Holidays in U.S
January
>>New
Year's Day (Tues., Jan. 1, 2013)
A federal holiday in the United States, New Year's Day has
its origin in Roman times, when sacrifices were offered to Janus, the two-faced
Roman deity who looked back on the past and forward to the future.
>>Epiphany (Sun., Jan. 6, 2013)
Epiphany (from Greek epiphaneia, "manifestation"),
falls on the 12th day after Christmas. It commemorates the manifestation of
Jesus Christ to the Gentiles, as represented by the Magi, the baptism of Jesus,
and the miracle of the wine at the marriage feast at Cana. One of the three
major Christian festivals, along with Christmas and Easter. Epiphany originally
marked the beginning of the carnival season preceding Lent, and the evening
preceding it is known as Twelfth Night.
>>Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Birthday (Mon., Jan. 21, 2013)
A federal holiday observed on the third Monday in January
that honors the late civil rights leader. It became a federal holiday in 1986.
>>Mawlid al-Nabi (Thurs., Jan. 24, 2013)*
This holiday celebrates the birthday of Muhammad, the
founder of Islam. It is fixed as the 12th day of the month of Rabi I in the
Islamic calendar.
February
>>Groundhog
Day (Thurs., Feb. 2, 2013)
Legend has it that if the groundhog sees his shadow, he'll
return to his hole, and winter will last another six weeks.
>>Chinese New Year (Sun., Feb. 10, 2013)
The most important celebration in the Chinese calendar. Chinese months are
reckoned by the lunar calendar, with each month beginning on the darkest day.
New Year festivities traditionally start on the first day of the month and
continue until the fifteenth, when the moon is brightest. In China, the New
Year is a time for family reunions. In the United States, however, many early
Chinese immigrants arrived without their families, and found a sense of
community by celebrating the holiday through neighborhood associations.
>>Lincoln's Birthday (Tues., Feb. 12, 2013)
A holiday in a few states, this day was first formally
observed in Washington, DC, in 1866, when both houses of Congress gathered for
a memorial address in tribute to the assassinated president. In some places, it
is combined with Washington's Birthday and celebrated as President's Day.
>>Mardi Gras (Shrove Tuesday) (Tues., February 12, 2013)
Shrove
Tuesday falls the day before Ash Wednesday and
marks the end of the carnival season, which once began on Epiphany but is now
usually celebrated the last three days before Lent. In France, the day is known
as Mardi Gras (Fat
Tuesday), and celebrations are held in several American cities, particularly
New Orleans. The day is sometimes called Pancake Tuesday by the English because
fats, which were prohibited during Lent, had to be
used up.
>>Ash Wednesday (Wed., Feb. 13, 2013)
The seventh Wednesday before Easter and the first day of Lent, which
lasts 40 days. Having its origin sometime before A.D. 1000, it is a day of
public penance and is marked in the Roman Catholic Church by the burning of the
palms blessed on the previous year's Palm Sunday. With the ashes from the palms
the priest then marks a cross with his thumb upon the forehead of each
worshipper. The Anglican Church and a few Protestant groups in the United
States also observe the day, but generally without the use of ashes.
>>St. Valentine's Day (Thurs., Feb. 14, 2013)
Originally a pagan festival, the holiday eventually was
recast as a Christian feast day in honor of St. Valentine—but there are at
least three different early saints by that name. How the day became associated
with romance remains obscure, and is further clouded by various fanciful
legends.
>>Washington's Birthday or Presidents' Day (Mon., Feb. 18, 2013)
A federal holiday observed the third Monday in February. The
actual date of Washington's birthday is Feb. 22. It is a common misconception
that the federal holiday was changed to "Presidents' Day" and now
celebrates both Washington and Lincoln. Only Washington is commemorated by the
federal holiday; 13 states, however, officially celebrate "Presidents'
Day.
>>Purim (Feast of Lots) (Sun., Feb. 24, 2013)*
A day of joy and feasting celebrating the deliverance of the
Jews from a massacre planned by the Persian minister Haman. According to the
Book of Esther, the Jewish queen Esther interceded with her husband, King
Ahasuerus, to spare the life of her uncle, Mordecai, and Haman was hanged on
the same gallows he had built for Mordecai. The holiday is marked by the
reading of the Book of Esther (the Megillah), by the exchange of gifts, and by
donations to the poor.
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