May Day!
Today is May 1st!
I started this blog February 1st ... Wow!
Where has the time gone?
Several people have asked me if I'm running out of things to post about.
Are you kidding?!?! No way.
The biggest issue I have is figuring out how to "chunk" it into sections so that no one post is too long and involved and then how to string them back together.
With this in mind, I'm realizing belatedly that it would have been good to be tagging these posts with key words as I went so that I (and others if they are so inclined) could go back and reference easily all the posts that related to a certain thread.
So my plan is to start going back through the previous 90 posts and tagging them with key words to make them searchable by more than just their titles.
As you can read below May Day has nothing to do with calling for help as in "may day! may day!" - but even so, I am going to ask for your help going forward - or at least any suggestions - with regards to tags that might prove useful.
Hope your May Day was a beautiful one.
Respectfully,
Kathy Wiz
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http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/30/living/may-day-facts-and-times/
To most people in the
Northern Hemisphere, May Day conjures images of brightly colored twirling
ribbons and promises of warm days ahead. That's not the whole story, though:
May Day is also a day of protests and riots that traces its modern roots back
to a world-changing explosion in Chicago.
When is May Day?
May Day is May 1 every year. Easy to remember,
right?
What is May Day?
Depending on where you are, it's either a
seasonal celebration or a day to celebrate workers' rights, or maybe a little
bit of both. Think of the latter use as a Labor Day, if you will, for the rest
of the world.
How did it start?
This is a more complicated question.
Originally, May Day was an ancient pagan holiday celebrating the start of
summer. In Gaelic traditions, it is known as Beltaine (or the
Anglicized "Beltane"). As time went on, different groups adapted the
celebration to their specific cultures or beliefs. Europeans and Americans
often celebrate in a more secular manner with diversions like maypole
dancing and flower crowns. (That certainly lends a bit of cultural context
to all the young women breezing around summer music festivals this time of year
with giant daisies on their heads.)
Also of note: In May, the Southern Hemisphere
is getting ready for winter, so May Day as a seasonal celebration is, for the
most part, a Northern Hemisphere thing.
How did it become a
day for labor rights?
May Day is also a labor holiday in many areas
of the world, and that part of its history is a thornier story. May Day has
shared a date with International Workers' Day since the 1880s. At the
time, labor movements around the world were fighting for fair work
accommodations like eight-hour workdays and unions. The date was chosen because
it aligned with the anniversary of the Haymarket affair in Chicago, where
police killed four people at a peaceful protest after someone threw a bomb into
the crowd.
The event had a huge impact on labor movements
across the world.
So why are there
sometimes riots and marches on May Day?
Because of its more recent history,
International Workers' Day/May Day is often a day of protest for labor unions
around the world. The people come come out to rally, and sometimes their
passionate demonstrations can turn violent. In 2014, Turkey attempted to
ban labor rallies, citing security concerns. Across Europe, similar
events have attracted heavy police presence.
Riots and protests occur in the United States,
as well. One of the most notable is the Seattle May Day Marches, which, though
intended to be peaceful, have broken out in violence in the past.
In a strange way, some of these demonstrations
overlap with the more festive roots of May Day: The planned protests in
Seattle include a rock concert, and the long-running May Day
Parade in Minneapolis features both colorful, festive floats and revelers
who wear satirical costumes related to the labor and political issues of the
day.
Is this related to the
"Mayday! Mayday!" distress call?
It's actually not at all! "Mayday"
the distress call comes from the French term m'aidez, which means
"help me."
Nothing wrong with a little French lesson to
go along with the holiday's history!
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