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Mother's Day is a day
Honouring mothers, celebrated on
various days in many places
around the world. Mothers often
receive gifts on this day.
History
Different countries celebrate
Mother's Day on various days of
the year because the day has a
number of different origins.
One school of thought claims
this day emerged from a custom
of mother worship in ancient
Greece, which kept a festival to
Cybele, a great mother of Greek
gods. This festival was held
around the Vernal Equinox around
Asia Minor and eventually in
Rome itself from the Ides of
March (15 March) to 18 March.
The ancient Romans also had
another holiday, Matronalia,
that was dedicated to Juno,
though mothers were usually
given gifts on this day.
In some countries the
Mother's Day began not as a
celebration for individual
mothers but rather for
Christians.
Mothering
Sunday in Britain & Ireland
Mothering Sunday, also called
"Mothers' Day" in the United
Kingdom and Ireland falls on the
fourth Sunday of Lent (exactly
three weeks before Easter
Sunday). It is believed to have
originated from the 16th century
Christian practice of visiting
one's mother church annually,
which meant that most mothers
would be reunited with their
children on this day. Most
historians believe that young
apprentices and young women in
servitude were released by their
masters that weekend in order to
visit their families. As a
result of secularization, it is
now principally used to
celebrate and give thanks for
mothers, although it is still
recognized in the historical
sense by some churches, with
attention paid to Mary the
mother of Jesus as well as the
traditional concept 'Mother
Church'.
Mothering Sunday can fall at
earliest on March 1st (in years
when Easter Day falls on March
22nd) and at latest on April 4th
(when Easter Day falls on April
25th).
Mother's Day in the United
States
The United States celebrate
Mother's Day on the second
Sunday in May. In the United
States, Mother's Day was loosely
inspired by the British day and
was imported by social activist
Julia Ward Howe after the
American Civil War. However, it
was intended as a call to unite
women against war. In 1870, she
wrote the Mother's Day
Proclamation as a call for peace
and disarmament. Howe failed in
her attempt to get formal
recognition of a Mother's Day
for Peace. Her idea was
influenced by Ann Jarvis, a
young Appalachian homemaker who,
starting in 1858, had attempted
to improve sanitation through
what she called Mothers' Work
Days. She organized women
throughout the Civil War to work
for better sanitary conditions
for both sides, and in 1868 she
began work to reconcile Union
and Confederate neighbors. In
parts of the United States it is
customary to plant tomatoes
outdoors after Mother's Day (and
not before).
When Jarvis died in 1907, her
daughter, named Anna Jarvis,
started the crusade to found a
memorial day for women. The
first such Mother's Day was
celebrated in Grafton, West
Virginia, on 10 May 1908, in the
church where the elder Ann
Jarvis had taught Sunday School.
Grafton is the home to the
International Mother's Day
Shrine. From there, the custom
caught on — spreading eventually
to 45 states. The holiday was
declared officially by some
states beginning in 1912. In
1914 President Woodrow Wilson
declared the first national
Mother's Day, as a day for
American citizens to show the
flag in honor of those mothers
whose sons had died in war.
Nine years after the first
official Mother's Day,
commercialization of the U.S.
holiday became so rampant that
Anna Jarvis herself became a
major opponent of what the
holiday had become. Mother's Day
continues to this day to be one
of the most commercially
successful U.S. occasions.
According to the National
Restaurant Association, Mother's
Day is now the most popular day
of the year to dine out at a
restaurant in the United States.
Mother's
Day in various parts of the
world
In most countries, Mother's
Day is a new concept copied from
western civilization. In many
African countries, the idea of
one Mother's Day has its origins
in copying the British concept,
although there are many
festivals and events celebrating
mothers within the many diverse
cultures on the African
continent that have been there
centuries before the colonials
arrived. In most of East Asia,
Mother's Day is a heavily
marketed and commercialized
concept copied straight from
Mother's Day in the USA.
Mother's Day is celebrated on
different days throughout the
world.
Mother's Day in various
regions:
|
Day |
|
|
Second Sunday in
February |
Norway |
|
Shevat 30 (falls
anywhere between
January 30 and
March 1) |
Israel |
|
March 3 |
Georgia |
|
March 8 |
Afghanistan,
Albania*,
Armenia,
Azerbaijan,
Belarus,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Bulgaria,
Laos,
Macedonia*,
Mongolia*,
Montenegro,
Romania*,
Russia*,
Serbia,
Ukraine. *In
Albania, Belarus,
Bulgaria, Guyana, Italy,
Macedonia, Mongolia, and
Russia it is observed as
International Women's
Day, not
specifically Mothers'
day. |
|
Fourth Sunday in
Lent (Mothering Sunday
-
March 2 in 2008) |
Ireland,
Nigeria,
United Kingdom |
|
March 21 (first day of spring) |
Bahrain,
Egypt,
Iraq,
Jordan,
Kuwait,
Oman,
Lebanon,
Palestine,
Qatar,
Saudi Arabia,
Sudan,
Syria,
United Arab Emirates,
Yemen (All
Arab countries in
general) |
|
March 25 |
Slovenia |
|
April 7 |
Armenia |
|
Baisakh
Amavasya (Mata
Tirtha Aunsi) |
Nepal |
|
First Sunday in May |
Hungary,
Lithuania,
Portugal,
Spain |
|
May 8 |
Albania (Parents'
Day),
South Korea(Parents'
Day). |
|
May 10 |
El Salvador,
Guatemala,
Mexico |
Second Sunday in May
|
Anguilla,
Aruba,
Australia,
Austria,
Bahamas,
Bangladesh,
Barbados,
Belgium,
Belize,
Bermuda,
Bonaire,
Brazil,
Brunei,
Bulgaria,
Canada,
Chile,
China,
Colombia,
Croatia,
Cuba,
Curaçao,
Cyprus,
Czech Republic,
Denmark,
Ecuador,
Estonia,
Finland,
Germany,
Ghana,
Greece,
Grenada,
Honduras,
Hong Kong,
Iceland,
India,
Italy,
Jamaica,
Japan,
Latvia,
Malta,
Malaysia,
Myanmar,
The Netherlands,
New Zealand,
Pakistan,
Peru,
Philippines,
Puerto Rico,
Singapore,
Slovakia,
South Africa,
St. Lucia,
Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines,
Suriname,
Switzerland,
Taiwan,
Trinidad and Tobago,
Turkey,
Ukraine,
United States,
Uruguay,
Venezuela,
Zimbabwe |
|
May 26 |
Poland |
|
May 27 |
Bolivia |
|
last Sunday in May |
Algeria,
Dominican Republic,
France (except if it
coincides with
Pentecost day, in
which case Mother's Day
will be shifted to the
first Sunday of June),
Haiti,
Mauritius,
Morocco,
Sweden,
Tunisia. |
|
May 30 |
Nicaragua |
|
June 1 |
Mongolia (The
Mothers and Children's
Day. Mongolia is the
only country that
celebrates Mother's day
twice a year.) |
|
2nd Sunday of
June |
Luxembourg |
|
Last Sunday of June |
Kenya |
|
August 12 |
Thailand (the
birthday of Queen
Sirikit Kitiyakara) |
|
August 15 (Assumption Day) |
Antwerp (Belgium),
Costa Rica |
|
Second Monday in
October |
Malawi |
|
October 14 |
Belarus |
|
Third Sunday in
October |
Argentina (Día de
la Madre) |
|
Last Sunday of
November |
Russia |
|
December 8 |
Panama |
|
16 December, Iranian
calendar: 25
Azar (Mother And
Child Foundation) |
Iran (This date is
almost deprecated inside
Iran and is replaced by
birthdate of
Fatimah daughter of
Islam prophet.) |
|
December 22 |
Indonesia |
|

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