Noel+ wrote:Jolly O'Leary wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNqFvv_Imjg
Since Sweden does not have a "thanksgiving culture", we have to borrow from the Canadian. First Thanksgiving, then Halloween, then Thanksgiving, then Christmas! I was teasing Perky saying that if we had had children, they would have been so confused. Swedes already get Thanksgiving and Halloween mixed up.
Too Thanksgiving/Halloween/Thanksgiving/Christmas cute.
to make matters even more confusing. Swedes do not necessarily celebrate Halloween on October 31. They celebrate the week before "All Saints Day" weekend which is the Saturday that falls between October 31 and November 6. The Friday before "All saint's day" is a half holiday for most or a whole holiday. So this year, "Halloween" is October 24 when the schools let out for "höstlov" (fall break) , All Saints day is October 31, and usually All Soul's Day is on Sunday of that weekend. However, I see my Swedish calendar calls both Saturday and Sunday "all saints day". Perky finds it confusing that the rest of the world celebrates Halloween (All Hallow's Eve.........) on October 31, All Saint's Day is November 1, and All Souls Day is Nov. 2. IN San Antonio, they sort of all merge into Dia de los muertos, but no one gets a day off from work.
I had a teacher complain yesterday that the students have a break the last week of October because their previous course ends early and the new one does not start until November 2. Technically it is not a break, but I was not allowed to schedule classes that week because I was told "It's like Christmas". huh???? In the old days, people would travel to where they ancestors were buried much like Dia de los muertos, but nowadays it is a big commercial holiday.
We got married on October 27, which was Swedish Halloween that year. The Corpse Bride is our "wedding movie". We usually plant the cemetery garden the week before and take an anniversary cruise over the long weekend. Friday is a half day.