Czech Easter - Holy Week: Green
Thursday
Contributed by Petr Chudoba
Maundy Thursday commemorates
Jesus' last supper with His disciples and the institution
of the Lord's Supper. Holy Thursday is called Maundy Thursday
in English from the old Latin name for the day, "Dies
Mandatum," i.e. "the day of the new commandment".
With this day begins
the so-called Holy Three-Day Period, among the most significant
days of the Church year. This Holy Three-Day Period (Thursday,
Friday and Saturday) was a time of holy obligation all
through the Middle Ages. The Christian people, freed from
servile work, were all present at the impressive ceremonies
of these days. Due to the changed conditions of social
life, however, Urban VIII, in 1642, rescinded this obligation.
Since then the last three days of Holy Week have been
classified as working days, despite the sacred and important
character they bear, which was powerfully stressed by
the renewal of the liturgical order of Holy Week in 1955.
Zelený čtvrtek (Green
Thursday) is how the Czechs and Moravians refer to Maundy
Thursday. One explanation is that in many places, before
the thirteenth century, green vestments were used for
the Mass that day. Another is that this is a reference
to "the Green Ones," the penitents who, being
re-admitted to the Church, wore sprigs of green herbs
to express their joy. The "grün" in the
German name for the day ("Gründonnerstag",
literally Green Thursday) does not derive from the name
of the color but is a corruption of the word "greinen" (weinen,
to weep).
A strict fast used to
be observed on Green Thursday. Because only a single,
meatless, complete meal - free of any food of animal origin
- was allowed, only vegetables were eaten. Thus, Green
Thursday. The eating of green vegetables is still a customary
part of the meals served on this day in many parts of
Europe and, to some extent, in the United States. The
Czechs and Moravians eat a soup of green herbs, followed
by a green salad.
According to another
explanation, Jesus prayed on a green meadow in the Garden
of Gethsemane.
On Zelený čtvrtek in
the Czech Republic, the children must go out very early
in the morning and bathe - naked! - in the river. This
is supposed to be a cure for laziness. And when they come
in, shivering and complaining that theyve just been
made to do something they would be punished for in summer,
when they would enjoy it, the rope-like jidáky are
eaten.
Jidáky are served with honey at breakfast.
These breakfast cakes, made to look like rope, suggest
the fate of Judas Iscariot, who "went and hanged
himself" (Matthew
27:5 NKJV) in remorse after he had identified Jesus to
His enemies.
Before sunrise, the
owners of horses in Slovakia lead them to the river and
into the water to a depth of two feet or so. It is believed
that this will bring the horses good health and sound
feet for the entire year.
It is believed that
the floor and the bedding should be beaten with a willow
blessed on Palm Sunday. The house should also be sprinkled
with holy water from a new pot with a wisp of straw.
In Slovakia, the housewives
diligently sweep around the home, the yard and the street
to ward off
harm to the home for the coming year. During the course
of this Thursday, the women wash the wooden boards upon
which they make noodles. They also wash the rolling pin,
the large wooden mixing spoon and the bowl used for mixing
the dough for bread and koláče.
In the evening of Zelený
čtvrtek in the Czech Republic, the village boys used
to equip themselves with a wooden rattle (řehtačka),
which was specially made for the purpose. They formed
a
group and walked through the village, rattling their rattles
vigorously so the noise could be heard from afar. The
meaning
of the rattling may have been to chase away Judas. The
same procedure would repeat on Good Friday (Velký pátek).
The last rattling day was White Saturday (Bílá sobota),
when the boys didn't just walk through the village, but
stopped at every house in the morning and rattled until
they were given money which they could then split between
themselves. This custom ceased to exist around the beginning
of last century.
The racket they made
served as a substitute for churchbell ringing during Holy
Week, a time when all church bells were believed to have
flown to Rome on Zelený čtvrtek to make
a pilgrimage to the tomb of the Apostles, or to visit
the bishop of Rome to be blessed by him. The bells then
would sleep on the roof of St. Peter's Cathedral until
morning on Bílá
sobota,
when they would return, bringing glad news and colored
eggs.
The men in the countryside
rise at midnight on Zelený čtvrtek and
walk to the nearest brook to wash themselves. They do
this in honor and imitation of Jesus Who - according to
legend - tripped and fell into the Brook Kidron on His
way to His hearing before the high priest.
In the Czech Republic,
the hawthorn tree is supposed to weep on this day. According
to tradition, it is the tree from which the crown of thorns
was fashioned. Of all the plants mentioned as the source
of the torturing crown, none is better known than the
hawthorn. So abundant are its white blossoms in spring
that its long, spiny thorns are hardly noticeable, but
they are capable of inflicting a painful wound and their
sharpness is soon apparent when branches are carelessly
handled.
Sources include: My Czech
Republic (www.myczechrepublic.com)
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