Mother’s Day > facts and trivia

Posted On May 13, 2007

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mothers_day.jpg  Earliest fete > The earliest Mother’s Day celebrations are traced back to the spring celebrations of ancient Greece in honour of Rhea, wife of Cronus and the Mother of the Gods and Goddesses.

In Rome the most significant Mother’s Day-like festival was dedicated to the worship of Cybele, another mother goddess. Ceremonies in her honour began some 250 years before Christ was born.

In Englad > During the 1600’s, England celebrated a day called “Mothering Sunday”, celebrated on the 4th Sunday of Lent, also called Mid-Lent Sunday. “Mothering Sunday” honoured the mothers of England. As Christianity spread throughout Europe the celebration changed to honour the “Mother Church”, the spiritual power that gave them life and protected them from harm. Over time the church festival blended with the Mothering Sunday celebration .

People began honouring their mothers as well as the church. During this time many of the England’s poor worked as servants for the wealthy. As most jobs were located far from their homes, the servants would live at the houses of their employers.

On Mothering Sunday, the servants would have the day off and were encouraged to return home and spend the day with their mothers. A special cake, called the mothering cake, was often brought along to provide a festive touch.

The official side to it > The first Mother’s Day proclamation was issued by the governor of West Virginia in 1910. Oklahoma celebrated Mother’s Day that year as well. By 1911 every state had its own observances. By then other areas celebrating Mother’s Day included Mexico, Canada, China, Japan, South America and Africa.

The Mother’s Day International Association was incorporated on December 12, 1912, with the purpose of furthering meaningful observations of Mother’s Day.

While many countries of the world celebrate their own Mother’s Day at different times throughout the year, there are some countries such as Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia, and Belgium which also celebrate Mother’s Day on the second Sunday of May. Mother’s Day is celebrated on May 10  in Bahrain, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia, Mexico, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and United Arab Emirates.

Mother’s Day, like the job of “mothering,” is varied and diverse. Perhaps that’s only appropriate for a day honouring the multiple ways women find to nurture their families,  their communities, their countries, and the world at large.

Mother’s Day: zany facts! > Hindu scripture credits the Great Mother, Kali Ma, with the invention of writing through alphabets, pictographs and beautiful sacred images. In the Bible, Eve is credited with being the “Mother of All the Living.” Some tribes of people, like the Assam in Africa, don’t call themselves families. They call themselves “maharis”, or “motherhoods.”

Rosa Parks was the mother of bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama that launched the Civil Rights Movement. Chinese family names are often formed, begin, with a sign that means “mother”. It’s a nice way of honoring their moms long past.

The ancient Greeks celebrated Mother’s Day in spring, like we do. They used to honor Rhea, “mother of the gods” with honey-cakes and fine drinks and flowers at dawn. Sounds like the beginnings of the Mother’s Day tradition of breakfast in bed!

Mother Shipton was a Prophetess in Britain 500 years ago. She could see the future, and predicted that another Queen Elizabeth would sit on the throne of England.  Japan’s Imperial family trace their descent from Omikami Amaterasu, the Mother of the World.

Julia Ward Howe wrote the Battle Hymm of the Republic and was a staunch fighter for women’s rights. She staged an unusual protest for peace in Boston, by celebrating a special day for mothers. Julia wanted to call attention to the need for peace by pointing out mothers who were left alone in the world without their sons and husbands after the bloody Franco-Prussian War.

The Greek word “meter” and the Sanskrit word “mantra” mean both mother and measurement. Mother Goose is one of the most popular of all children’s entertainers. Her books and stories have been loved for many generations. Native American Indian women have long been honored with the name, “Life of the Nation” for their gift of motherhood to the tribes. Ancient Egyptians believed that “Bast” was the mother of all cats on Earth, and that cats were sacred animals.

Buddha honoured mothers when he said, “As a mother, even at the risk of her own life, loves and protects her child, so let a man cultivate love without measure toward the whole world.”

Mother’s Day is now celebrated in many countries around the world. Australia, Mexico, Denmark, Finland, Italy, Greece, Belgium, Russia, China, Thailand, all have special celebrations to honor Mothers, but some of them not in the same way or on the same day as the United States.

On this Mother’s Day, let’s remember what moms do

Posted On May 13, 2007

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Today is Mother’s Day. That’s the easy part. Now just what does that mean? For most, it’s about sending a nice card laced with moving words. For some, a high-priced dinner fits the bill. And still for others, a simple “Happy Mother’s Day” will suffice.

We all know it’s really more than all of that.

Mother’s Day reminds us of the need to say and do nice things for our mothers. But it also presents us an opportunity to reflect on the very essence of motherhood, and how mothers are an integral part of the family fabric in every country. Mothers often hold it all together.

The aunt who is there to prepare the meals on holidays. The sister who lends the listening ear when one is needed. The cousin who puts others before she puts herself. The grandmother on her second leg of raising children when the other mother is either working or is not around.

The roles of mothers have changed over the years. As society has put added stresses on everyone, it is often women who find themselves juggling a career with an unending capacity to care for others. That’s when the role of mothers comes into an even sharper focus.

As people around the world today either thank their mothers or remember what it was like when their mothers were around, we should never lose sight that our collective conscience is tied to the person we call Mom.

Happy Mother’s Day!

At least one day a year, we should put mothers first

Posted On May 13, 2007

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We shouldn’t need a special day set aside to thank our mothers for all the things they do. It’s something we should do routinely and without prodding.

But while some might heed an “every day is Mother’s Day” theme, many of us need an extra reminder, just like we often needed a reminder from Mom to do our homework, wake up for school, pick up our clothes and send a thank you note to Aunt Sally for the birthday gift she sent.

Considering how often mothers put their children ahead of themselves throughout the year, having one special Mother’s Day isn’t too much to ask.

But it wasn’t until 1914 that the United States established the second Sunday in May as a national holiday to celebrate motherhood. Now it is among the busier days of the year for dining out or making phone calls. Remember that if you have to wait a long time for a table or find “all circuits are busy” when pick up the phone.

The candy and flowers are welcome. The breakfast in bed is nice, even if Mom has to put in extra work cleaning the mess made in the kitchen by well-intentioned children.

Children are not the only ones who should be thanking their mothers. We should thank mothers for the roles they play in developing the next generation of citizens. Those roles often require a juggling act as mothers try to meet the needs or demands of children, other family members and, in some cases, employers.

Mothers have been multi-tasking since long before the term was invented. Mothers provide children with direction and serve as their first role models. They reinforce the lessons of society and school, teaching children how to fit in yet also be independent thinkers.

In praising mothers on this special day, we do not want to dismiss the similar contributions of fathers. In some households, as a result of death, divorce or other circumstances, dads are performing dual roles as fathers and mothers. In other households, grandparents have taken over parenting duties.

To all who are fulfilling the traditional role of mothers, even those doing so in not-so-traditional ways, we wish you a happy Mother’s Day.

Flowers for your Mother

Posted On May 13, 2007

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mothers_day_roses.jpg  Even if you did not made it to buy flowers from your florist or online, there’s always a rush solution. Pick up some flowers from your garden and present them with much love to your Mother.

Happy Mather’s Day!

Make your mother feel special on Mother’s Day

Posted On May 13, 2007

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Whether it’s by gifting her favourite perfume, the dress she has been eyeing for a long time, making her indulge in some sinful chocolates, pampering her in a spa or by simply, but most importantly, spending some time with her, Mother’s Day is all about celebrating the most special woman in your life.

Celebrated in most countries on the second Sunday of May and with equal zeal and enthusiasm across the world, Mother’s Day is looked forward to by all.

There’s no one day that you can celebrate the spirit of motherhood and tell your mom that she is special, but owing to the fast lane life that we are leading, we all know how often we do that actually! So it is a good thing that there is one day dedicated to our mothers completely. As far as I am concerned, I will spend the whole day with my mom, cook her favourite meal and take her to a movie later, just the two of us.

It was observed for the first time May 10, 1908, in a church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the memory of Anna Reese Jarvis, mother of Anna Jarvis. Four years later, the Mother’s Day International Association was set up to spread the concept and practice of observing Mother’s Day.

Besides celebrating the day, those like human rights activists said that we should celebrate the institution of motherhood not just on this day, but everyday.

Happy Mothers Day

Posted On May 13, 2007

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One thing was all have in common is that we all have a mother, so take a moment out of your busy Sunday and call your mom, maybe impress her with someadditional knowledge about the day.

This video is the undisputed most popular Mothers Day video on the internet with over 3.2 Million views from the comedy duo Barats and Bereta. If you are a mother with two sons, you might be witnessing a comedic gem.

Via > AOL Newsbloggers

A massive Mother’s Day cake in Mexico

Posted On May 13, 2007

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A team of Mexican bakers is hoping to get into the Guinness Book of Records with a massive 2.2 metric ton Mother’s Day cake they say is the biggest made with zero-calorie sweetener rather than sugar.

The heart-shaped yellow-iced cake, normal height but some 5 meters (16 feet) across, took 23 people a week to bake and fed around 150 mothers, grandmothers and great-grandmothers at an event on Thursday, when Mother’s Day was celebrated here.

“Within a week they will be calling us to give us the good news that Mexico has a new Guinness record,” said organizer Fernando Trueba.

Organizers want to promote artificial sweeteners in Mexico, where obesity is increasingly widespread and some 7 million people suffer from diabetes. Sweet-toothed Mexicans are some of the world’s biggest guzzlers of sugary fizzy drinks.

“We have a tendency to eat what we shouldn’t and blame ourselves. This is a way to cook without feeling guilty,” actress Mayrin Villanueva said as she cut the cake.

Edged with garish blue icing, the cake contained a stomach-churning 420 kg (926 lb) of margarine, 400 kg (881 lb) of eggs, 210 kg (463 lb) of strawberries and 290 kg (639 lb) of whipping cream. It used 92 kg (203 lb) of sweetener.

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