Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

On the day before Georgiovden, Yakoruda gets ready with an old ritual – “dipping the posy”

7
Photo: Svetlina-1907 chitalishte

In the town of Yakoruda in Southwestern Bulgaria, the preparations for one of the best-loved holidays Gergiovden, St. George’s Day, start on the day before, 5 May, when, early in the morning, the lasses and young brides take the colourful Yakoruda rugs out of their boxes to lend colour to their town for the grand day. And in the evening, before the sun sets, in their richly decorated traditional clothing typical of the region, the amateur performers from the Svetlina-1907 chitalishte (community culture club) in the town go out into the town square to reenact an ancient ritual “dipping the posy”, a ritual connected with the belief in good and evil, and the hope of health and fertility.


“The posy is made up of spring flowers, bound by a red thread to a small bottle which we dip into a clay jar,” explains Iva Rashkova in an interview with Radio Bulgaria. “The jars are filled with water and the ritual can begin.”


The older women start to sing an emblematic song – St. George – which is only sung on this day, and the first-born girls in the families start to dip the flowers, arranged around an icon of St. George.

Reenactment of “dipping the posy” at the open-air Regional Ethnographic Museum Etara by a female folklore group from Svetlina-1907 chitalishte, Yakoruda, 2022. The song is “St. George”.

The jars are covered with a piece of red cloth and left overnight underneath a white or a red rose bush. And late in the evening the people come out to dance the horo in the town square.


“On the following day, again before sunset, we start to take the posies out,” Iva Rashkova goes on. “But this time this is done not by the first- but by the last-born child in the family, who makes an incantation for each person who takes a posy – usually for health, happiness and fertility. After fishing the posies out, the girls wash their faces to make them “red and white”, and the woman of the house takes the flowers and hangs them up high – to bring luck to the home. The water from the bottle is used for sprinkling – with a wish for health to humans, to the home, and to the animals.”


“Dipping the posy” ends with a celebration on St. George’s day itself, 6 May. Interestingly, in Yakoruda, it is celebrated by Christians and Muslims together.


“People in Yakoruda go to the St. George the Victor church in the town’s suburbs, which is actually the spot where old Yakoruda was once located before it burnt down in 1666. And Christians, along with Muslims gift lambs for the feast day. And then the celebration begins, in which we all take part, together,” Iva Rashkova says.



More:

Translated from the Bulgarian and posted by Milena Daynova

Photos: Svetlina-1907 chitalishte



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki - the spiritual patron of Vidin

On October 26, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church marks the Day of Great Martyr St. Demetrius of Thessaloniki, considered one of the greatest saints. In Bulgaria, his name is also associated with the restoration of the Second Bulgarian..

published on 10/26/24 5:35 AM

Bulgarians honour Saint Euthymius Patriarch of Tarnovo as patron of the people

Exactly a year ago, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church established a new holiday in the church calendar - the Glorification of the holy relics of Saint Euthymius, Patriarch of T a rnovo . According to church sources, the last..

published on 10/22/24 2:57 PM

Eliya drinking fountain in Nikopol is covered in delicate verses of love

They call Nikopol “the town of ages” because its history goes back thousands of years. It was founded as a settlement in the year 169 during the reign of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius. In 629, theByzantine Emperor renamed the town to Nicopolis, meaning..

published on 10/19/24 11:30 AM