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Pommerntag
- on a Sunday Afternoon -
Sorry you missed it for this year,
but be sure to mark your calendars for
next year so you don't miss this great
celebration of your heritage! Pommerntag
is scheduled for the last Sunday in
June. Features include the Verein database
with our computer setup; the database
now contains over 104,000 names which are
linked together in family pedigree form.
Printouts are free at Pommerntag!
There are cultural, genealogical
displays, plus book and map sales.
Usually, entertainment includes the music of
the Kameraden Band and the beautiful
ethnic dancing of the Pommersche Tanzdeel
Freistadt. Pommern food is offered
along with the famous Kirschsuppe (cherry
soup) The festival is customarily held at
the Mequon City Park, 11333 North
Cedarburg Street, Mequon,
Wisconsin.
Pommerntag - Sonntag Nachmittag -
Kennzeichnen Sie ihre Kalender für
diese große Feier ihres Erbes!
Pommerntag wird für den letzen Sonntag im
Juni festgelegt. Eigenschaften
umfassen die Verein Datenbank mit unserer
Computerinstellung; die Datenbank enthält
jetzt über 104,000 Namen die zusammen in
der Familie Stammbaumform verbunden
werden. Ausdruck sind bei Pommerntag
frei! Es gibt kulturelle,
genealogische Anzeigen plus Buch und
Diagrammverkäufe. Normalerweise
umfaßt Unterhaltung die Musik von
das Bandes Kameraden und das schöne
ethnische Tanzen des Pommersche Tanzdeel
Freistadt. Pommern Nahrung wird
zusammen mit em berümte Kirschsuppe
angeboten. Das Festival wird gewöhnlich
am Mequon Stadt-park, 11333 NordCedarburg
Straße, Mequon, Wisconsin gehalten.
*
* *
German
Fest - is held the last
week-end in July. This unique
festival offers something for everyone!
Genealogy, Sheepshead, Arts and Crafts,
Chess, German Books, Parades,
Trachenschau, Spanferkel and other good
German specialties. It is a fun time
for anyone who loves good food and
great Gemütlichkeit! This great
festival is over for this year, but Be
sure to mark your calendar for the last
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday in July for
next year.
Deutschesfest - wird
das jetzte Wochenende im Juli
festgelegt. Es ist ein einzigartiges
Festival, das Gemealogie, Schafskopf, Künste,
Fertigkeiten, Trachenschau, Spanferkel ,
und andere gute deutsche Spezialgebiete.
Gesetzt ihm in ihre Zeitplan fur folgendes
Jahr. Sie lieben die gute
Nahrung und das Große Gemütlichkeit.
*
* *
Erntedank,
Pommern's harvest festival, was
comparable to our Thanksgiving; Ernte
(meaning harvest) and Dank (meaning
thanks). However, the Pomeranian
Erntedank was held on the first Sunday
after the 29th of September, at the end of
the harvesting season.
The harvesting of crops
was a strenuous task in historic times.
The potato crops were harvested by the
whole family, first they dug out the
potato mounds and then picked through the
soil to sort out the tubers. The children
would gather the dried vines and burn
them, using the fire to roast the smaller
potatoes, which were considered a
delicacy. When the last potato hill was
harvested, they climbed onto the decorated
wagon and headed for home.
The custom of Erntedank
was centered in the church. A table was
decorated with the best produce from the
fields and gardens. Baskets of
fruits and a harvest crown (Erntekrone)
made from the grains and were carried into
the church and onto the altar. In
some churches this produce was distributed
to the poor and in others it was sold with
the proceeds going to the poor.
There
were ceremonial rituals connected to the
festival, such as, the making of the
Alte - an old man made of straw, the
decorating of their tools, the wearing of
the (crown), and most everyone wore
their trachten. Sometimes there were
contests for the largest pumpkin grown, or
the heaviest fodder of carrots or
potatoes. There were festival
dinners and everyone ate and drank a lot.
Dances, games, and plays were held on the
barn threshing floor. These
celebrations varied somewhat from village
to village.
*
* *
Osterfeiertag
Palmsonntag
(Palm Sunday) was deemed
the beginning of Easter Week.
Homes were decorated with birch
tree branches, or pussy willows that had
been forced to leaf out early by being
brought into the warmth of the homes a few
days earlier.
Gründonnerstag
(Maunday Thursday)
commemorates the Last Supper, the meal
Jesus shared with His disciples the day
before He died. Gründonnerstag
literally means "green
Thursday." Although the name
probably comes from an ancient word "grein",
which means to cry or weep, the color
green is used that day as a symbol of
renewal The meals that day usually
include green foods, like spinach, leeks,
beans, and chives.
Karfreitag
(Good Friday) is observed by
Christians because it was the day
Christ died on the cross. Karfreitag
literally means grief Friday and in most
areas, the village was quiet and even the
church bells were silent. All
adornments on the altar and throughout the
church were removed.
But, in some areas of
Germany
the church services are announced by
making a lot of noise with wooden rattles.
There was a tradition of lighting bon
fires in the evening before Easter Sunday
to chase away the evil spirits of winter. The
young men would compete with each other to
make the largest fire on a nearby hill.
The charcoals from the fire were
carried home as it was believed that these
coals would give a warmer greeting to
guests when burned on a cool evening.
Osterfeiertag
-
Easter - There is an old
German saying that when a pig was
butchered, every part of that pig was
eaten or used in one form or another, that
is, all except the squeal. So it was
with many things, everything was used
for something, even the outer skins of the
onion. These skins of shades of red
and brown were put aside throughout the
winter months for the coloring of the Östereier
(Easter egg). Leaves, grasses
and small flowers were carefully arranged
around each egg, leaving much of the shell
exposed, then wrapped with a thin clothe
and securely tied. The red onion
skins were placed in a kettle, the brown
ones in another, and then the eggs
were carefully laid in the kettles and
covered with cold water. The
eggs were boiled for about 10 minutes and
when taken from the water and the
wrappings removed, they had beautiful
designs from the grasses, leaves and
flowers on a background of various
shades of red, orange, and brown.
They were now ready for the
forthcoming Österhas (Easter Bunny) to
hide in various places for the children
to find.
Colored
eggs were given as presents as early as
the 6th century.
The eggs were symbols of fertility
and purity.
Sometimes eggs were placed in the
attics to insure good health and good
fortune.
The young Frauleins had a special
observance on Easter morning too.
Very early, before sunrise, they would
walk barefoot and quietly through the dewy grass
to the nearest clear water creek. It
was important for them to be very quiet
and not talk to anyone and wash their
faces in the cold water promptly as
the sun began to rise.
The boys and young men would hide
behind shrubs or trees on the path to the
creek and try to startle the girls and
engage them in conversation.
The Frauleins believed that the
"Easter Water" would magically
bless them and make them beautiful.
They also filled a bottle with this
"Easter Water" from the
stream so that they could dip their
fingers in it each morning to maintain their
newly acquired beauty.
Many Pomeranians saved the membrane
from inside the eggs and covered their
fingertips with it. This
membrane was kept on their finger-tips
throughout the day on Easter to protect
them against sickness and evil throughout
the entire year.
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* *
Hocktied
- The
Pommern Wedding, - The
marriage procedure began with the
groom-to-be visiting the parents of the
bride-to-be to formally ask for her
hand in marriage; the wedding date
was determined at that time. Then
the forthcoming marriage was
announced in church on the Sunday
before the wedding, and at this time the
couple would attend communion.
The wedding party usually began on a
Friday, but the celebration
continued on through the following Sunday.
Even as today, prior to the wedding,
the invitations had to be sent out, and
this service was performed by the Hochzeitsbitter;
in some areas he was called the
"Hochtiedsirer" and this
service was usually performed by a brother
of the bride. He wore the
Pommerscher Trachten or a black suit with
a tall black hat. This hat
was decorated with colorful flowers and
ribbons. He wore a small bouquet of
flowers in the button hole of his suit,
and carried a staff that was also
decorated with colorful ribbons and
flowers. He rode his horse from
house to house, and was usually invited
into the parlor of each home; where
he treated the future wedding guests to
some Schnapps, while reciting a
memorized poem of invitation. He
usually received a colorful handkerchief
or a ribbon as an acceptance to the
invitation. This handkerchief or
ribbon was pinned to the back of his
jacket. As he greeted the
guests or helped in serving them at
the wedding, the handkerchiefs were still
pinned to his jacket,
During the 19th century, it was
customary for the bride to wear black; it
wasn't until the early 1900's that
white became fashionable. The groom was
not allowed to see the bride before
he reached the church door. The
guests arrived at the wedding ceremony by
10:00 A.M. and were
welcomed with the music of a band of
musicians. It was customary
for the guests to tip the musicians,
especially if the music pleased them.
This custom was called "Zur
Hochzeit einspielen."
The bridal dance began with the
ceremony of the bride climbing onto a
stone (usually upon a historic grave
of an ancestor) to ask for a blessing from
her ancestors. She would then
recite, "Hier stehe ich ganz
allein auf einem breiten Stein, und wer
mich lief hat, holt mich ein"
(Here I stand all alone on this stone, and
whoever loves me, brings me down.)
The bride groom would then have to climb
up on the stone and the bridal dance would
follow. Customarily, everyone
attended a bounteous chicken dinner, so
that "das Glück gackern"
(happiness could cackle). The dinner
was followed with a night of dancing that
continued until around midnight.
The bride was expected to dance with all
the male guests and the groom with
all the females. The musicians would
continue to play until dawn, if tipped
by the guests.
In some parts of Pommern, towards the
end of the evening of dancing,
there was a "Wreath Dance."
during which every young bachelor
tried to take the bride's bouquet,
and the groom was obligated to defend it.
While in other areas, the bride would
throw her bridal bouquet in the air
and the young unmarried girls would try to
catch it. Who ever caught it was
expected to be the next bride.
The last dance was the "Broom
Dance," during which a
young man would ride the broom between the
dancing couples, and when he dropped
the broom, the lady was his partner.
Everyone would try to get a new
partner, and whoever was left had to dance
with the broom.
The bride's parent's home was usually
decorated with flags, embroidered with the
couple's initials, hung high on the
building. Three separated
bottles were hung there too.
The third day after the wedding was the
party of the bullet. The groom was
challenged to shoot one of the
bottles, with a gun of the guests choice.
This was not an easy task especially
since they had been partying for three
days.
The house was usually decorated with
different themes each day. On the
last day of the celebration, arcs were
made out of the center of palm tree
leaves. The bridal couple would walk
underneath the arcs, symbolizing that
their love would last an eternity.
The bridal couple would host a party on
the Sunday after the wedding to
demonstrate their graciousness and
generosity. It was also an
opportunity to show off the bride's
trousseau and the gifts they had received.
The following Tuesday was moving day and everything
was loaded onto a wagon and driven to the
groom's farm- yard. Oftentimes a
rooster was stolen from the bride's farm
to be let loose at the groom's farm.
The resulting rooster fight was to
foretell whether the groom or the bride
would "rule the roost" in the
marriage; this was determined by which
rooster won the fight.
If the bridal couple did not host a
large wedding, a Polterabend, was
usually organized by the bridal
couple's young friends. They would
gather their kitchen utensils to bang on,
old pottery to break, and whatever else
they could find to make a lot of noise.
The noise continued until the bridal pair
rewarded them for their efforts. The
young noise- makers would bring small
gifts and often chickens to be used for
the dinner the next day. These young
friends sometimes played tricks on the
bridal couple, such as putting an old buggy
or other items on the roof top of their
house. The bridal couple was expected to
clean up the mess and bury the pottery
pieces behind the house before sunrise.
This indicated that the couple would
have a peaceful married life.
Some superstitions connected with
weddings were: 1. The bride was not
to look back on her walk to the church as
it was thought to symbolize that she was
thinking of the things she had left
behind. 2. If one of the wedding bands
were to fall, it was thought that the person
who dropped it would be the first to die.
3. As the couple walked from the church,
they were to take the first steps together
as man and wife and walk very close to
each other. This was to
prevent any bad vibes or evil powers from
coming between them.
*
* *
Baptismal
Customs - When a child was
born in Pommern, the father would plant a
tree in the garden. If the child was
a boy, he would plant an apple tree,
If the child was a girl, he would
plant a pear tree, and for twins a cherry
tree. It was believed the child
would then grow up to be good and
strong.
The
Pomeranians had many superstitions,
perhaps originating from pagan
customs prior to their conversion to
Christianity. This one came into
play when a baby was born during the
period between an individual's death
and his burial. They feared that the
dead person's spirit could cause the child
to die, or that it would cause the baby to
become an evil person. The parents of
the child would frantically call the
pastor, even in the middle of the night,
to come and baptize the child
immediately. The baptism had to be
done at once to prevent the death of the
child.
The baptism of healthy
babies was done normally
following the first regular Sunday
church service after its birth. The
congregation would stay for the baptism,
so that the ceremony was thought to
be part of the service. It was a common
practice for the parents to remain at
home while the Godparents took the child
to church. The parents usually
chose two male relatives of the
father and a female relative of the mother
as sponsors (Godparents) of a male
child, and two female relatives of the
mother and a male relative of the
father for a female child. This
position carried great responsibilities.
They were to guarantee that the
child was taught their Christian faith and
serve as an example for the child by
"living a good Christian life." They
were also expected to take over as parents of
the child, if something happened to the
parents. It was customary for the
Godparents to remember the child with
a present on their birthdays and at
Christmas until the child was
confirmed.
There was a close
relationship between the Godparents and
their Godchild, but this also had
some superstitious omens. For
instance, if the Godmother carried
the child quickly to the church, it
was believed that the child would walk
early. It was believed in some
areas that the Godparent must use their
right hand to bestow presents to the
child, otherwise the child would be
left handed. The Godparent also
should never touch the child
while wearing gloves, or the child would
then have weak and tiny hands.
Shortly after the baptism, the
godparents would slip their "Patengeschenk"
under the pillow where the child lay.
In earlier times this was usually two
Taler. These were put in a
box-like envelope and a pious verse
was written on the envelope.
The baptism of twins also
brought another superstition into play.
The pastor, knowing that twins were
born, would be taken by surprise
when he was presented with only one
child to be Christened. When
questioned regarding this, the parents
stated that it was a family custom
not to baptize the twins together; there
was no other explanation. Most
likely this resulted from some confusion
between certain superstitions and the
baptismal customs. It was also
thought important that a male child and a
female child should not be baptized
with the same water, otherwise the male
child would never grow a beard, but
the female child would.
Many Pomeranians also
believed that the baptismal water had
healing powers. This lead one
woman to make a milk-soup out of the
water, which she used as a cure-all for
her children whenever they were
sick.
*
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Death
and the Funerals
-
When the time came that good Christian
Pomeranians knew death was near, they called the Pastor to
administer the sacrament of Holy
Communion to insure their peace with God.
When the final moments of life was
eminent, the windows in the room
were opened and the close relatives
stepped away from the bed to allow
the dead person's soul to go directly to
heaven with no obstacles in its path.
Everyone then prayed and/or sang hymns.
The clocks were all stopped at the
moment of death and a black cloth
was hung on the entrances to the home and
also all over the mirrors. This was
done to keep all satanic powers away.
In some areas of Pomerania,
on the day after the death, the
church bells would toll, counting
out the deceased person's age,
In other areas they rang out at three
intervals, the first time as the
gravediggers removed the sod from the
grave site, then again when the digging
was done, and the third time when they
completed their work.
The dead person's
body was washed and dressed in his/her
finest clothing and laid out in a
coffin in the parlor or on the dining room
table, with their feet towards the
door. The body had to be carried out that
same way to protect the mourners
from being carried along.
The coffin was taken to
the cemetery on a horse-drawn farm
wagon. The horses were watched
closely during this ritual. If
they turned their heads in the direction
of a home along the way, it
was believed someone in that house
would be the next to die; and if
they stopped in front of a house, a
person in that house would die soon.
It was customary for all
the mourners to go the church from the
cemetery to attend the funeral service.
Usually a large dinner was served after
the church service; it traditionally
included chicken soup. The meal
started off on a somber note, but after
several servings of brandy,
some of the tenseness disappeared and
the tongues were loosened.
Gradually, the the mourners became more
cheerful and they began to enjoy each
others company.
*
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New
Year's Eve (Sylvester)
-
The
night of the Holy Sylvester, the last
night of the year, has always been the
night of fools and a funny good time. The
saint of this day, Pope Sylvester I,
according to legend is the man who was
healed from leprosy and baptized the Roman
Emperor Constantine the Great.
There
was a great amount of drinking, dancing
and singing at the "Sylvester
Balls" held that night.
As the old year ended and the new year was
about to begin, everyone refilled their
glasses with champagne or wine. Then
the hugs and kissing began, accompanied
with "ein gutes neues Jahr."
The bells throughout Germany rang and many
revelers ran out in the streets to enjoy
the merry sounds. There was usually some
private fireworks displays and the sounds
of shooting was often heard along with the
ringing bells.
Naturally,
there were some superstitions connected
with Sylvester. People dropped
molten lead into cold water and then
interpreted the shape it made into a
future event they believed would take
place in the coming year. If the
shape could be interpreted as a heart or a
ring - it meant a wedding, a ship meant a
journey, a pig meant there would be a year
of plenty, etc.
Traditionally,
carp was eaten on Sylvester;
it was believed it brought future wealth.
It was also important to leave a bit of
each type of food on the dinner plate,
which was to remain there until after
midnight. This insured that they
would have plenty of food throughout the
coming year.
*
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May
Day (Erster
Mai)-
In
Germany
, the first day of May is a national
holiday, similar to Labor Day in the USA.
It is the International Workers' Day - Tag
der Arbeit, when workers gather for
rallies and speeches, to collectively
express their unity. Also a variety
of May festivals take place.
After the dreariness of winter, and the
green fields and trees appeared again, the
celebration of spring on May Day was a
joyous event, a symbol of spring’s
reawakening to fruitfulness.
Maiglöckchen (May-bells)
began to bloom and chocolate Maikäfer
(May beetles) were available in the stores
for the children.
It inspired many romantic
poems and songs like "Mairegen bringt
Segen" (rain in May brings
blessings).
There
were also ceremonial plantings of
seedlings or small trees; homes and dance
halls were decorated with flowers and
green leaves.
In some areas Maypoles were set up
and there was community dancing around it,
holding hands, dancing, enjoying spirits,
usually Maiwein (May wine). It was a
happy day away from the workplaces.
Maiwein (May Wine), a white wine,
dedicated to springtime and flavored with
fresh Waldmeister, an old-world herb, a
small plant with white blossoms,
decorative and grown in a shady
corner of a German's
herb garden. It is used for
flavoring only in May, when the new
leaves are tender.
Historically, May was known as the
"Wonnemond," the month of
lovers, when a young man's fancy turned to
love. The young bachelors organized
parties and dances to romance the young
maidens of the area.
Over the years, the Maubaum
(May-tree) lost its original meaning and
became just a celebration of May and
spring.
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