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Hamburg children with their lanterns. Photo: DPA

Celebrating St. Martin's Day in Germany

Published: 10 Nov 12 14:10 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.de/national/20121110-15437.html

Each November 11, Germans celebrate St. Martin's Day and this Sunday will be no exception. But what exactly are we celebrating and why are there kids with paper lanterns in the streets? The Local has the lowdown.


What exactly are we celebrating?

Martinstag is named after St. Martin of Tours, a Roman soldier who became a monk after being baptised as an adult. He eventually obtained sainthood from the Catholic Church for being a kind man who cut his cloak in half to share with a beggar during a snowstorm.

What do the lanterns mean?

In many parts of Germany it is traditional for children to participate in a procession of paper lanterns in remembrance of St. Martin. They make their own little lanterns in school or kindergarten and then gather on city streets to sing songs about good old Marty and their lanterns. Often a man dressed as St. Martin with a long red cloak leads the parade on horseback.

So this is actually a big deal then?

It's officially a Catholic holiday, but in recent years the lantern processions have become widespread even in Protestant areas of Germany. So just like Santa Claus has little to do with the birth of Christ, these days St. Martin Day's is probably better known for the luminous procession than the saintly history.

So what do I do on St. Martin’s Day?

If you have kids, you’ll probably spend the evening outside with a bunch of other parents and their children. You’ll be busy frenetically relighting the tea candles in those fiddly little lanterns with cold, stiff fingers and drying tears because, as upsetting it is for the kids, paper lanterns lit by candles tend to catch fire quite quickly. Who would have thought...

Heavens! That sounds dangerous.

Well, definitely worrying for the parents, forced to prevent their little ones from accidentally setting each other on fire during the procession.

But on the other hand, it wouldn’t really be a proper St. Martin’s procession without someone stamping out a flaming lantern, or a sad-faced child clutching to a charred stick.

What do I do if I don’t have children? Is there anything else to it?

Like most holidays, St. Martin's Day is also about eating food. The traditional victuals are goose with red cabbage and dumplings.

Yummy! But why goose?

According to legend, Martin was reluctant to become a bishop as an honour for all his good deeds, so he hid in a stable filled with geese to escape from Church officials. Martin might have been a very kind and gentle man, but he apparently wasn’t the smartest. Otherwise he would have considered a better hiding place than a pen filled with gabbling geese - who ended up giving away his location.

And the geese had to pay for that?

Perhaps, but the more likely reason is that November 11 is the beginning of Advent fasting and hardcore Catholics get a last chance to feast before they abstain from greasy food and booze until Christmas.

And if I am not Catholic, don’t like goose and have no children?

Then you might want to huddle around one of the many Martin bonfires, eat something else or simply celebrate the beginning of carnival, as it starts on November 11 as well.

Kerstin von Glowacki (news@thelocal.de)

What do you think? Leave your comment below.


Your comments about this article:

20:16 November 11, 2010 by marimay
"Yummy!"

lol

Riiiiiiiiight.
05:24 November 12, 2010 by wenddiver
Sounds like fun!!!
19:27 November 12, 2010 by flagwag
When was the last time the author joined a lantern procession? Battery-powered bulbs functioning as lantern sticks have been around for a long while already.

BTW, even though he's a Catholic saint, St. Martin is the protestant counterpart to St. Nikolaus (Santa Claus, Dec. 6) in terms of bringing presents (or punishment) for kids.
09:53 November 11, 2011 by freechoice
aber in Asia gibts similar Lantern Festivals with andere story!
16:55 November 11, 2011 by Matt in Florida
sounds like fun!
19:00 November 11, 2011 by Penfold
I would not say that the Catholics have St. Martin and the Protostants have St. Nicholas, as down in the south, in Catholic Baveria, both saints are celebrated - even more chanches of "Goodies All Round!"
21:31 November 11, 2011 by amritodas7
Comment removed by The Local for breach of our terms.
18:47 November 14, 2011 by flannel1
This was really helpful,

I loved it and it really helped me with a German Project.

Thanks guys and this event sounds really cool!!!!
18:33 November 10, 2012 by Englishted
As somebody else commented on another subject ,it seem to be something the Germans have to do ,march or parade as they would call it, shooting festivals,carnival,even the opening of the Oktoberfest ,they dress up and off they go in line best foot forward .

It would be amusing if some group in the not to distant past had used the same tactic albeit on a grander scale to mobilise the population.
22:20 November 10, 2012 by McM
No sign of the banned horse I see!
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