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Georgios Paraskevopoulos

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Re: Kaleidoscope #8: Sweden
6/20/2008 6:06:00 PM
Hello Myrna!

Thank you for joining Kaleidoscope Sweden!
I love this country. I use to say I love my parents because they gave my life but I love my teachers because they teached me how to live and my teachers were Swedish.


HAPPY MID SUMMER
GEORGIOS
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Georgios Paraskevopoulos

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Re: Kaleidoscope #8: Sweden
6/20/2008 6:13:57 PM
Hello Marja!

Thank you for your visit and your comments. I lived in Sweden 1965-1983. At my best years I was in Sweden. Today is a special day for you up there in POLAR NORDIC CAP.
SUMMER MIDNIGHT - POLAR DAY- POLAR NIGHT.


Here is a nice song from Scandianavia
I presume in your mother tonque


 
HAPPY POLAR DAY
Georgios

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Georgios Paraskevopoulos

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Re: Kaleidoscope #8: Sweden
6/21/2008 9:01:21 AM
MIDSUMMAR IN SWEDEN

© WIKIPEDIA


Raising and dancing around a maypole (majstång or midsommarstång) is an activity that attracts families and many others. People dancing around the pole listen to traditional music and many wear traditional folk costumes. The year's first potatoes, pickled herring, sour cream, and possibly the first strawberries of the season are on the menu. Drinking songs are also important at this feast, and many drink heavily.

Because Midsummer was thought to be one of the times of the year when magic was strongest, it was considered a good night to perform rituals to look into the future. Traditionally, young people pick bouquets of seven or nine different flowers and put them under their pillow in the hope of dreaming about their future spouse. In the past it was believed that herbs picked at Midsummer were highly potent, and water from springs could bring good health. Greenery placed over houses and barns were supposed to bring good fortune and health to people and livestock; this old tradition of decorating with greens continues, even though most don't take it seriously. To decorate with greens was called att maja (to "may") and may be the origin of the word majstång, maja coming originally from the month May. Other researchers say the term came from German merchants who raised the maypole in June because the Swedish climate made it impossible to find the necessary greens and flowers in May, and continued to call it a maypole.

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Today, however, it is most commonly called a midsommarstång. In earlier times, small spires wrapped in greens were erected; this probably predates the maypole tradition, which is believed by many to have come from the continent in the Middle Ages. Others argue that some form of Midsummer pole occurred in Sweden during the pre-Christian times, and was a phallic fertility symbol, meant to impregnate the earth, but as there were no records from those times it cannot be proven, and this idea might just be a modern interpretation of the poles form. The earliest historical mention of the maypole in Sweden is from the Middle Ages. Midsummer was however linked to an ancient fertility festival which was adapted into St. Johans day by the church, even though it retained many pagan traditions, as the Swedes were slow to give up the old heathen customs. The connection to fertility is naturally linked to the time of year. Many young people became passionate at Midsummer, and this was accepted, probably because it resulted in more childbirths in March which was a good time for children to be born.

Georgos
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