a day for trimming hair as it was believed it would prevent headaches for the rest of the year.
π₯People gave their homes a big spring clean to prepare for the priest calling to bless the house. Some would even whitewash the wallsβinside and out.
π₯Precautions were taken to avoid any injury that might cause bloodshed. Workers avoided using any kind of tool that might cause harm., like hammers and nails.
π₯It was believed that a child born on Good Friday and baptized on Easter Sunday would be blessed with the gift of healing. A boy born on Good Friday was to become a priest. And if you died on Good Friday youβd go straight to Heaven; right through those pearly gates with no hassle!
π₯Eggs laid on Good Friday were kept for boiling on Easter Sunday, either at home or at the cludΓ³g.

π₯Ever heard of holy wells? Water from a holy well was most powerful for cures on Good Friday, so visits to these wells and graveyards were more prominent on this day.
EASTER SATURDAY
π₯People went to ceremonies in the chapel to have their water blessed. They would take 3 sips from it and sprinkle some on everyone in the house.
That reminds me of the day my grandson Ben, drank our bottle of holy water. He thought it was River Rock mineral water. I have to say he did have a bit of an obsession with Mass and the missions for a while afterwards. We brought him to Knock once and he insisted on having his picture taken with all the statues. However, the spiritual effects of drinking half a litre of holy water were short lived. Sigh!


EASTER SUNDAY
π₯People rose as early as sunrise to celebrate Easter Sunday. (That tradition hasnβt completely died.)
π₯After Easter Sunday Mass people attended a βherring processionβ. Because so much fish (herring in particular) was eaten during Lent, butchers conducted these mock funerals to symbolize the end of Lenten abstinence. Some were known to whip the herring because they were so sick of eating it for 6 weeks.
π₯βSpoilin meith na hlnideβ was a small piece of meat that people pinned on their wall during Lent. On Easter Sunday it was taken down and burnt to give a nice smell to the inside of the house.
π₯Boil and paint eggs or go on an Easter cludΓ³g. An Easter cludΓ³g was where people would come together and light a bonfire. Theyβd roast eggs on the fire and eat them saving the egg shells to plant at a May bush.
π₯This tradition lasted right through to the 80βs. Maybe later in some parts of the country. Iβd like to know if and where people still have a traditional Easter CludΓ³g.

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What a treasure trove of things I did not know! I love it Gloria. Happy Easter to you and yours!!
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Thank you Chris. Happy Easter to you too! π
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Happy Easter!!
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Same to you Darlene! π
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Gloria, this is a fascinating list of traditions. I had to read the one about bloodshed to my husband who banged up his elbow playing pickleball the other day. I love your story about your grandson drinking the holy water. How funny. I wonder if that is how you become βholier than thou.β
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Thanks Marsha. Yes, it’s a strange list isn’t it! Ouch for your husband! He should visit a holy well today to have it cured.
We love telling the story about Ben drinking the holy water. By the time we realised what he was drinking, the bottle was empty! (Very competent grandparents…ahem!)
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Makes a great story! Children are reknown for their quick antics. Thatβs one of the characteristics that makes them so loveable, right?
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Ah yes! That’s all part of the fun.
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My Italian friend Chiara was just telling me last week they donβt have βSpring Cleaningβ in Bologna but they always have a big βEaster Cleanβ!!! Must be a similar tradition to the one you mentioned in this story β€οΈ
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Must be Margaret. I suppose it is a good time for the big clean, coming into the good weather. (Not that it’s too good today π)
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Wonderful again Gloria,
Ned did an Easter Cludought a few years ago π . Brought ours and a few more π. Lit a fire, traditional style, He borrowed his motherβs hard boiling pot and then lost it in the field β¦.. biggest mystery ever β¦β¦ we think the fairies must have taken it π . We searched (as Nan would have said) We searched high and lowβ¦..the pot vanished π ππ
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Ah…definitely sounds like the fairies were involved there!! π
Maybe the old tradition will be resurrected afterall. π€
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I loved the quotes but I definitely loved the traditions and beliefs you found. some Iβd heard but most were new to me. So fascinating.
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Thanks Kirstin. There’s some strange ones in there too. π
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