Hey, hey! It is Epiphany!
In my childhood, this was another holiday. We got another present, often an orange, a blood orange which we had to share. The Russian people on the other side of the camp invited my mother to tea. I came along, although the rituals and formality made me queasy. Gerd, my brother, refused every time.
"They eat dogs," he said.
don't know where he got that information. I went with my mother because there was homemade chocolate and a little cookie filled with plum jam. The grandmother would read out loud from a book. I would sit on the floor near my mother's legs and look around the room. Dark, dark, dark, with hangings on the walls- one of them was the pelt of an animal . The dog they ate, maybe?
The visit was soon over. We shook hands with the grown-ups. I had to curtsey. The grandmother gave me another piece of chocolate, which I put into my apron pocket for Gerd.
" Watch out for that one, Elisabeth," said the old woman to my mother. "She observes everything."
I guess observing everything was not a good thing, but I just kept on paying attention. The family got their visas to emigrate to America the next year. Other refugees moved into their rooms, without pelts on the wall.
Is Epiphany a religious holiday?
I think it is in Europe.
I love to hear recollections from our childhoods...which are all so diverse and interesting. We are a group of people with very varied backgrounds and ethnicities who have come here and found a common bond.
Absolutely, but don't get me started. lol
This is also the 12th day of Xmas, and according to the Xian calendar the day the Magi visited the baby (Epiphany). It is a holiday in Germany. I thought it was a PITA that they closed gas stations when I was traveling to visit friends on my birthday.
Happy birthday, Paula! Best wishes and good to meet you here.
Happy birthday from me too.