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This succession of two long weekends is rather nice, yes. Legolas Send a noteboard - 28/05/2012 01:41:05 AM
Although of course only the Thursday of Ascension is an actual public holiday, the Friday is taken off by many people, institutions and companies too, and then the weekend of the week after is Pentecost with the Monday off.

In here we have Easter Monday, Ascension, Pentecost Monday, Mary's Ascension on August 15th, All Saints and then Christmas Day - though few people work on either Christmas Eve (at least not in the afternoon) or Boxing Day, either.

However, religious holidays of other formally recognized religions are accepted, too - just not as official public holidays, I guess, in the sense that only companies or institutions with primarily or exclusively employees of the religion in question will be closed, and in the sense that Muslim or Jewish employees wishing to work on Christian public holidays will have a rather hard time doing that in their office or usual workplace.

This country definitely doesn't have separation of church and state in a very strict way... we (and most other European countries) just violate it in entirely different ways than the US does, is all. Although I have to admit that the state paying the wages of priests/rabbis/imams is a fairly extreme violation of said separation, alright...
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For Our Nordmenn: What Happens to Federal Religious Holidays in the Absence of a State Church? - 27/05/2012 01:33:20 PM 1338 Views
Nothing, they are federal holidays still because of strong unions, not religion - 27/05/2012 06:58:52 PM 751 Views
Hypocrisy FTW, eh? - 27/05/2012 11:04:38 PM 884 Views
No. - 27/05/2012 11:16:11 PM 712 Views
Nothing. - 27/05/2012 07:03:07 PM 695 Views
Replacing it with another, secular, holiday seems the responsible thing to do. - 27/05/2012 11:15:11 PM 681 Views
People. Don't. Care. - 27/05/2012 11:29:07 PM 714 Views
Most of them are stolen from heden traditions and have nothing to do with christianity. - 27/05/2012 07:15:55 PM 1008 Views
It's all about watching Kalle Anka and Karl-Bertil Jonsson - 27/05/2012 07:40:45 PM 758 Views
YES! *NM* - 27/05/2012 10:48:06 PM 652 Views
Thanksgiving isn't a religious holiday. - 27/05/2012 08:43:58 PM 773 Views
That is rather debatable. - 28/05/2012 12:08:53 AM 879 Views
The Distinction - 29/05/2012 07:41:47 PM 831 Views
This succession of two long weekends is rather nice, yes. - 28/05/2012 01:41:05 AM 688 Views
I think Grunnlovsdagen ate Ascension Day. - 28/05/2012 02:57:27 AM 800 Views
It's funny how you use "federal" to mean "mandated by national government". - 28/05/2012 03:49:17 PM 710 Views
I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 28/05/2012 04:26:38 PM 733 Views
Re: I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 28/05/2012 04:50:32 PM 689 Views
Re: I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 01/06/2012 02:03:40 AM 914 Views
I think you've got the Scotland Act backwards. - 01/06/2012 09:48:36 AM 871 Views
I did, though the practical effect is much the same. - 01/06/2012 08:41:03 PM 794 Views
There's a lot of countries that call "devolution" federalism, though. - 01/06/2012 09:52:23 PM 804 Views
What about when most of the country is still under central control? - 02/06/2012 10:25:47 AM 717 Views
I wasn't saying the UK is a normal federal country. - 02/06/2012 10:17:08 PM 752 Views
There is a Campaign for an English Parliament. - 03/06/2012 10:12:21 AM 712 Views

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