Ten Out-of-the-Ordinary Valentine’s Day Customs
From the festivals of ancient Rome to modern public awareness campaigns, the holiday hasn’t always been about roses and candy
- By Mark Strauss
- Smithsonian.com, February 08, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
7. Eat Your Heart Out: French women traditionally have relied on subtle culinary cues to signal their amorous intentions. The July 1956 issue of the journal Western Folklore reported: “a young maid lets her swain know whether the answer is ‘yes’ or ‘no’ by what she feeds him on St. Valentine’s Day. It's a custom that goes back for centuries. Any egg dish, for example, definitely means No! On the other hand, an apple or pear means Yes!”
8. Role Reversal: After an executive at the Mary Chocolate Company introduced Valentine’s Day to Japan in 1957, an error in translation led Japanese marketers to believe that tradition called for women to send chocolate candies to men. Now, “Many Japanese consider Valentine’s Day the one occasion in which women are allowed the greatest amount of personal expression,” writes Millie Creighton, an associate professor in the department of anthropology and sociology at the University of British Columbia. “A high-ranking official at one department store asserts, ‘This is the only day girls can express their feelings very openly.’ ”
9. On the March: Every year since 2003, the human rights group Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) has held peaceful demonstrations on Valentine’s Day, demanding access to education, health care and an end to government oppression of activists. Dressing in red and white outfits, they distribute paper roses and cards with messages such as, “Defend your right to love and let love overcome hate. Defend all your rights and stand up for the truth.” Several prominent WOZA activists have been arrested during these Valentine’s Day protests—including Magodonga Mahlangu, who later received the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award on November 23, 2009.
10. To Your Health: In recent years, Valentine’s Day has emerged as an occasion for public health education. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control seek to raise awareness about heart disease, with e-cards that read: “Valentine, dear Valentine, My heart beats just for you. To keep our hearts beating, Let’s walk a mile or two.” (Hey, they’re doctors, not poets.)
Worldwide, the holiday also has become an occasion for holding AIDS prevention workshops. “Valentine’s Day offers more opportunity [for AIDS education] than any other day,” writes columnist Joseph Adeyeye of Nigeria, where 2.6 million people are living with HIV/AIDS, the second largest number in any country in the world. “It is the period when teenagers, especially, come under the greatest form of pressure to undertake risky sexual behaviors.”
Perhaps inevitably, pharmaceutical companies also caught on. In 2000, Pfizer, the manufacturer of Viagra, funded a Valentine’s Day impotence awareness campaign in Britain.
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Comments (1)
It is great to learn about the history of our rituals and celebrations. For example, I really enjoyed researching about how Christmas is celebrated in various parts of the world. It is so different in Mexico then in the U.S., for example. Mexico celebrates the Three Kings, rather than Santa Claus. Although Santa Claus is beginning to have a stronger presence here. Thank you for revealing the history and various customs for celebratory Valentine's Day - very interesting. It is interesting to see that chocolate, often associated with Valentine's Day today in the U.S. was not always associated with it in the past.
Posted by ChocolateCentral on February 12,2011 | 11:03 AM