Christmas Custom–a Shoe In

Susan Vaughan here. I admit it, the title’s a bad pun, but you’ll see shortly why I couldn’t [image error]resist. Christmas customs around the world differ in strange and bizarre ways. In the U.S., Canada, and Great Britain, we’re familiar with the tradition of hanging stockings for Santa to fill. According to legend, long, long ago, three sisters left their stockings drying over the fireplace. Saint Nicholas knew the family was very poor, so he threw three bags of gold coins down the chimney. The money landed in their stockings. Since then, children have hung up their stockings on Christmas Eve, hoping to find them filled with gifts in the morning. In many other places, footwear also plays a role, but usually not stockings.


Before going to bed, children in France put their shoes by the fireplace. They hope that Père Noel will put small gifts inside. France’s Santa also hangs small toys, nuts, and fruits on the tree.


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In the Netherlands, children fill their shoes with hay and a carrot for the horse of Sintirklass, who has arrived in town with an entourage of helpers and in a big parade.


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In Italy, children leave their shoes out the night before Epiphany, January 5, for La Befana the good witch. The custom appears to date from when children wore wooden peasant shoes but not why or how it began.


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Iceland has many traditions for celebrating the holiday. I won’t go into the history, but nowadays thirteen Santa Clauses, called jólasveinar, or “Yuletide Lads,” come to each [image error]town bearing gifts, candy, and mischief. These are apparently mountain trolls or elves. Each has his own personality and role to play. The first jólasveinn arrives thirteen days before Christmas and then the others follow, one each day. A special custom is for children to set a shoe in the window from December 12 until Christmas Eve. If they have been good, one of the “Santas” leaves a gift, but bad children receive not a lump of coal but a potato. After Christmas, the Yuletide Lads leave as they arrived, one each day, making the Icelandic Christmas season last twenty-six days.


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The Czech Republic has a wealth of Christmas customs and superstitions, but none for [image error]filling children’s shoes or stockings. Instead, I found Christmas customs that offer marriage hope to girls in the family. On Christmas Day, an unmarried girl can stand with her back to the door and throw a shoe over her shoulder. If the shoe lands with the toe pointing to the door, she will be married within the year. When the shoe points in the opposite direction, the girl will remain single for at least another year. Along with that, another tradition is that every woman should receive a kiss under the mistletoe so love is guaranteed throughout the next year.


Because eighty percent of the population in the Philippines is Christian, Christmas is huge there. For centuries, the bearers of gifts for children have been not Santa but the Three [image error]Kings. Brightly polished shoes and clean socks are left on windowsills, for the Kings to fill with gifts as they pass by on their way to Bethlehem. Some children leave straw or dry grass for the camels; if these are gone in the morning, the camels must have been very hungry. Epiphany, the “Feast of the Three Kings,” marks the end of the Christmas celebration.


I’ll leave you with wishes for a Happy Holiday and with questions for which I do not have answers. I imagine the tradition of filling shoes and stockings with treats and small gifts spread around the world with Christianity, but why do shoes and stockings still play such a prominent role in Christmas celebrations? And do shoes and/or stockings play a role in other holiday traditions?


 

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Published on December 22, 2019 22:09
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