B
bpbasilphx
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The idea is that you have foods you abstained from in your basket to be blessed to break the fast.
I once took a pre-made square (white) from the craft store, hemmed the edges in, and put red Byzantine cross about 2" high on the middle of one edge. It was the perfect project for a graduate student budget, and it only took about a week in my spare time before Easter. It is simple, but gets the job doneThank you Kuryakyn and mariyka–I think the already embroidered cloths are out of my budget this year–perhaps I’ll have to make do with some plain cloths and work on my own throughout the coming year.
Absolutely No candy which includes (Chocolate) is permitted in Basket! The older Priests screamed at the people who put sweets in the Baskets!!Thank you Kuryakyn and mariyka–I think the already embroidered cloths are out of my budget this year–perhaps I’ll have to make do with some plain cloths and work on my own throughout the coming year. Now I have more ideas as to what to put in. I was planning to make pascha bread (or at least Hungarian milk-loaf) and the horseradish sounds right up my alley, if not my family’s.
I think i’ll be putting in some chocolate rabbits and lambs if i can find them as well (for the kids, of course, right?).
Since our teeny congregation borrows space in a Roman Catholic church we will be celebrating “early” on Saturday with the service, blessing of baskets and a potluck.
Easter Basket Blessing is actually a **Slavic Paganist **tradition! And the Russian Orthodox church adopted the Practice from the start!Hi Catherine
It isn’t only the Eastern Christians who have this custom.
You find that Slovaks, Czechs, Poles, Hungarians, Croatians and Slovenes also bless baskets of Easter food and they are 99% Roman Catholic.
You find different things in the baskets depending on where you’re from. For instance, Croatians and Slovenes put lamb in their baskets instead of ham.
In Western Slovakia, they make a veal loaf and put that into their basket.
My family is from Eastern Slovakia and we put slab bacon into the basket along with the ham and kolbassy.
In regions where they made wine, you will often find bottles of wine.
In some regions of Hungary and Croatia, they also put in garlic and spring onions.
Hope this helps…
My mother’s (and my former) Polish parish in Brooklyn has always had the blessing of Easter baskets.You find that Slovaks, Czechs, Poles, Hungarians, Croatians and Slovenes also bless baskets of Easter food and they are 99% Roman Catholic.
Not the Poles. The Poles were Roman Catholics from the start, since 966, when Mieszko I converted. 966 is considered the date of the birth of the Polish nation. Because the Poles were converted by missionaries from Rome, they began using the Roman alphabet, unlike those converted by Cyril and Methodius, who introduced the Cyrillic alphabet.Poland and all most of the other slavs were converted to orthodox Christianity in the 10th century !
Never heard of this one!! My basket is always overflowing with chocolate1Absolutely No candy which includes (Chocolate) is permitted in Basket! The older Priests screamed at the people who put sweets in the Baskets!!
Lambs should consist of Butter-cream!
Perogis history of Christianity in Poland is much more historical…granted Poland is NOW a very western oriented catholicism but hasnt always been.Not the Poles. The Poles were Roman Catholics from the start, since 966, when Mieszko I converted. 966 is considered the date of the birth of the Polish nation. Because the Poles were converted by missionaries from Rome, they began using the Roman alphabet, unlike those converted by Cyril and Methodius, who introduced the Cyrillic alphabet.
To be sure, other faiths also lived in Poland, but it was overwhelmingly a Catholic country and a western-oriented one.
Another source I’ve used is St. Joseph School for Boys Bookstore They have nice basket covers and other items. She homeschools and this is a business that helps support them. It’s getting close to Pascha to be ordering anything now……You can also go to www.hanuseys.com
They have plenty of Easter stuff including printed basket covers and plastic molds to make your butter lamb.
…You may also want to take a look at www.allthingsukrainian.com they have AWESOME basket covers in 3 sizes, small, medium and large. All are hand-done.
Trying to remember everything with my sleepy brain…
This is coming from a Ukrainian Easter basket:
→ Of course you need the paska. No Easter basket is an Easter basket without paska!
→ Pysanky, as well as plain eggs (I think we hard-boiled the plain ones)
→ Horseradish
→ Kobasa
→ Ham
→ Butter
→ (blessed) Candle
→ Cloth below and above (embroidered)
→ Hrudka ( egg ball )
I am probably forgetting something. Maybe someone else can fill in the gaps. The “cover” you mention is just a rushnyk-- ours were either given to us as gifts or bought. There are several places you can order them online, and if you want I will try to find and post the URLs tomorrow.
Poland was originally evangelized through the efforts of Ss Cyril and Methodios in the ninth century and onward. Byzantine-Greek Christianity spread from southern Poland (once part of the Moravian empire … little Poland, as it would be known later) to the north along the Vistula river, and also Latin Christianity from the west (Holy Roman German empire) to the east as well. The process of conversion was not complete when Duke Mieszko of Polans conquered the Vistulan Slavs to the south near the Carpathian mountains and united them to his pagan duchy (and subsequently accepted baptism from Latin Catholic missioners to avert attacks from the Holy Roman empire).Not the Poles. The Poles were Roman Catholics from the start, since 966, when Mieszko I converted. 966 is considered the date of the birth of the Polish nation. Because the Poles were converted by missionaries from Rome, they began using the Roman alphabet, unlike those converted by Cyril and Methodius, who introduced the Cyrillic alphabet.
To be sure, other faiths also lived in Poland, but it was overwhelmingly a Catholic country and a western-oriented one.
Welcome to CAF EC section. Did you intend to say something about this post you quoted?