L O W L A N D S - L - 30 December 2006 - Volume 04<br>======================================================================<br><br>From: <span id="_user_jonny.meibohm@arcor.de" style="color: rgb(0, 104, 28);">jonny <<a href="mailto:jonny.meibohm@arcor.de">
jonny.meibohm@arcor.de</a>></span><br>Subject: LL-L 'Customs'<br><br>Beste Lowlanners,<br><br>tonight we have the last night of the old year, 'Silvester' after a holy pope, and G: 'Altjahrs-Abend'.
<br><br>Some interesting customs, spread over greater parts of the old Lowlandic-areas I know carried on this evening.<br><br>1.
Everything- maybe a ladder, forgotten in a fruit-tree, a box or a net
for fish or even the skirts on a string have to be brought to the place
they normally should be kept. Otherwise- so I was told by my
superstitious ancestors- the 'Wild Ghosts of the Wind' (G: auch 'Wilde
Reiter') could get caught, and that's dangerous for the house and
family.<br><br>2. Maybe depending on this you're allowed to go to your
neighbours and steal all these things not tied up at the correct place-
even bikes (as our Piet told me) or unclosed doors from a stable, a
pushkart or or...<br><br>3. Then you also may disguise yourself and terrify next-door children or dogs ;-)!<br><br>As
far as I know it's spread widely over the LS-area though it seems to me
comparable with the customs people having in the (more catholic) south-
with all their masques and strange outfit during the days of carneval.<br><br>----------<br><br>From: R. F. Hahn <<a href="mailto:sassisch@yahoo.com">sassisch@yahoo.com</a>><br>Subject: Traditions<br><br>Thanks, Jonny.
<br><br>In the big cities of the north, kids used to dress up and go from door to door "begging," which involves serenading. Grown-ups still have fancy-dress party on New Years Eve. It's much like Halloween and like the Scottish Hogmanay guising that Sandy talked about.
<br><br>As far as I know, it all goes back to pre-Christian cleansing rituals in which guisers, dressed as scary trolls and things, go around driving out evil demons before the coming of the new year at the winter solstice. Some Christmas traditions are related to that, too, such as the burning tree or wheel (
<span style="font-style: italic;">hj</span><i>ól</i>) enticing out the sun, also the Scandinavian Christmas custom of dancing and stomping around throughout the house singing loudly (e.g., "Nu är det jul igen").
<br><br>'n Gouden rutsch!<br><br>And don't scare the dogs!<br><br>Reinhard/Ron<br>