maanantai 23. lokakuuta 2017

Remembering the veterans in Finland





It has been awhile from my last post. I have been too busy in other areas of life, but I try to get back to this blog and posting. I have some ideas for new posts, but of course I’m also open for your ideas too. So if you are interested in reading about a tradition in Finland, please let me know and I see what I can do about it. This time I wanted to make a post about Finnish veterans and our traditions to remember them.

Like in many countries, also in Finland, we remember the veterans of our wars. Thankfully we have had the opportunity to live in peace already for decades, but we still have some 17.000 veterans in Finland, who fought in the Winter, Continuation and Lapland Wars. Their average age is 93 years and 2.500 of them are war-invalids.

I’m happy to say that nowadays in Finland we honour and acknowledge our veterans, but it has not been like that always. Sometime after the Wars the veterans were forgotten, especially in 1970s they were not at all honoured. Since the 1990s there has been a tradition in most of the parishes to light on Independence Day a candle in the cemeteries to every grave of a soldier, who has died defending Finland. This year, as Finland is celebrating her 100 years of independency, we remember our veterans also in many other ways and treat them with all the respect as we always should have done.

My family’s traditions have been for years to donate our charity money of a year to one veteran association in Finland. Quite many years I have also bought our Christmas cards from one or two of these associations. You may read more about postcards from my earlier post.

The Finnish postal service, Posti, has had already a few years a campaign annually to remember the veterans. I think it is a nice new tradition we have. One just writes a postcard and sends it to an address given by Posti. Posti collects the cards and delivers them then to a veteran. The purpose of this cards is to say thank you to the veterans for keeping Finland independent. I shall participate also this year. This a really nice tradition, which unfortunately won’t last for long.

In case you want to read more about the Finnish army and veterans, please see my other post.



Finnish veteran organisations (pages in Finnish)




lauantai 14. tammikuuta 2017

Bye-bye Christmas!




Yesterday we had the day of Nuutti in Finland (13th of January). You know Nuutti, the bad guy, who takes away the Christmas according to Finnish proverb. So when saying godbye to Christmas I once again went thorugh the Christmas traditions and merry Christmas time in my head. And a tradition, that means lot to my family came to my mind. So here’ s a short post about it.

I have blogged earlier about the Christmas peace and Eating on Christmas Eve. On Christmas Eve after noon and the declaration of Christmas peace my family sits down for rice porridge. You can find from the later post, how the porridge is made and served. There is also mention about the almond. But I did not open up the tradition behind it.

Person, who finds the almond, shall have good luck the upcoming year. But where does this kind of tradition originate from? The Finns have been finding almonds from their porridge since the mid 19th century. The tradition came from Sweden. Both rice and almonds were really expensive delicacies in Finland back then. Both needed to be imported. That’s why it is believed the almond was chosen to bring good luck. Prior to almond it had been a bean or a coin.

The habbit of putting something (a foreign object) during Christmas celebration to food to bring good luck is a very old tradition and known at least all over Europe. Already the Romans and the Greeks put coins and beans to food for good luck.

:)