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Showing posts with label Christmas and holiday season. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas and holiday season. Show all posts

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Holiday travelers benefit from spread-out season

As travelers take to the road, air and rail in the last days before Christmas, they should keep one thing in mind: It could be worse.

Steve Kent scoffed at lines Thursday morning at New York's LaGuardia Airport as he got ready to fly to Denver on a family ski trip.

"I don't find it that difficult," he said. "I think Thanksgiving is harder."

The spread-out nature of the end-of-year holidays means travel facilities aren't quite so cramped now as they are on the day before Thanksgiving, when practically everyone who's going somewhere is on the move.

"Unlike the other holiday periods, the year-end holiday travel period is extended," said Troy Green, a spokesman for AAA. "We have a lot of folks who already may have taken off of work. ... They may have arrived at their destination before today."

Green said travel is expected to be up about 3 percent this year, with more than 92 million people planning to go more than 50 miles sometime between now and Jan. 2.

The most densely populated parts of the country are getting a break from the weather.

The rain that pounded California has stopped. And while a snowstorm is making its way across the country, it's not expected to hit the crowded East Coast until the weekend.

That could make for some more treacherous return trips -- but it makes getting there easier.

After last year's record-breaking snow falls in the East, the way weather can mess up travel seems to be on plenty of minds.

At LaGuardia, Mike and Martha Lee Mellis were waiting to fly from New York to Aspen, Colo., with their three young sons.

They were dreading a repeat of last winter's ski trip, when a snowstorm hit while they were transferring in Chicago on their way home.

"We had to return via Philadelphia and I had to rent a car and drive everybody home at 11 at night," Mike Mellis recalled.

His wife had been trying to forget. "I've blocked it all out," she said.


(source:businessweek.com)

Friday, December 24, 2010

A day to offer holiday wishes buoyed by gratitude

Merry  Christmas and happy holidays to all! It has been a wonderful year for the Santa Claus Fund. We are very thankful for all the support we received this year. It has been a pleasant journey, and I look forward to the holidays. They will provide a little down time for me and my volunteers.

There was a lot to do in so short a time. But I have to thank all the volunteers at the North Pole Annex who did a marvelous job.

I want to wish all of the men and women who made those wonderful wooden toys and knitted all those hats, scarves, blankets and mittens, a very Merry  Christmas. Your talent, time and money are a key part of our program. Thank you so much.

I have to thank those Christmas shoppers who bring the toys and drop them off at the Elks lodges. I wish you a merry Christmas too!

Those extra toys often plug the holes in our inventory when we really need them. To those of you who take the time to make these generous donations, I wish you a very Merry Christmas too. Your donations this year are nothing short of a miracle. Thank you so much.

I also wish to send a special thank you and a merry Christmas to our friends at The Times Record. Their support cannot be understated. They allow us to communicate with all of you every day from Thanksgiving to Dec. 31. Their partnership is so important to us, and I appreciate all they do for us.

I am going to keep this short today to meet holiday deadlines. Here are the latest donations: L. Valerie Campbell and Stephen H. Campbell sent $25. Richard and Pauline Harris mailed us $70. Thank you.

We also received a $75 donation from Lief, Kim, Kelsea, Moriah, and Micailah Albertson. They wish to recognize the fantastic teachers and staff at the Bath Middle School and the Phippsburg Elementary School. Thank you, Albertson family.

Today’s total is $170. Our new grand total is $41,773.05. That money will provide lots of toys for local families in need.

To donate to the 2010 campaign, mail checks to: The Santa Claus Fund Inc., P.O. Box 278, Brunswick, ME, 04011.

Thank you everybody. I will be back on Monday.

Merry Christmas To you

I would venture to guess there is not a parent alive who did not,at one time or another depending on the situation, say to one kiddo or another, "I can't wait until you have your own children. Then you'll see!"

When my children were very young one of those times was the annual visit to Santa Claus at G Fox, which not only included a lot of excitement but the annual tear-filled meltdown as they were hoisted onto Santa's lap for the annual picture.

I received this photo from my oldest yesterday of his three daughters, including poor Amelia who clearly was not happy about the situation. I could not help but smile because we have a very similar one of her dad, my son (circa 1972) crying his eyes out as the Jolly Old Elf tried his best to at least get the sobbing to stop long enough for a decent picture.

To all of you with children and family, hold them close and enjoy lots of smiles during the holidays. Time goes by too fast.

And Merry Christmas to readers and best of 2011 to you all. I have appreciated your support, comments, criticism and wonderful stories and good deeds.

P.S. The picture of all the happy kiddos with Claus? Some of my grandchildren who were more than happy to grin during an outing with Nana to Hartford Stage!


(source:courant.com)

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Christmas Morning (short story)

Christmas Morning (short story),
Christmas Morning is a comic but poignant short story by Ireland's Frank O'Connor.
The narrator of the story is Larry Delaney, an Irish boy who appears regularly in O'Connor's stories, and serves as O'Connor's alter ego. Larry is a typical mischievous Irish boy who likes to skip school and runs with a rough crowd. Larry fears that, because of his misbehavior, Santa Claus won't be leaving him any presents for Christmas. His fears are stoked by his mother, who scolds him constantly and compares him unfavorably to his smarter, better-behaved younger brother Sonny. Larry resents his mother, who constantly pushes him to excel at school and frets aloud that he will amount to nothing, like his drunken father.
On Christmas morning, Larry wakes up early and finds that Santa Claus has left only a book in his stocking, while there's nothing but a toy gun in Sonny's. Since Larry has no interest in books, he switches the presents, taking the gun for himself and leaving the book to the more studious Sonny. He imagines that no one but Santa Claus will ever know the difference.
To his horror, his mother sees the difference instantly, and weeps that her son is a thief. In that instant, Larry realizes for the first time that there is no Santa Claus, only an impoverished mother who's been striving vainly to raise a decent son under miserable circumstances. By giving Larry a book, his Mother had been trying to steer him to success and a better life. By shunning the book and stealing the toy gun, Larry has broken his mother's heart, and convinced her that he will become a rotter like his father.

Alternative Christmas message

The Alternative Christmas message is a message broadcast by Channel 4 since 1993, lampooning the Royal Christmas Message of Queen Elizabeth II.

Background

Since 1993, Channel 4 has broadcast an "Alternative Christmas message" featuring a contemporary, often controversial celebrity, delivering a message in the manner of Her Majesty. This tradition started by accident when, running a series of programmes on 'Christmas in New York', the channel invited Quentin Crisp to give an Alternative message - playing on the pejorative term 'Queen' meaning a male homosexual. In contrast to the Queen's message, the alternative lasts only 3 to 5 minutes. The concept seems to date back to a sketch in a Christmas special of The Two Ronnies, where Ronnie Barker delivered a Christmas message from "Your Local Milkman". Examples of recent variations to the Alternative Christmas message proliferate on YouTube.

List of Alternative message presenters

1993 - Quentin Crisp
1994 - Rev Jesse Jackson
1995 - Brigitte Bardot
1996 - Rory Bremner (as Diana, Princess of Wales)
1997 - Margaret Gibney, a Belfast schoolgirl broadcast a plea for peace in Northern Ireland
1998 - Doreen Lawrence and Neville Lawrence, parents of Stephen Lawrence
1999 - Ali G
2000 - Helen Jeffries, mother of a CJD victim
2001 - Genelle Guzman, World Trade Center terrorist attacks survivor
2002 - Sharon Osbourne
2003 - Barry and Michelle Seabourn, a Merseyside couple who appeared on Channel 4 reality show Wife Swap.
2004 - Marge Simpson
2005 - Jamie Oliver
2006 - Khadijah Ravat 
2007 - Major Andrew Stockton, a British soldier who lost his arm fighting in Afghanistan.
2008 - Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, president of Iran 
2009 - Katie Piper, television presenter who underwent surgery after Sulphuric acid was thrown in her face.

2004 Alternative message
Marge Simpson was chosen to give the message due to Channel 4's recent acquisition of rights to broadcast The Simpsons.
In it she commented on David and Victoria Beckham's marriage in a negative comparison with hers and Homer's, and compared the special relationship between the UK and the US to that of Mini Me and Dr. Evil in the Austin Powers films ("Helping out in all our zany schemes to take over the world"). Lisa Simpson also held a banner supporting Cornwall's secession: "UK OUT OF CORNWALL", while chanting Rydhsys rag Kernow lemmyn (Cornish for "freedom for Cornwall now").

2005 Alternative message
The majority of Jamie Oliver's message was in the form of a comedy sketch, where he was a school cook preparing junk food, including "Turkey Twangers", for children. This turned out to be a nightmare, and he awoke to give a message about his wish for the new year being for British children to be fed better. He was chosen to deliver the message following his successful Jamie's School Dinners series. The broadcast also featured actress Jessica Stevenson as a dinnerlady.
For the first time, sister channel E4 broadcast an "alternative to the alternative message", delivered by Avid Merrion, the creation of comedian Leigh Francis from the series Bo' Selecta!.

2006 Alternative message
This message was due to be presented by Khadija Ravat (b. 1973 in Zimbabwe: a British Muslim teacher of Islamic studies who has worn a niqab for ten years.The decision of Channel 4 to have a veiled woman giving the speech is a particularly controversial one due to the media attention that the niqab has received in the UK in 2006.
With regards to the decision, Channel 4 have said that it was fitting that the "alternative Christmas message should be given by a Muslim woman in a year when issues of religious and racial identity and freedom of expression have dominated the news agenda."
The address went out at 3pm, the same time as the Queen's speech on BBC1 and ITV1. Ravat had stated that she would not be watching her own broadcast in favour of watching the one given by the Queen. Her place was taken by another veiled woman, with the first name Khadijah. She was a convert to Islam in 1996 and took up wearing the niqab two years after she converted. She stated during her speech that her great-grandmother was a suffragette.
The alternative Christmas message on E4 was Fonejacker's Christmas Message in which actor Kayvan Novak prank called members of the public. This five-minute broadcast was also a preview of his new series which aired in mid-2007.

2008 Alternative message
The 2008 Christmas message was given by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, President of The Islamic Republic of Iran. The message was given in Persian with English subtitles. In this message Ahmedinejad said that "if Christ were on earth today, undoubtedly he would stand with the people in opposition to bullying, ill-tempered and expansionist powers".The message was considered controversial and received much criticism both before and after its broadcast. Much of the criticism was centred on Ahmadinejad's allegedly anti-semitic and homophobic views. However, the message itself was not regarded as inflammatory and did not make any reference to these two issues. Human Rights campaigner Peter Tatchell called Ahmadinejad a "criminal despot, who ranks with Robert Mugabe, Omar al-Bashir of Sudan and the Burmese military junta as one of the world's most bloody tyrants".

2009 Alternative message
The 2009 Message was delivered by Katie Piper, a former model and television presenter who had featured in an edition of Channel 4's Cutting Edge documentary strand in October 2009. The hour-long documentary, which traced Piper's recovery from an acid attack in March 2008, had received significant viewer attention; it had received the highest viewing figures of any entry in the Cutting Edge strand during 2009, and received the most viewer responses of any Channel 4 show in October 2009. The documentary has since been made available for international broadcast.
The huge response to the Cutting Edge programme led Channel 4 to invite Katie Piper to give 2009's Alternative Christmas Message, which focused on the theme of 'appreciating the beauty in life' and also allowed Piper to reflect on the huge public support she had received following the earlier film. The Message also featured new footage of Piper and her family at home. The Message was produced by Mentorn Media, the production company which had made the earlier programme. Piper's Message was aired at 3pm and repeated at 8.50pm on Christmas Day 2009, the later showing being broadcast following on from a re-airing of Katie: My Beautiful Face. The 3pm screening attracted 500,000 viewers and the 8.50pm broadcast drew 400,000.

2010 Alternative message
The 2010 message will be broadcast as part of One Born At Christmas, a festive special based around Channel 4's hit documentary series One Born Every Minute. One Born At Christmas will be broadcast live in various slots on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and will follow the work of nursing and medical staff and chronicle the experience of parents giving birth over the Christmas period. It is believed that a member of nursing staff will be reading the Alternative Christmas Message as part of the Christmas Day afternoon broadcast, which incorporates the traditional 3pm message slot. It had earlier been erroneously reported that Dino "Dappy" Contostavlos of N-Dubz would be giving the 2010 Message; Channel 4 later clarified that he would be featured in a segment on T4, not giving the main message itself.


(source:wikipedia)

Joulupukki

Joulupukki is a Finnish Christmas figure. The name Joulupukki literally means Yule Goat. The Finnish word "pukki" comes from the Swedish "bock" (equivalent of the English "buck" or "billy-goat") and is an old Scandinavian tradition. Over time, the figure became more or less merged with Santa Claus.
There is a long Finnish tradition of persons dressing in goat costume to solicit or perform for leftover food after Christmas. Historically, such a person was an older man, and the tradition refers to him as a nuuttipukki. The term now also describes the practice, reportedly continuing in some parts of Finland.
Today Joulupukki looks and behaves mostly like his American version, but there are differences. Joulupukki's house and workshop are situated in the mountains of Korvatunturi, whereas the American counterpart resides at the North Pole. Another difference is that instead of sneaking in through the chimney during the late night hours, Joulupukki knocks on the front door during the Christmas Eve celebrations. When he comes in, his first words are traditionally "Onkos täällä kilttejä lapsia?" (Are there (any) well-behaved children here?)
He usually wears warm red clothes, uses a walking stick, and travels in a sleigh pulled by a number of reindeer. Unlike the American version, the reindeer do not fly. In Lapland, pulka rather than a sleigh can be encountered. The popular song "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" in its Finnish translation, Petteri Punakuono, has led to Rudolph's general acceptance in the mythology as Joulupukki's lead reindeer. Joulupukki has a wife, Joulumuori ("Old Lady Christmas"), but tradition doesn't have much to say about her.

Home

Joulupukki lives in Korvatunturi in Finnish Lapland.
Joulupukki's assistants are called tonttu, or more precisely joulutonttu (from Swedish tomte); they are not elves, but essentially human, often dwarflike in character. They usually wear similar attire to Joulupukki's, and males also have a white beard; but joulutonttu are often smaller in size and may be of any age and either gender. While only a rather large, aged person can convincingly dress as Joulupukki, conveniently everyone can dress as a joulutonttu, with less special attire required.

Trivia

The location of Joulupukki's workshop comes from a children's radio show called Markus-sedän lastentunti ("Children's hour with Uncle Markus") hosted by Markus Rautio and broadcast by the Finnish Broadcasting Company between years 1927-1956.
Finland's Joulupukki received over 700,000 letters from children all over the world in 2006, according to a news report by the Finnish Broadcasting Company, YLE.
The US-based Coca-Cola Santa Claus was designed by the son of Finnish emigrants, Haddon Sundblom.
Joulupukki is a prominent character in Rare Exports, a movie based on the award winning shorts by Jalmari Helander.

The origins of Joulupukki

One interesting theory about the origins of Joulupukki and his flying reindeer, comes from the aboriginal Saami people of Lapland. In the forests there is a common poisonous mushroom, Amanita muscaria, that is red with white dots. The Saami shamans used to feed this mushroom to the reindeer, whereby the intestinal tract of the reindeer would filter out the poison, but leave the intoxicating substances. The urine of the reindeer would then be collected and used as a hallucinogenic by the shamans. The shamans would often have out-of-the-body experiences and fly in the sky, returning through the chimney hole of their tent or cottage to their bodies. This shamanistic tradition would explain the flying reindeer, the use of chimneys, and even the red-white colouring of Joulupukki.

Joulupukki's dark side

Pagans used to have festivities to ward off evil spirits. In Finland these spirits of darkness wore goat skins and horns. In the beginning this creature didn't give presents but demanded them. The Yule Goat was an ugly creature and frightened children.
It is unclear how this personality was transformed into the benevolent Father Christmas. Nowadays the only remaining feature is the name. The process was probably a continuous amalgamation of many old folk customs and beliefs from varied sources. One can speak of a Christmas pageant tradition consisting of many personages with roles partly Christian, partly pagan: A white-bearded saint, the Devil, demons, house gnomes. Nowadays the Joulupukki of Finland resembles the American Santa Claus.
Popular radio programs from the year 1927 onwards probably had great influence in reformatting the concept with the Santa-like costume, reindeer and Korvatunturi as its dwelling place. Because there really are reindeer in Finland, and Finns live up North, the popular American cult took root in Finland very quickly.


(source:wikipedia)

Jul

Seden med julgran dök upp i Tyskland under1400-talet. Julgranen placeras
 i mÃ¥nga hem inom den kristna kultursfären under julhelgen,
 rikligt dekorerad med julgransprydnader och
 pynt. Här iDanmark 2004,
Jul är en högtid i slutet av december som firas till minne av Jesu födelse, tidigast känt från år 336. I dag firas dock julen av många med färre religiösa inslag än tidigare. Den officiella svenska julhögtiden börjar den 24 december (julaftonen, aftonen före juldagen) och avslutas den 13 januari (Tjugondag Knut) då "julen dansas ut", även om det på senare tid blivit allt fler som inleder firandet tidigare[källa behövs] och betraktar det som avslutat i och med den sista lediga dagen 6 januari (trettondagen).
Innehåll [göm]

Etymologi 

Ursprunget till ordet jul är ovisst, en populär föreställning är att det kommer från "hjul", men språkforskare anser det vara en myt. Det äldsta belägget för ordet jul kommer från ett fragment Codex Ambrosianus A av den gotiska kalendern som skrevs någon gång på 500- eller 600-talet e.Kr. Fragmentet beskriver slutet på oktober och början på november. Månaden november är överskriven med "Naubaimbair: fruma Jiuleis" vilket kan tolkas som "November: första julmånaden" eller "November: Månaden före jul". Omkring 730 e.Kr skrev Beda venerabilis att anglosaxernas kalender har månaden "geola" eller "giuli" som kan motsvara december eller december och januari. Den 25 december är första dagen på hedningarnas nya år och anglosaxarna firar hela natten till mödragudarnas ära.
Efter kristendomens införande använde germanerna samma ord för firandet av Jesu födelse som man använt på det hedniska firandet. På 1000-talet i England och 1100-talet i Tyskland började man dock kalla det kristna firandet för "Cristes Mæsse" (Kristi mässa), respektive "wîhe nah" (vigda natten). I de nordiska länderna behöll man ordet "jul".
Genom att jämföra olika språk har man rekonstruerat att det urgermanska ordet var *jehwla eller *jxwla (x uttalas här som tyska "ach"). Ordet lånades tidigt in i finskan vars uttal i jämförelse med de germanska språken förändrats mycket litet de senaste 2000 åren, "juhla" betyder där "högtid". Senare har finnarna lånat in ordet en gång till, "joulu" med betydelsen "jul".


Historia 

Tidigt ursprung 
Den persiska guden Mitras födelsedag 
I antikens Persien dyrkades solguden Mitra vid sidan om högguden Ahura Mazda. Genom kulturella kontakter spreds Mitradyrkan till Romarriket där gudsgestalten fick namnet Mithras. I dagens Iran firas Mitras födelsedag den 21 december i samband med den iranska midvinterfesten Shab-e Yalda. I samband med kristendomens spridning i Rom kan persiska traditioner ha influerat tidsbestämmelsen för firandet av Jesus födelse.

Saturnaliefesten 
I antikens Rom hölls i december en fest till guden Saturnus ära, Saturnaliefesten (lat. Saturnalia). Då bytte slavar och herrar roller, man gav varandra presenter och en uppsluppen stämning rådde.

Sol Invictus 

Kristus som Sol Invictus.
Sol Invictus, latin "Den obesegrade solen", var en romersk religion, tillägnad solguden Elagabalus Sol Invictus (jämför gudomen Baal). Romarna höll en festival den 25 december som de kallade Dies Natalis Solis Invicti, "den obesegrade solens födelsedag". På 300-talet byttes högtiden ut mot firandet av Jesu födelse och blev således en kristen högtid, julen.

Den fornnordiska julen

Julblot, jólablót eller midvinterblot, julofferfest, är en högtid i fornnordisk religion. Den exakta tidpunkten för blotet är omstritt. En del menar att det hölls vid vintersolståndet i slutet på december, medan andra menar att det var i mitten av januari. Det senare datumet kommer av att midvintern ansågs infalla 14 januari. Jul (fornnordiska jol) är benämning på den nordiska förkristna midvinterfesten julblot, fornnordiska jólablót eller "midvinterblot". Julblot eller midvinterblot firades vid midvintern då dagarna är som kortast och nätterna som längst, det vill säga kring vintersolståndet. Man tror att firandet av denna dag var en dyrkan av denna egenskap hos dygnet, då det tolkades som ett återuppvaknande av naturen. Julens speciella gud var Jólner, som är ett av Odens många namn.
Begreppet jul förekommer i ett hyllningskväde till Harald Hårfager från omkring år 900, där någon sägs "dricka jul". Vid julblotet, den högtidligaste offerfesten, gjorde man offer, blot, för att få gudarnas välsignelse över den kommande grödan. Julblotet integrerades i den kristna julen.


Kristen anpassning 

Midvinterblot mÃ¥lning av Carl Larsson iNationalmuseets trapphall, mars 2008
Jesu födelse, mÃ¥lning av den nederländske konstnären Gerrit van Honthorst (1590/1592 – 1596).
Jul kallas på nordiska språk samt finska och estniska även den högtid som kristna firar den 25 december till minne av Jesu födelse den 25 december (ett datum som saknar grund i evangelierna, men som valdes av romarna på 300-talet, i samband med kampen mot hedendomen).

Årstiden för Jesu födelse anges inte i evangelierna, men Lukasevangeliet indikerar att årstiden var månaderna då herdarna var ute och vaktade får. Det gjordes under sommarmånaderna, vädret blev kyligare i slutet av oktober och början på november. Men den exakta tidpunkten för Jesu födelse är inte känd.
Liberius fastställde datum för juldagen till den 25 december år 354. Enligt en gammal tolkning av 1 Mos. skapades världen vid vårdagjämningen. Den 25 mars betraktades alltså som Marie bebådelsedag och Kristi födelse beräknades till nio månader därefter, 25 december. Firandet av Jesu födelse ersatte företrädesvis det romerska firandet av solguden som hölls vid midvintern, men även andra hedniska folk i västerländerna firade redan sina egna typer av högtider vid midvinter. Övergången från de gamla folkens traditioner och seder till kristendomen underlättades genom att midvinter redan var en högtid. Ljusets återvändande till jorden efter midvinter har fått symbolisera det andliga tecknet för Jesu födelse. Vintersolståndet infaller nuförtiden något tidigare på grund av ändringar i kalendern.
Den västkristna kyrkan var först med att införa juldagen den 25 december och samtliga länder i väst har denna högtidsdag. Inom den östkristna kyrkan har trettondedag jul, epifania, ofta en starkare ställning än julen. Denna dag firas där till minne av Jesu dop eller hans födelse. Eftersom den kristna julens första helgdag är den 25 december, inleds helgen klockan 18 kvällen innan, därav namnet julafton.

Jultraditioner

Julgran 

Traditionellt julfirande i USA, foto frÃ¥n 1897.
Julgranen är en tradition som tog sin början i Tyskland på 1500-talet. På 1600- och 1700-talet fick granen ljus. När granen kläs är olika i olika länder. Exempelvis sker detta i England i början av december. Att klä granen innebär att man dekorerar den. Dekorationerna varierar från plats till plats och färgas ofta också av familjens egen tradition. I de flesta granar sätts dock ljus, förr stearinljus, numera vanligen elektriska. Färgade glas- eller plastkulor är vanliga.


Julmusik 
I juletider är musik och sång starkt inriktade på jultema. Julskivor spelas in av såväl barnkörer, kyrkokörer och skolkörer som artister och grupper inom pop, rock och dansband.
Nationella traditioner 

Sverige 
 Jul i Sverige


Mat vid julbordet. Olika sorters sill.
Ris à la Malta Ã¤r en efterrätt som ofta äts pÃ¥ juldagen, lagad pÃ¥ resterna av risgrynsgröten.
Julfirandet i Sverige har inslag från hedniska, kristna, nordiska och germanska traditioner från vikingatiden och framåt. I och med Sveriges kristnande kring mitten av 1100-talet började de kristna och hedniska traditionerna blandas. De flesta nutida traditionerna härstammar från 1800-talet och 1900-talet.

I Sverige pågår den kristna julen från julaftons kväll, 24 december, till Tjugondedag Knut den 13 januari. ("Tjugonde dag Knut dansas julen ut".) Enligt kristen synvinkel är den viktigaste tiden den fram till trettondagen, 6 januari, men julen pågår enligt kyrkoåret egentligen till och med Kyndelsmässodagen, 2 februari, ursprungligen, men Svenska Kyrkan har flyttat det till närmast liggande söndag.
I det sekulära svenska samhället firas jul under hela adventstiden med julafton som höjdpunkt och anses av många[källa behövs] avslutad efter mellandagsrean, som vanligtvis tar slut någon gång i januari. I det svenska julfirandet ingår en mängd företeelser. Kring mitten av 1700-talet dök de första klädda granarna upp i Sverige. På 1800-talet blev det allt vanligare med julgran i de borgerliga hemmen och man började importera tyska julgransprydnader. Idag kläs granen oftast dagarna före julafton. I Ersta diakonianstalt i Stockholm började man 1870 att varje söndag i advent tända sju ljus i en gran. 1920-1930 ersattes adventsgranen med adventsljusstaken som har fyra ljus. Denna svenska tradition har sedan spridit sig runt om i världen främst genom möbelföretaget IKEA. Julen är förknippad med Lucia, julklappar, pepparkaksbak och julmat, och man brukar städa, stöpa ljus, stoppa korv, koka knäck och annat julgodis, ta fram julprydnader och klä en gran. På senare år har man i Sverige infört traditionen från katolska länder att fira midnattsmässa under natten mellan julafton och juldagen.
Julklappar började delas ut på 1600-talet. Traditionen bjöd att givaren smög fram till mottagarens dörr som man ljudligt klappade på, slängde in gåvan genom dörren för att sedan springa därifrån - vilket är ursprunget till ordet "julklapp". På 1700-talet började man rimma till paketen vilket är en tradition hämtad från antikens Rom. Under 1700-talet utbredde sig traditionen att det var julbocken som delade ut klapparna. Julbocken var helgonet Sankt Nikolaus följeslagare. Firandet av S:t Nikolaus hade försvunnit i samband med reformationen men julbocken levde vidare som julsymbol. Under 1800-talet blev pepparkakor och glögg en del av den svenska jultraditionen och färgen röd blev viktig. Kring slutet av 1800-talet började Jenny Nyström ge ut kort med en ny typ av tomtar och svenskarna började skicka julkort. Kring mitten av 1900-talet började speciella julfrimärken att ges ut. Vid slutet av 1800-talet påbörjades också den sammanblandning av S:t Nikolaus, julbocken och den svenska gårdstomten som kom att bli jultomten vilken tog över julklappsutdelningen.
Under 1900-talet har först radio och sedan TV fått en betydande roll för julfirandet. 1932 lanserades den första adventskalendern i papp och samma år lanserades den första elektriska adventsljusstaken. 1960 sändes Kalle Anka och hans vänner för första gången på julafton vilket sedan blivit en tradition klockan 15 varje julafton. Samma år slog julstjärnan igenom som julblomma. Senare har även Sagan om Karl-Bertil Jonssons julafton blivit en tradition på TV. 1961 sändes den första julkalendern på TV och det förekommer även en i radion.
Andra traditioner är julskyltningen som, nuförtiden, startar redan i november, annonskampanjer, julmusik, julmat med bland annat julskinka, julbord, lussekatter, julmust och julöl, jultidningar och julstädning.
Jul är i Sverige en familjehögtid. Julen har som en följd av det blivit en pina för somliga människor som är ensamstående eller marginaliserade. I mindre orter är de flesta restaurangerna stängda under julhelgen, även på julafton, trots att det inte är en röd dag. Julen är också en tid då många människor ägnar sig åt välgörenhet . Flera ideella organisationer engagerar sig extra under julen och erbjuder ensamma, hemlösa och socialt utslagna lite julstämning genom att anordna julbord med skänkta livsmedel, kanske åtföljt av lite underhållning.


Dagarna runt jul


Tiden från och med den fjärde söndagen före jul till och med julafton ingår i advent, där söndagarna är markerade som första, andra, tredje och fjärde söndagen i advent.
13 december Lucia
21 december vintersolståndet
(23 december Dan' före dopparedan', lilla julafton, lokal företeelse, ej officiell)
24 december julafton, kallas ibland dopparedagen
25 december juldagen (helgdag)
26 december annandag jul/annandagen (helgdag)
28 december Värnlösa barns dag
6 januari trettondedag jul/trettondagen även kallad epifania (helgdag till minne av de tre vise männen och inom ortodoxa kyrkan även Jesu dop)
13 januari tjugondag Knut (kastas julen ut)
2 februari Kyndelsmässodagen (julen tar slut i kyrkoåret)
I Sverige fanns förr fler helgdagar omkring jul. Tredjedag och fjärdedag jul avskaffades genom förordning 4 november 1772.

Finland 
I Finland firas allmänt lilla jul lördagen före första advent. Dagen har dock ingen officiell status. En viktig tradition i Finland är att julfreden utlyses. Denna tradition kan med säkerhet spåras ända tillbaka till 1300-talet då återkommande perioder av fred utlysta av den katolska kyrkan var en tradition vitt spridd över västeuropa (Treuga Dei) men som bland de sekulära och protestantiska staterna idag bara lever kvar i Finland som en stark tradition. Enligt traditionen började julfreden på Tomasdagen och varade till Tjugondag Knut, brott som begicks under denna tid straffades med dubbelt straff. Idag förkunnas julfreden på julafton då domkyrkans klocka slagit tolv, av stadssekreteraren på balkongen i Brinkala hus vid Gamla Stortorget i Åbo. Texten som läses upp är bevarad som en muntlig tradition från 1600-talet och läses både på finska och svenska.

Kina 
I Kina firas julen främst av de kristna. På senare år har även kineser som är sekulära eller tillhör en annan trosuppfattning än kristendomen börjat uppmärksamma julen, detta gäller framförallt ungdomar och människor i yngre medelåldern bosatta i de stora städerna längs kusten. Julen har blivit en "modern" och "internationell" helg för de unga som de kan skapa egna nya traditioner kring.
Julfirandets genombrott stöter dock på hinder, mest genom konkurrensen från det kinesiska nyåret (infaller i slutet av januari eller början av februari), som är den högtid som mest liknar den västerländska julen, dels genom pyntningen, dels genom att man då har ledigt och familjerna samlas igen.

Liknande festligheter 

Julfirande eller liknande fanns redan bland flera äldre folk. Några sådana fester är judarnas "chanukka" (tempelinvigningsfest), grekernas "chronia" och romarnas saturnalia. Nutidens firande baseras på kombinationer av dessa festligheter. Till exempel härrör traditionen att ge julklappar från romarnas saturnalia och att tända ljus från nordbornas julblot, såväl som den judiska chanukka. Den sistnämnda högtiden är förmodligen upphovet till den nutida skandinaviska traditionen att placera ljusstakar med en rad av ljus (sju, eller flera) i fönstret under december.
Jehovas vittnen tar avstånd från allt julfirande på grund av dess hedniska ursprung.


(Källa:wikipedia)

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Royal Christmas Message

The first televised Christmas Message, broadcast in 1957.,
The Queen's Christmas Message (or King's Christmas Message in the reign of a male monarch) is a broadcast made by the sovereign of the Commonwealth realms to the Commonwealth of Nations each Christmas. The tradition began in 1932 with a radio broadcast by King George V on the British Broadcasting Corporation Empire Service. Today, the message is read by Queen Elizabeth II and broadcast on television, radio, and the Internet via various providers.


History
King George V giving the 1934 Royal Christmas Message,
The idea for a Christmas message from the sovereign to the British Empire was put forward in 1932 by the "founding father" of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Sir John Reith, as a way to inaugurate the Empire Service (now the World Service). That year, King George V read the first Royal Christmas Message; the King was originally hesitant about using the relatively untested medium of radio, but was reassured after a summertime visit to the BBC and agreed to carry out the concept and read the speech from a temporary studio set up at Sandringham House. The broadcast was introduced from Ilmington Manor by 65 year old Walton Handy, a local shepherd, with carols from the church choir and the bells ringing from the town church, and reached an estimated 20 million people in Australia, Canada, India, Kenya, South Africa, and the UK.
While his brother, King Edward VIII abdicated just before his first Christmas as king, King George VI continued his father's Christmas broadcasts; it was in his reading delivered in the opening stages of the Second World War that he uttered the famous lines: "I said to the man who stood at the Gate of the Year."
George's daughter, Queen Elizabeth II, gave her first Christmas message to the Commonwealth of Nations from her study at Sandringham House, at 3:07 PM on 25 December 1952, some 11 months after her father's death. By 1957, the broadcast became televised, and, from then until 1995, was aired exclusively by the BBC; only in 1969 was no message given. The Queen ended this monopoly, however, announcing that the message would, after 1997, be produced and broadcast alternately by the BBC and its main rival, Independent Television News (ITN), with a biennial rotation. It was reported by The Daily Telegraph that this decision was made after the BBC decided to screen an interview with Diana, Princess of Wales, on its current affairs programme Panorama.

Broadcast

The message typically combines a chronicle of that year's major events, with specific focus on the British Empire originally and later the Commonwealth of Nations, with the sovereign's own personal milestones and feelings on Christmas. It is one of the few instances when the sovereign speaks publicly without advice from any ministers of the Crown in any of the monarch's realms. Planning for each year's address begins months earlier, when the monarch establishes a theme and appropriate archival footage is collected and assembled; the actual speech is recorded a few days prior to Christmas.
In the United Kingdom and on the Internet, broadcast of the Queen's Christmas message is embargoed until 3:00 PM GMT. In other parts of the Commonwealth, the message is first broadcast in New Zealand at 6:50 PM local time by Television New Zealand, in Australia by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation at 7:20 PM local time, and in Canada by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation at noon local time.


Messages

1930s

King George V 1932 Written by Rudyard Kipling, the speech touched on the advance of technology that permitted the King to deliver an intimate message to all parts of the world, as well as mentioning the need for work towards peace and counselling listeners to aim for "prosperity without self-seeking."
1935 The speech mentioned the King's 25th anniversary of his accession and his place as a personal link between his peoples, as well as the marriage of his son, Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and the death of his sister, Princess Victoria.


King George VI 1936 No Christmas message was broadcast this year as King Edward VIII abdicated the throne just weeks prior to Christmas.
1937 In his first broadcast as king, George thanked the Empire for its support during his first year on the throne.
1938 No message was delivered.
1939 The outbreak of World War II firmly established the Royal Christmas Message; the King spoke live from Sandringham House to offer a message of reassurance, and used a portion of the poem God Knows by Minnie Louise Haskins.


1940s

King George VI 1941 The King focussed on our "one great family," stating: " in serving each other and in sacrificing for our common good that we are finding our true life."
1942 The King focussed on "the family circle".
1945 The King focussed on "the family of the British Commonwealth and Empire," saying: "Wherever you are, serving in our wide, free Commonwealth of Nations, you will always feel at home. Though severed by the long sea miles of distance, you are still in the family circle."
1946 King George VI reviews the privations of the war years, the difficulties of postwar adjustment, and adds words of encouragement to his subjects.
1949 The King reassured people of his recovery from illness and expressed his gratitude to the United States of America for its sympathy and help in Britain's effort towards recovery.


1950s

King George VI 1951 King George VI's final Christmas message was the only broadcast that he pre-recorded, because of illness. He spoke of his recovery and the goodwill messages he had received: "From my peoples in these islands and in the British Commonwealth and Empire – as well as from many other countries – this support and sympathy has reached me and I thank you now from my heart..."
Queen Elizabeth II 1952 Her first Christmas message, from the same desk and chair used by her father and grandfather before her, the Queen spoke of carrying on the tradition passed on to her. This message, and the ones until 1957, were also broadcast in sound only on television in the United Kingdom.
1953 This message was broadcast from Auckland, New Zealand, during the Queen's 1953-1954 royal tour of the Commonwealth. Her Majesty finished her broadcast with a note of sympathy to those affected by the Tangiwai disaster the night before.
1954 The Queen broadcast this message from Sandringham House at the end of a year in which she and her husband, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, had travelled around the world.
1955 Broadcast live from her study at Sandringham House, the Queen's theme was the opportunities arising from membership of the Commonwealth of Nations. With the launch of ITV in the UK, the sound-only television broadcast was simulcast on both ITV and the BBC Television Service from this year on.
1956 The Duke of Edinburgh spoke from HMY Britannia during a voyage around the Commonwealth before the Queen made her speech live from Sandringham House.
1957 This year's message, read from the Long Library at Sandringham House, was the first to be televised and was also the 25th Christmas broadcast on radio.
1958 The reading, coming from the Long Library at Sandringham House, focused on some of the journeys soon to be made around the Commonwealth by the Queen and members of the Royal Family.
1959 The Queen pre-recorded this Christmas message as she was pregnant with her third child, Prince Andrew, who was born the following February.


1960s

Queen Elizabeth II 1960 The Queen spoke from Buckingham Palace and described an eventful year in which she gave birth to Prince Andrew; her sister, Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, married Anthony Armstrong-Jones; and Nigeria gained its independence while remaining part of the Commonwealth. The disasters to which The Queen alluded included that year's earthquake in Morocco; the deaths of protesters in Sharpeville, South Africa; and an explosion in Six Bells Colliery near Aberbeeg Monmouthshire.
1961 The Queen mentioned her six-week tour of India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Iran, as well as her visit to the Vatican City.
1962 The speech from Buckingham Palace referred to recent successes in space, including the launch of Telstar, which made it possible to broadcast television, images, and news around the world almost instantly.
1963 The Queen reverted to a message delivered by radio, as she was pregnant with her fourth child, Prince Edward. This year saw the John F. Kennedy assassination.
1964 Elizabeth addressed the important role of the Commonwealth in a year in which anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela was jailed in South Africa and Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru died.
1965 The address from Buckingham Palace took as its theme the family, from the individual unit to the family of man.
1966 The Queen spoke about the increasingly prominent and important role played by women in society. This year saw the Aberfan disaster, in which 144 people were killed after the collapse of a colliery spoil tip onto the Welsh village of Aberfan.
1967 Elizabeth spoke of Canada's centenary of its confederation and her five weeks tour of the country to mark the event, and also mentioned her knighting of Sir Francis Chichester. The message, filmed at Buckingham Palace, was the first to be shown in colour.
1968 This year's Christmas message, which came from Buckingham Palace and had a theme of brotherhood, included mention of civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination.
1969 No Christmas address was given by the Queen, as Elizabeth felt that, between the investiture of her son, Prince Charles, as Prince of Wales and the release of the documentary Royal Family, she had had enough coverage on television; concern expressed by the public prompted Her Majesty to issue a statement that assured a return to tradition in 1970.


1970s

Queen Elizabeth II 1970 Once again televised, the speech recounted some of the trips made by the Queen during the year; it included film shot in Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
1971 Focusing on the theme of families, the television version showed Prince Andrew and Prince Edward looking at a family photograph album.
1972 The production included scenes from the celebration of the Queen's 25 years of marriage to Prince Philip and Elizabeth mentioned the violence in Northern Ireland, as well as the preparations for Britain to join the European Economic Community.
1973 Interspersed with footage of the Queen giving her oration was film shot during the wedding of the Queen's daughter, Princess Anne, to Mark Phillips.
1974 In a more sombre tone, the Christmas message alluded to problems such as the continuing violence in Northern Ireland and the Middle East, that year's famine in Bangladesh, and the floods in Brisbane, Australia.
1975 Broadcast from the gardens of Buckingham Palace, it was the first time the message had been recorded outdoors, and acknowledged a year of record inflation and unemployment in the UK and worldwide.
1976 To mark America's bicentenary, the Queen and Prince Philip undertook a state visit to the United States of America; that visit, and the theme of reconciliation after disagreements, formed the focus of the message.
1977 The Queen recalled the year's celebrations for her Silver Jubilee, and expressed hope for reconciliation in Northern Ireland, where she had visited in August for the first time in 11 years.
1978 The future was the subject selected by Queen Elizabeth, with the broadcast including footage of the Queen with her new grandson, Peter Phillips, and Princess Anne, as well as recordings of earlier broadcasts going back to King George V.
1979 1979 was the Year of the Child, and the Christmas message addressed the theme of children and young people. It was a year that saw hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing Cambodia following the disastrous rule of the Khmer Rouge, as well as the assassination of The Earl Mountbatten of Burma by the Provisional Irish Republican Army. In this broadcast, Ceefax was used for the first time providing subtitles for the hard of hearing.

1980s

Queen Elizabeth II 1980 The message, which attracted a record 28 million viewers in the United Kingdom, reflected on celebrations for the 80th birthday of Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother, and addressed the theme of service in its many forms.
1981 The speech was broadcast from the terrace behind Buckingham Palace and marked the International Year of Disabled People, in which the courage and needs of the disabled came to prominence.
1982 Marking the 50th anniversary of the first Christmas message, the Queen delivered this year's at the library of Windsor Castle, for the first time. The theme was "the sea", in a year in which British troops fought in the Falklands War in the South Atlantic Ocean.
1983 At the beginning of the electronic age, the Christmas oration discussed new possibilities for co-operation within the Commonwealth of Nations permitted by modern technologies. The Queen mentioned a visit to Bangladesh and India that year, in which Her Majesty met Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, invested Mother Teresa into the Order of Merit, and attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in New Delhi.
1984 The message was the lessons which adults could learn from children, with film featuring the christening of the Queen's fourth grandchild, Prince Harry.
1985 Queen Elizabeth spoke of the earthquake that struck Mexico City, the volcanic eruption in Columbia, famine in Africa, and the Air India crash off the coast of Ireland, though the message focused on the good news stories of the year, as the Queen praised remarkable public achievements to footage of investitures and the presentation of awards.
1986 David Attenborough, as he would until 1991, produced the Christmas message broadcast, which in 1986 was filmed in the Royal Mews at Buckingham Palace and stressed society's responsibility towards children.
1987 The Queen mentioned the Remembrance Day bombing in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, and stressed the importance of tolerance and forgiveness.
1988 Along with added references to the Clapham Junction rail crash, the Lockerbie disaster, and the Armenian earthquake that all occurred after the main broadcast was recorded, the Queen reflected on three important anniversaries: the 400th of the Spanish Armada, the 300th of the arrival in Britain of King William and Queen Mary of Orange, and the 200th of the founding of Australia.
1989 The Queen read part of her Christmas speech from a podium on the stage at the Royal Albert Hall, recorded at a special gala occasion held there, meaning that, for the first time, an audience heard the speech prior to its international airing.


1990s
Monarch Year On Notes
Queen Elizabeth II 1990 BBC Elizabeth paid tribute to the role of the armed services in the context of imminent war in the Persian Gulf.
1991 BBC The message reflected on the enormous changes taking place across eastern Europe and Russia, and the importance of democratic traditions.
1992 BBC The Christmas speech came one month after the fire destroyed part of Windsor Castle; the Queen addressed the importance of personal fortitude, as embodied by members of the armed services undertaking difficult peacekeeping duties, and Leonard Cheshire, who died that year.
1993 BBC The Queen praised the achievements of volunteers working for peace and the relief of others.
1994 BBC Reflecting on past and present peace efforts, Elizabeth remarked on her attendance at the ceremonies marking the 50th anniversary of the Normandy Landings and her state visit to Russia.
1995 BBC Beginning with a reminder of the 50th anniversary of VE-Day and VJ-Day, the Queen stated that remembrance was an important part of life, and paid tribute to those who had served and those who had not returned. She then turned to present-day conflicts, such as the Bosnian War, in which Commonwealth forces were serving, to the full year of peace in Northern Ireland, and referred to her Buckingham Palace invitation to voluntary workers working throughout the world. The work of Sister Ethel, a nun helping children in the townships of South Africa, was picked out by Elizabeth, who ended by paying tribute to peacemakers throughout the world.
1996 BBC The Queen spoke of her trips to Poland, the Czech Republic, and Thailand, as well as the visit to the UK by South African President Nelson Mandela, with an overall theme of hope for the future.
1997 ITN The first Christmas message produced by Independent Television News, as well as the first to be published on the Internet, it opened with contrasting pictures of Westminster Abbey, which the Queen reminded viewers had that year been the scene of the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales, as well as the celebration of Elizabeth's golden wedding anniversary, speaking of the joy of her married life. The Queen then reminded viewers of her trips to Canada, India, and Pakistan, and of the return of Hong Kong to China, before paying tribute to the Commonwealth prime minister's gathering. In conclusion, Her Majesty welcomed the imminent devolution of power to Scotland and Wales, and spoke of the benefits of being a United Kingdom.
1998 ITN The message focused on lessons that could be learnt by different generations from each other, and the broadcast included film of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, visiting the Field of Remembrance at Westminster Abbey, the Queen at Ypres and in Paris, and the reception for the Prince of Wales' 50th birthday.
1999 BBC The Queen expressed her looking forward to the start of a new century and a new millennium, as well as at the lessons of history. The broadcast, filmed in the White Drawing Room of Windsor Castle, featured footage of a reception for young achievers at Holyrood Palace, and a reception for members of the emergency services at Buckingham Palace.

2000s

Queen Elizabeth II 2000 BBC The Queen used her Christmas broadcast to reflect on the true start of the new millennium and the role of faith in communities. The broadcast included film of that year's visit to Australia.
2001 ITN Elizabeth, in this speech which she described as "my 50th Christmas message to you", referred to the unusual number of trials and disasters that year, alluding to the foot-and-mouth disease outbreak and the September 11 attacks; viewers saw the occasion when the American national anthem was played at the changing of the guard. Her Majesty then spoke of the importance of faith when drawing strength in troubled times, and paid tribute to those who work for others in the community.
2002 ITN The Queen made her 50th Christmas broadcast.
2003 BBC The opening of this message was recorded at the Household Cavalry barracks in Windsor. With many members of Commonwealth armed forces on foreign deployments, the Queen encouraged the audience, which included 10 million in the UK, to think of those not with their families at Christmas, and paid tribute to the work they had done to bring peace. She also spoke of the importance of teamwork and of what she had learned when presenting the new Queen's Golden Jubilee Award for Voluntary Service in the Community.
2004 BBC Opening with footage of Her Majesty handing out presents to her own family, and interlaced with coverage of The Queen, The Duke of Edinburgh, and the Prince of Wales attending various multicultural meetings, Her Majesty and the Duke of Edinburgh visiting a Sikh gurudwara and the Prince of Wales visiting a Muslim school in east London, the theme of the message was cultural and religious diversity and the benefits of tolerance. The message was warmly received by leaders of Britain's Muslim ans Sikh communities, though also denounced by Stuart Millson in Right Now! In a break from tradition, Her Majesty also sent a separate radio Christmas message to UK troops, which was broadcast by the British Forces Broadcasting Service.
2005 ITN The Queen reflecting on such tragedies as the Indian Ocean tsunami, Hurricane Katrina, the earthquake in Kashmir, and the bombings in London; she praised as "quite remarkable" the humanitarian responses from people of all faiths. Although the message was on the whole well received, there was comment in UK national newspapers on the absence of any mention of the wedding of Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles, with some[who?] describing it as a "snub".
2006 ITN The speech, available for the first time on the Internet and for download as a podcast, was about the relationship between the generations and how young and old could come together to strengthen their communities, with strong references to the inclusion of Muslims and other faiths into mainstream society.
2007 BBC The 2007 message began with the introductory remarks from the 1957 Christmas message shown on a television and the Queen standing beside it. The theme centred on the family, including Jesus' birth into a family under unfavourable circumstances, and the Queen spoke about the common duty to care for the vulnerable in society. Footage of the Royal Marines in Afghanistan, as well as a military memorial, were shown, accompanied by commentary about the work of troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. The message ended with a black and white clip of "God Save the Queen" from the original 1957 broadcast and an image of the British royal standard.
2008 BBC The Queen's Message was broadcast in high-definition.
2009 ITN The Queen reflected on the role of Commonwealth armed forces serving in Afghanistan.

Similar messages elsewhere

The leaders of other countries have adopted the tradition of a message at Christmas, including the King of Sweden, the Queen of the Netherlands, and the President of Germany. Others have modified the practice by issuing a statement to coincide with the New Year; this is done by the Governors-General of Canada and New Zealand, the Queen of Denmark, the Presidents of Finland, Hungary, and Italy, as well as the Chancellor of Germany. The Prime Minister of Malaysia also makes his speech not only on this occasion but also on the night of Hari Raya Aidilfitri and on the eve of its independence day. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong also makes his speech on his birthday in June. In the past, the Governor of Hong Kong, as the representative of the British monarch, played this role; the tradition was carried on by the Chief Executive upon the territory's handover to the People's Republic of China in 1997.

See also



(source:wikipedia)