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Well, you know better than I, but I found the 1580s date interesting. Joel Send a noteboard - 28/05/2012 04:08:31 PM
That predates Plymouth Rock by nearly 40 years (and all English settlement in the Americas by about 20.)
Wikipedia claims the origins of your Thanksgiving lie even farther back than ours, by the way, and quotes your Parliament establishing it officially in 1957


That's when it became a civic holiday. The tradition of celebrating Action de Grâce goes way further, to 1799 the first time it was officially celebrated, and originates with British loyalists who migrated to Lower Canada from the south (that's you). Originally it thanked God and the King for the peace and prosperity of the realm, and it wasn't a fixed holiday but a celebration that was proclaimed at need.

Most of the French equivalents to those reaping festivals didn't follow or died fast in New France, as we never cultivated grapes.

Why it's not considered a religious holiday here is simple: most Québécois were catholics (and still nominally are), and it's not a catholic feastday but a popular feastday borrowed from protestants and thanking their King, which later became a federal civic day.

I suppose that is logical enough; America does not get that out though: It is hard to imagine Washington, local officeholders who preceded him, and presidents who have succeeded him since all being vain enough to declare by statute that the public should thank THEM, personally, for our relative good fortune. SO, OK then, three (though I suspect it still depends on whom you ask) with two of them being either/or in many cases. That means Sweden has over three times as many federally sanctioned Christian holidays as the US and Canada do. Which is a touch bizarre.

basis and meaning remain religious just as Mardi Gras/Carneval does, even if many people with little or no religious fervor have since added unrelated aspects.

Actually, it's a secular feastday that existed in tons of traditions which the Church, who disapproved of those popular festivals thoroughly (for obvious reasons... the village's fool elected Abbot for a day and whatnot - the Church was mocked alongside authorities in general in carnivals), transformed into a religious feastday before Ash Wednesday. The religious feastday here is fat tuesday, which only old fashioned practicing catholics still hold to. Carnivals, charivaris etc. are not held at Mardi-Gras anymore and have all returned to their non-religious roots (though without the original "inverted world" symbolism, which belonged with medieval mentalities).

What about giving things up for Lent? Sounds like there may have been multiple factors (just the impression of a guy who did not know what Advent candles were two years ago. :P)

If we say any holiday people used for partying or just general rest and relaxation is disqualified as religious, then NO holiday is qualified.

Well.. culturally speaking only Christmas and Easter still have religious meanings for a sizeable percentage of the population (if not by any mean everyone). The other religious feastdays are now ignored by all but practicing catholics (and same for protestant ones I guess, I wouldn't even know what they are). Most of the Canadian civic holidays have nothing to do anymore with religion. Quite a few of them like St-Jean-Baptiste were full of pagan connotations... presenting the Baptist as an Appollo-like golden-haired child-sheepherder carrying a newborn lamb, and with pyres lit all night to celebrate the longest day. It's the old summer solstice festivals on which St-John and christian symbolism were tacked on by the Church. Now we've done away with the lamb and child, and we've even renamed the feastday to get rid of the last christian association, making it the province's National Holiday (it's still called St-Jean outside Québec).. We've kept the pyres. Not that the Church really complains, tons of modern priest around here care nothing for newborn lambs and solar child, easter water and the whole lot of christianized paraphernalia, and think that while they had a purpose once upon a time to integrate the last popular/pagan practices into Christianity, that's just accumulated clutter catholicism is much better without these days.

Well, as a non-denominational Christian I do not wholly disagree (if nothing else, every day is supposed to be the Sabbath for practicing Christians; not like one gets the day off from Christianity the rest of the year.) However, in those cases it is really just a question of how many people ignore the religious basis of inherently religious holidays they still celebrate without revering. Insisting religious holidays must entail religious observance, and nothing else, is how we wound up with fundies screaming about the "war on Christmas."

"Is grammy Jesus?! No? Then you visit her NEXT week. Here, I'll write you a note:

Please excuse Timmy from class to visit his grammy because his mommy dragged the godless commie kicking and screaming to church WHERE HE BELONGS ON CHRISTMAS111

What? NO, Santa isn't coming; he's of the Devil.... (8"

If most people celebrating an explicitly religious holiday are non-religious, it just means they are not religious; that does not change the holidays nature.

If you gleaned from the preceding that I spent the last sixteen hours laboriously typing out a response to Cannoli I am now too exhausted to edit, you shall feast well this eve in the Hall of Nourishing Thought. Sorry for the delay on yours, but fear not: You are next.... (8
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I imagine our first federal Thanksgiving proclamation looked something like this:
This message last edited by Joel on 29/05/2012 at 01:26:46 PM
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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 1033 Views
Nothing, they are federal holidays still because of strong unions, not religion - 27/05/2012 06:58:52 PM 457 Views
Hypocrisy FTW, eh? - 27/05/2012 11:04:38 PM 603 Views
No. - 27/05/2012 11:16:11 PM 426 Views
Nothing. - 27/05/2012 07:03:07 PM 417 Views
Replacing it with another, secular, holiday seems the responsible thing to do. - 27/05/2012 11:15:11 PM 382 Views
People. Don't. Care. - 27/05/2012 11:29:07 PM 449 Views
Most of them are stolen from heden traditions and have nothing to do with christianity. - 27/05/2012 07:15:55 PM 625 Views
It's all about watching Kalle Anka and Karl-Bertil Jonsson - 27/05/2012 07:40:45 PM 466 Views
YES! *NM* - 27/05/2012 10:48:06 PM 439 Views
Thanksgiving isn't a religious holiday. - 27/05/2012 08:43:58 PM 493 Views
That is rather debatable. - 28/05/2012 12:08:53 AM 542 Views
The Distinction - 29/05/2012 07:41:47 PM 503 Views
How do you come to four for Canada? - 27/05/2012 11:29:57 PM 386 Views
Because I counted Thankgiving, and holidays for federal employees rather than just statutory ones. - 28/05/2012 02:03:55 AM 538 Views
Re: Because I counted Thankgiving, and holidays for federal employees rather... - 28/05/2012 04:31:14 AM 449 Views
Well, you know better than I, but I found the 1580s date interesting. - 28/05/2012 04:08:31 PM 613 Views
Re: Well, you no better than I, but I found the 1580s date interesting. - 29/05/2012 01:15:52 AM 434 Views
I was referring to the Wikipedia article I linked. - 01/06/2012 03:34:11 AM 529 Views
This succession of two long weekends is rather nice, yes. - 28/05/2012 01:41:05 AM 412 Views
I think Grunnlovsdagen ate Ascension Day. - 28/05/2012 02:57:27 AM 515 Views
It's funny how you use "federal" to mean "mandated by national government". - 28/05/2012 03:49:17 PM 423 Views
I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 28/05/2012 04:26:38 PM 454 Views
Re: I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 28/05/2012 04:50:32 PM 421 Views
Re: I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 01/06/2012 02:03:40 AM 608 Views
I think you've got the Scotland Act backwards. - 01/06/2012 09:48:36 AM 531 Views
I did, though the practical effect is much the same. - 01/06/2012 08:41:03 PM 521 Views
There's a lot of countries that call "devolution" federalism, though. - 01/06/2012 09:52:23 PM 519 Views
What about when most of the country is still under central control? - 02/06/2012 10:25:47 AM 424 Views
I wasn't saying the UK is a normal federal country. - 02/06/2012 10:17:08 PM 472 Views
There is a Campaign for an English Parliament. - 03/06/2012 10:12:21 AM 404 Views

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