By Dana Shanberg
You can read about Prague Easter celebrations on our
Easter in Prague pages and get a
historical perspective of Czech Easter in articles contributed to us by
Petr Chudoba.
When I was growing up in Czechoslovakia in the years before 1989, the
meaning of Easter (
Velikonoce - from
Veliké noci or Great
Nights) was limited to the welcoming of spring. The religious connotations
of Easter were suppressed under the communist regime. Nowadays, Czechs are
again aware of the strong Christian background of Easter, but Easter has not
become a serious religious holiday.
Easter in the Czech Republic is a fun time. Many traditions are still
observed and practiced, especially in villages, and different regions may
have their own Easter traditions and customs.
Many Czech Easter symbols are related to spring and the beginning of new
life. Some of the best known are:
The
hand-painted or otherwise decorated egg (kraslice) is the most
recognizable symbol of Czech Easter. Girls decorate Easter eggs to give them
to boys on Easter Monday. There are many Easter egg decorating techniques
and the more elaborate ones require a certain level of skill. Different
materials can be used, such as bee's wax, straw, watercolors, onion peels,
picture stickers. There are no limitations to creating pretty, colorful
eggs.
A nationwide Easter egg contest is held in Prague and other Czech cities
around Easter time.
Young, live pussywillow twigs are thought to bring health and youth to
anyone who is whipped with them. An Easter pomlázka (from
pomladit or "make younger") is a braided whip made from pussywillow
twigs. It has been used for centuries by boys who go caroling on Easter
Monday and symbolically whip girls on the legs. In the past, pomlázka
was also used by the farmer's wife to whip the livestock and everyone in the
household, including men and children. There would be no Czech Easter
without the pomlázka.
Boys used to make their own pomlázkas in the past (the more twigs,
the more difficult it was to braid one), but this tradition and skill is
long gone and pomlázkas can be bought in stores and street stands.
Some men don't even bother and use a single twig or even a wooden spoon!
One Easter tradition is to bake a lamb. In the Czech Republic, real lamb is
usually replaced with one made from gingerbread.
Dousing a girl with water has a similar symbolic meaning as the pomlázka.
Red and other bright colors symbolize health, joy, happiness and new life
that comes with the spring.
The following is based on my experience of Easter in the Northern Moravia
region.
Children finish school on Ugly Wednesday (Škaredá
středa), which is a good idea because they need to spend some serious
time on making Easter what it should be. In the evening of
Green Thursday (Zelený čtvrtek),
every boy in the village equips himself with a wooden rattle (řehtačka),
which is specially made for the purpose, the boys form a group and walk
through the village, rattling their rattles vigorously, so the noise can be
heard from afar. The meaning of the rattling is to chase away Judas. The
same procedure repeats on Good Friday (Velký
pátek) and one more time on White Saturday
(Bílá sobota) when the boys don't only walk through the village but
stop at every house in the morning and rattle until they're given money,
which they then split between themselves.
Easter Sunday (Neděle velikonoční)
is a day of preparations for Easter Monday. Girls paint, color and decorate
eggs if they haven't done so already, and boys prepare their pomlázkas!
In my family, decorating Easter eggs is a simple affair: dip some hardboiled
eggs in water filled with boiled onion peels and then place store-bought
Easter stickers on the eggs.
Easter Monday (Pondělí velikonoční)
is a day off, the day of the pomlázka.
The origin of the pomlázka tradition (pomlázka meaning
both the whip and the tradition itself) dates back to pagan times. Its
original purpose and symbolic meaning is to chase away illness and bad
spirits and to bring health and youth for the rest of the year to everyone
who is whipped with the young pussywillow twigs. Boys would whip girls
lightly on the legs and possibly douse them with water, which had a similar
symbolic meaning. An Easter carol, usually asking for an egg or two, would
be recited by the boy while whipping. The girl would then reward the boy
with a painted egg or candy and tie a ribbon around his pomlázka.
As the boys progressed through the village, their bags filled up with eggs
and their pomlázkas were adorned with more and more colorful
ribbons.
This tradition is still largely upheld, especially in villages and small
towns, although it may have lost its symbolism and romance and is now
performed mainly for fun. Some boys and men seem to have forgotten that the
whipping is supposed to be only symbolic and girls don't always like that.
The reward has also changed - money and shots of plum brandy (slivovice)
are often given instead of or in addition to painted eggs and candy. So by
early afternoon, groups of happy men can be seen staggering along the
roads... All that aside, Easter remains one of the most joyful holidays on
the Czech calendar.
Happy Easter! - Veselé Velikonoce!
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