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HALLOWEEN

How is All Saints Day marked in Sweden?

All Saints Day has its roots in Catholic tradition, and nowadays it's a chance for people in Sweden to remember all the people they have known and lost. Here's what you need to know about the custom.

How is All Saints Day marked in Sweden?
Lanterns cast light over graves at Stockholm's Woodland Cemetery. Photo: Henrik Montgomery/TT

In the ninth century, November 1st was chosen as the day to celebrate saints who didn’t have their own designated feast day. Even after Sweden became a Protestant country, and today is one of the most secular countries in the world, All Saints is a tradition that has lived on.

The Swedish language has two words for All Saints Day: allhelgonadagen and Alla helgons dag. There’s a difference between the two, since the former refers specifically to November 1st, while Alla helgons dag is always the first Saturday in November. In 2022, that’s November 5th.

Initially, both terms were used to mean November 1st, but Alla helgons dag has since come to mean the first Saturday in November, meaning the date changes each year.

A woman and child visit a grave on Alla helgons dag. Photo: Jonas Ekströmer/TT

For several centuries it was marked on November’s first Sunday until in 1953, Sweden’s government moved Alla helgons dag from Sunday to Saturday. At the time, many people worked on Saturdays so the decision was intended to increase the number of days off work. Because the government didn’t want to remove the right of people to mark November 1st as All Saints Day, that has remained in the calendar as allhelgonadagen.

Technically, Alla helgons dag remains a public holiday, but since it’s always during a weekend, that doesn’t mean much to many people.

If you’re lucky, your employer might be one of those which offers a half-day before public holidays, and there is also an exemption from congestion charges in Gothenburg and Stockholm on the days immediately preceding public holidays.

The public holiday also means that Systembolaget, the state-owned alcohol monopoly, is closed on Alla helgons dag (November 6th), so any alcohol for the weekend needs to be bought before the shops close on the Friday.

Otherwise, this is a quiet holiday rather than a day of celebration, as its origins are about remembering the dead. Many people use All Saints Day to visit family members’ or friends’ graves, care for the burial site, and bring extra decorations such as wreaths and, in particular, candles. The Sunday following Alla helgons dag is known as All Souls Day, when people remember all the dead, regardless of sainthood.

A fairly recent way of marking All Saints in Sweden is to light candles and place them on relatives’ graves.

The first recorded mention of this was in the 1920s at Värmdö, but recent surveys show the tradition now takes place at every single cemetery in Sweden.

Even if you don’t have relatives or friends buried in Sweden to commemorate, visiting a graveyard during All Saints Day is a beautiful and peaceful experience. Just remember to be respectful to the people who are mourning.

The biggest Alla helgons dag commemorations in the country take place at Stockholm’s Woodland Cemetery, Skogskyrkogården. As always, it’s free to enter this Unesco World Heritage Site, which takes on a special atmosphere as thousands of people visit to pay their respects to the dead, with lanterns lighting the way.

And wherever you are in the country, many churches host special services to remember the dead, will have staff on hand to assist with finding graves. At many places, churches will have coffee and gingerbread on offer for visitors too. You can visit your local Church of Sweden website to find out more about the events at your local churches.

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SWEDISH TRADITIONS

Why is Pentecost not a public holiday in Sweden?

Danes and Norwegians will get to enjoy three days off this weekend because of Pentecost and Whit Monday. But not Swedes. Why?

Why is Pentecost not a public holiday in Sweden?

Whit Monday, also known as Pentecost Monday (or annandag pingst in Swedish), falls on the day after Pentecost Sunday, marking the seventh Sunday after Easter.

It is a time when Christians commemorate the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples of Jesus, an event described in the Bible.

It was long a public holiday in Sweden, a country which is very secular today but where the old religious holidays still live on. In fact, up until 1772, the third and fourth day of Pentecost were also holidays.

In 2005, Whit Monday also got the boot, when it was replaced by National Day on June 6th. The Social Democrat prime minister at the time, Göran Persson, saw the opportunity to combine calls for National Day to get a higher status in Sweden with increasing work hours.

The inquiry into scrapping Whit Monday as a public holiday looked into May 1st, Ascension Day or Epiphany as alternative victims of the axe, but in the end made its decision after “all churches and faith associations in Sweden agree that Whit Monday is the least bad church holiday to remove”.

Because Whit Monday always falls on a Monday, whereas June 6th some years falls on a Saturday or Sunday, this means that Swedish workers don’t always get an extra day off for National Day.

This is still a source of bitterness for many Swedes.

And so it came to pass in those days, that apart from the occasional grumbling about Göran Persson, Whit Monday now passes by largely unnoticed to most people in Sweden. Unless they are active church-goers, or go to Norway or Denmark, where it’s still a public holiday.

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