Celebrating St. Patrick
On March 17, everyone's green-even the Chicago River. Yet St. Patrick remains colored in myth.
- By Amy Crawford
- Smithsonian.com, March 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
A rural land governed by numerous tribal kings, 5th-century Ireland had little contact with the outside world. Except for some Christian slaves kidnapped from Britain (as Patrick had been), nearly everyone in Ireland practiced Celtic polytheism. Religious leaders called Druids acted as priests and magicians, and naturally they opposed foreign missionaries. Patrick's mission was a daunting one, but over the next few decades he preached the Gospel, working his way from farm to farm and village to village—guided, he believed, by prophetic dreams. In time, he established an active Church of Ireland.
Patrick probably died sometime in the 460s, and shortly thereafter he fell into obscurity. But as the Irish Church grew, vague memories of Patrick developed into fanciful stories. Christian writers asserted that he had fought Druid magic and performed various other feats, wowing the Irish with supernatural powers. During the Middle Ages, biographies of saints were intended to inspire faith rather than record historical events, and the real Patrick was soon lost in the legend. "Saints were always working miracles; that was standard fare," explains Philip Freeman. "The snakes, for example, are just a representation of evil. Patrick drove the old evil pagan ways out of Ireland and brought Christianity there."
St. Patrick's Day falls on March 17, which is traditionally thought to be the day of his death, although that is probably a guess. For centuries, St. Patrick's Day was simply a religious holiday, celebrated in church rather than at the pub; in fact, in Ireland pubs were closed on March 17 until the 1970s.
It was not until Irish immigrants began coming to America that St. Patrick's Day took off as the international, secular celebration we know today. Boston's Charitable Irish Society held the first St. Patrick's Day parade in 1737. Irish New Yorkers first marched in 1762, and Philadelphia caught on in 1780. For early Irish-Americans, the holiday was a way of looking back fondly on the old country and expressing ethnic pride, and over the years more and more people have joined in the fun. The Irish themselves recently adopted many American traditions surrounding St. Patrick's Day, largely as a ploy to attract tourists.
What would St. Patrick think of the way his holiday is celebrated today? "He would probably be astounded," says Freeman. "He was not the sort of man who liked to draw attention to himself, and he would not have been comfortable with all the parades and the drinking. I think he would be very surprised."
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Comments (1)
Having visited the beautiful country of Ireland on two occasions and having been very impressed with the genuine warmth and hospitality shown to us by nearly every Irish citizen we met, I can't help but wonder if the Christian virtue of hospitality (clearly taught in the New Teatament epistles of Paul) prove that national attitudes can be influenced for centuries by one good man
Posted by Bill Adams on March 19,2008 | 11:48 PM