1 / 15

Malslenitsa =butter

Malslenitsa =butter. By: Gabriela Vargas and Lizbeth Salgado . Malslenitsa week A.K.A. The Pancake Week. Malslenitsa is celebrated…. -On the Last week before the Great Lent (In the winter getting close to the spring time) -It is introduced with a song -It is celebrated for a whole week

tanner
Download Presentation

Malslenitsa =butter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Malslenitsa=butter By: Gabriela Vargas and Lizbeth Salgado

  2. Malslenitsa week A.K.A. The Pancake Week • Malslenitsa is celebrated…. -On the Last week before the Great Lent (In the winter getting close to the spring time) -It is introduced with a song -It is celebrated for a whole week -Petrushka is the common thing to watch at this festival -there is no exact time that it started

  3. Monday • Children and adults built a Malslenitsa Doll out of straw and old clothing and hang them on a pole • They dance at the Khorovods(circle dance and singing involved). • They put the doll they made at the top of the hill and often slide them down the hill

  4. Tuesday • The children will slide down the ice hill and eat Russian pancakes known as Blini • While they are doing that, the single guys try to find their soul mate. Because most guys find a girl there, there is a big opportunity of the couples getting married on the KrasnayaGorkaa.k.a. the Red Hill Holiday, which is a Sunday after Easter.

  5. Wednesday • The day where everyone eats pancakes • Some examples of the type of pancakes they eat are buckwheat, barley, and rye; however, the original way was making the pancakes with oats.

  6. Thursday • People usually physically fight • After this day, all work is prohibited for the rest of the week • Men play a game name mock war game and would need to be able to defend snow fortresses. • People used to go in circles horse back riding around the settlement.

  7. Friday • On this day, the son in law will get treated to pancakes by the mother in law • The men that found a girlfriend on Tuesday, would visit the mother of the women. • People that have not yet found someone would just take a walk in Moscow’s parks • This was a day to be with family.

  8. Saturday • This is the day that people visit their relatives and eat a lot of pancakes • The pancakes represent the sun and they believe that the pancakes will help them receive energy • Family day once again

  9. Sunday • It is the last day for visiting the relatives and ask for forgiveness • They usually sing “Farwell Maslenitsa.” • They burn the Maslenitsa Dolls to represent the end of Winter • After the dolls are burned, people would step over the fire to mark the ending of the festivities

  10. Lady Maslenitsa • After Lady Maslenitsa gets burned, her ashes are thrown on the soil to fertilize it. This shows that Lent has begun. • The Lady Maslentisa is made of straw and clad in bright-colored garments. This the center of the celebration. • The song they sing is… “Wednesday and Friday Maslenitsa’s gone away. Lent sneaked up behind her And pulled of her tail!”

  11. Video on Maslenitsa • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8xZ1d0litU

  12. Traditions/History • Traditionally, people do not eat meat, dairy products, and eggs. • The holiday begins with a song on the snow sapped hills • The pancakes are believed that the energy they receive is coming from the pagan gods. • Because the sun god they worshipped, Yarylo, was believed to be vanished in the winter, they used the Russian pancakes to symbolize the sun. (golden, round, and warm) • Russians began this holiday in Suzdal, Vladimir, Rostov, and Veliky Novgorod, but was then spread throughout all of Russia.

  13. Traditions/ history (continued) • Each blini is made differently based on the recipe that is passed on from generation to generation. • The jelly on the pancakes was believed to be used by a hungry traveler that left the jelly to toast creating the first blini • Many immigrants get to eat pancakes first to recognize there deceased relatives. • Because Russians eat pancakes all week, they eat the pancakes with other things such as mushrooms, meat, jam, sour cream, onions and potatoes, fish, etc.

  14. Pagan/ folk • The Pagans used to use this on the vernal equinox day (the day the sun crosses the equator= day and night of equal length.) this is usually around March 20th or 21st. • The Christians, however, celebrated this holiday as a way of celebrating before lent.

  15. Resources Used http://russiapedia.rt.com/of-russian-origin/maslenitsa/ http://russiapedia.rt.com/of-russian-origin/blini/ http://www.moscow-russia-insiders-guide.com/maslenitsa.html http://www.advantour.com/russia/holidays/maslenitza.htm http://voiceofrussia.com/2010/02/08/4252703/ http://www.moscow-russia-insiders-guide.com/maslenitsa.html http://www.scn.org/russfolk/maslenitsa.htm

More Related