They come; those Viking spirits on the lapping ancestral waves of memory and myth. They conquer hearts for the day, proclaiming a time for turning. Torchlight gives way to flame, which turns to fire, transforming heat with real warmth, licking upwards, giving light. flickering sign of a turning world looking forward now to lengthening days as Lent, the Springtime of the year, draws us forward with new expectation.
[Mr G]
This poem is inspired by the annual festival of Up Helly Aa, held at Lerwick on Shetland , each year on the final Tuesday of January. It marks the end of the Yule, or Christmas, season which was kept, under the old Julian Calendar at this period of the year. According to an article in Wikipedia, Up Helly Aa means, literally Holy Day. The Festival draws from the link between the Shetland Islands and Norway of which it used to be a part. So it centres on a replica of a Viking Longship. It is ‘crewed’ by locals dressed as Vikings knows as Guizer Jarls (pr. Yarl) with a head Guizer presumably as warrior captain. Each Guizer is dressed in a figure from Norse legend. This year for the very first time, these include women and girls, though a few have slipped in many years ago disguised by costume! After a day of festivity, as night falls, the replica Longship is dragged through the streets of the town in a procession led by torchbearers. The Longboat is circled by the torchbearers who then sing a traditional song associated with the Festival. They then cast their burning torches into the ship which lights up the night with fire. Once the ship is just embers, another song is sung and then it’s party time as the people sing and dance the night away.
The following day is a holiday or ‘hangover’ day!
The Festival marks a transition from Winter Festival towards the season of Lent. In Christian terms this is also a turning point as we begin to prepare for the Passion, death and Resurrection of Jesus at Eostre, Easter. Lent itself is Old English for Spring. It is a time of growth as the earth gives birth to new growth. This growth is both spiritual as well as physical. It carries new hope and new expectation for each of us and for our world. And don’t we need it!
[There are a number of informative and entertaining sites about Up Helly Aa on the web. The photo is from one of the official sources]
a Candle for Holocaust Memorial Day. The Church of Scotland.
Holocaust Memorial Day 2024
With our world in increasing turmoil and uncertainty, it is even more important that we pause to recall the atrocities of the past and the horror, and method of the destruction, by the Nazis of, millions of Jews, Roma, Resistance members, politicians, homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and disabled persons. The Holocaust Memorial Day is the day for people to remember all the victims and those in the genocides which followed in other parts of the world. The 27th of January marks the liberation of Auschwitz, Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp. We are reminded this day of the Fragility of Freedom, especially in our own times. This is summed up, for me, in a message from King Charles III, which he has asked to be shared with others.
A message from The King on Holocaust Memorial Day 2024 Published 26 January 2024
“Holocaust Memorial Day offers a valuable opportunity for the richly diverse communities of this nation to come together and recommit to building a society free from antisemitism, persecution and hatred.”
This week, people from across the United Kingdom and the world are coming together to remember the six million Jewish men, women, and children who were murdered during the Holocaust, alongside the millions of other people killed under Nazi persecution, and those killed in other genocides such as in Rwanda, Srebrenica, and Cambodia. The theme for Holocaust Memorial Day 2024 is the Fragility of Freedom, a stark reminder to us all how freedom can so easily be lost when it is taken for granted, and how crucial it is, therefore, to learn from those who bear witness to the horrors of the Holocaust and all genocides. Tragically, we live in a world where violence and acts of unspeakable cruelty are still perpetrated against people for no other reason than their religion, their race or their beliefs. In recommitting ourselves to remembering the horrors of the past, we take an important step in creating a safer, freer world today and for future generations.
For us in the United Kingdom, Holocaust Memorial Day offers a valuable opportunity for the richly diverse communities of this nation to come together and recommit to building a society free from antisemitism, persecution and hatred. This steadfast commitment is at the heart of everything the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust does. It is why its vital work in ensuring that people across the country are able to pay fitting tribute to those who were murdered and to honour those who survived, remains as important as ever before.
CHARLES R
A Prayer for Holocaust Memorial Day 2024: The Fragility of Freedom
The Council of Christians and Jews in the United Kingdom has written the following prayer to reflect this theme.
Eternal God, we come before you, conscious of the fragility of freedom, to remember the victims of the Holocaust We lament the loss of the six million Jews who were killed in the Holocaust, the millions of other victims of Nazi persecution, and victims of all genocides.
Remembering the past, help us today to use what freedom we have to stand up for those whose freedom is denied. We pray for a daywhen all shall be free to live in peace, unity and love.
Winter Scene, Epping Forest. Photo by my friend, Shanne Woodhouse.
SOUL-WARMING
This headline, in the Guardian newspaper last week, caught my eye. It appeared on a day which was markedly cold and at a time of year when the weather in the UK included floods, ice, snow, bitter winds and all those elements which would encourage humans to join the animal kingdom in hibernation. (if only!)
It was also a time when yet more headlines drew our attention to a time when the darkness of humanity seems to be at its deepest. The Middle East is a tinder box of conflict; Ukrainian people are struggling against an evil foe, and bitterness in politics all over the Globe add to our woes. Even the Planet is angry with us. Earthquakes, Tsunamis, Volcanic eruptions, famine would, in earlier Biblical times have been attributed to an angry God (or earlier, gods).
So, the headline, ‘Soul-Warming’, grabbed my attention. The sub text gave a clue. ‘the mystery man who chops wood to keep his neighbours from freezing.’
The article told a story by an American journalist, David Wallis, about a Woodsman in upstate New York who, in the midst of a harsh winter, went about quietly easing the suffering of others. The man had once been involved as a director, writer and producer of films and TV programmes but has now given that up to help his struggling neighbours, especially the elderly trying to cope with freezing weather conditions. He believes firmly that heat in winter is a human right but in a part of America where many are wealthy there are equally those who are poor and really suffering.
So, the woodsman has been quietly doing something about this over the past few years. His mother was suffering from Cancer and later Covid, so he moved to look after her. He stocked a stand outside her home with bundles of wood which people could buy to fuel their fires. The proceeds were donated to local charities. Over time, the Woodsman noticed that bundles of wood vanished. He was sad that people were stealing. After a conversation with a friend, he thought of putting up a sign outside inviting people who needed wood but couldn’t afford it, to let him know and he would deliver some.
This led to a free firewood programme. Alongside two local Librarians, who knew about people living in reduced circumstances, he joined forces with them in supplying wood to people in need. He drew upon financial support from those in his former career as things developed. For him, it all really began to take off when one of the librarians called for his help. There had been a power cut and an old couple had burned their last stick of wood, could he help? Within hours, the Woodsman came to the rescue and went to their home. When he arrived, he found them huddled under a blanket with the fire long gone out. They were freezing cold. He brought wood and lit a fire for them. He continued to keep them supplied until power was restored. The journalist, David Wallis, called it a Soul-Warming action.
After that beginning, things just grew. The number of those he helped each winter were, he thought, a sign of increasing economic struggle. He not only supplies wood for them but also acts as one who listens and cares. He says that what he is doing is a ‘cheap form of therapy’ ~ for himself. “I’m sort of a quiet guy. Giving away wood does draw me out, pushes me out. When you interact with people, and I listen a lot, you do learn their stories. And I’m moved by every one of them.”
He meets real, genuine people, who are not only suffering from poverty but also need people to touch their lives and souls. Some are ill and need compassion and care. Often, they just need someone to talk to. Life hits them hard, trips them up, and they need someone who treats them not as a case to be helped but as a human being who needs a friend. In his own quiet pragmatic and determined way he is being just such a friend.
We often think of a Soul Friend, as a kind of Spiritual Director, and of Saints who show us holiness. Yet the Woodsman is being a Soul Friend to the people he helps. There is both a physical and spiritual friendship and it is often hard to see where one ends and the other begins. St Aelred of Rievaulx speaking of Martha & Mary drew on the distinction between Mary who sat at Jesus’s feet and listened to him and Martha who rushed around preparing a meal for him. Aelred made the point that both needed each other. Who would listen to Jesus if Mary didn’t sit with him and how would he be fed if Martha didn’t do it. It seems to me that that the Woodsman in this story did both.
As he said, anyone can do something – right?
In times such as now, I need stories like this because they warm my soul too.