THE FESTIVAL OF SANTA LUCIA
The festival of Santa Lucia begins before dawn, on the thirteenth of December,
which under the old Julian calendar (used in Sweden before 1753) was Christmas
Day and the longest night of the year. Throughout Sweden, the eldest daughter
in each household comes to her sleeping parents, dressed in a long white gown
tied with a red sash, and wearing a crown of lingonberry leaves in which are
set seven lighted candies. In her hands she carries a tray of steaming hot coffee
and "Lussekattor" (Lucia Runs). The procession includes her sisters
and brothers also dressed in white, holding lighted candles, and singing of
the light and joy of Christmas.
The sisters of the Lucia Bride wear a wreath of tinsel in their hair and
a piece tied around their waist, while the boys have tall pointed caps sprinkled
with stars. Awakened by the lights and the singing, the parents arise and eat
the breakfast served, thus ushering in the Christmas season.
Scandinavian tradition holds that in Värmland, Sweden, a white-clad
maiden, wearing a crown of burning candies, brought food to the starving villagers
on the shores of Lake Vänern. No one knows how long ago the tradition began,
but it was so far back that the festival of Santa Lucia was marked by a notch
on the primitive "primstav" (calendar stick), the precursor of the
calendar. It later became customary in western Sweden to finish the threshing
by Lucia Day so as to begin the cooking and baking for the long Christmas festivities.
From its beginnings in Värmland, the customs in honor of Santa Lucia have
spread throughout Sweden, and more recently to the rest of Scandinavia. Today,
the festival is celebrated in schools, hospitals, businesses, and towns; each
of which has its own Lucia Bride and festivities to mark the beginning of Christmas.
Santa Lucia Day is also an international holiday, celebrated not only in Scandinavia,
but also in Italy and France in the rites of the church.
However,
the origins of this tradition are not in Scandinavia, but in Syracuse on the
island of Sicily around 304 A.D. According to the Sicilian legend, Lucia's mother,
a wealthy lady, had been miraculously cured of an illness at the sepulcher of
Saint Agatha in Catania. Lucia, a Christian, persuaded her mother in thankfulness
to distribute her wealth to the poor. So, by candlelight, the mother and daughter
went about the city secretly ministering to the poor of Syracuse.
Unfortunately, this was during the last great persecution of Christians
in the reign of the Emperor Diocletian. The pagan young man, to whom Lucia was
engaged, took a dim view of this distributing of her dowry, and denounced her
to the prefect, Pascasius, who ordered that she be seized and tortured. Miraculously,
when neither boiling oil nor burning pitch had the power to hurt her, she was
blinded and slain with a sword. Her martyrdom is recorded in ancient sources
and in an inscription found in Syracuse.
How or when this legend and tradition came to Värmland, Sweden, no
one knows. With the coming of Christianity to Sweden shortly after 1000 A.D.,
missionaries and priests may have told the story to inspire new converts. Another
possibility is that sailors from Sweden may have been captivated by the popular
candlelight festival of Santa Lucia in Italy and brought the tradition back
with them. A newer theory, requiring more research is that St. Birgitta (1303-1373),
during her stay in Rome (1349-1373) in her effort to get papal approval of the
Bridgittine Order for women, probably wrote home to Sweden telling of the Lucia
legend which was widely known in Italy. As Lucia Day comes at the darkest time
of year, the candies of the ministering Santa Lucia portend and witness to the
True Light-the birth of the Lord Jesus Christ. On the morning of the thirteenth
of December, the strains of "Santa Lucia" are heard everywhere in
Sweden as the white-robed maiden comes out of the night with her burning crown
of candies dispelling the darkness. In honor of her martyrdom, It has long been
the custom to donate money on Lucia Day to institutions working for the blind.
Since 1956, the Scandinavian Club of Portland has preserved the beauty of this ancient tradition with a festival celebrating the coming of Santa Lucia preceding the Christmas holidays. In 1960, the club collaborated with Lloyd Center, providing a spectacular setting on their ice pavilion for the coronation of the Lucia Bride each year. In the tradition of the charitable life of Lucia, the court members visit churches, hospitals, local businesses, and homes for the elderly telling the story of Santa Lucia and bringing the holiday spirit into the hearts of all they meet. These girls are goodwill representatives of all Scandinavian communities in Oregon and southwest Washington, and of the countries of their forebears- Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden