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WALPURGIS NIGHT

SWEDISH TRADITIONS

Walpurgis Night: Why are Swedes dancing around bonfires?

Been invited to a bonfire party this weekend? Wondering what on earth is going on? Swedes are celebrating the spring. Valborgsmässoafton (Walpurgis night in English) takes place every year on the last day of April. Here's The Local's guide to the festivities.

Walpurgis Night: Why are Swedes dancing around bonfires?
Valborg in Lund in 2022. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT

What are people celebrating?

Walpurgis night is when Swedes celebrate the end of the harsh winter and look forward to the summer sunshine. It takes its name from Saint Walpurga (‘Valborg’ in Swedish), an English missionary who promoted Christianity in other parts of Europe, especially Germany, who was for centuries remembered on April 30th, but the tradition of lighting fires around this time dates back to pre-Christian times in Sweden. These days it has nothing to do with religion and is mainly seen as a way of celebrating the arrival of spring.

It’s also the King’s birthday, but that’s just coincidence.

Walpurgis celebrations always include a bonfire. Photo: Jessica Gow/TT

So what happens?

In most towns around Sweden, Walpurgis night is about a mountainous bonfire and a huge crowd, perhaps alongside a choir singing the traditional Swedish ditty ‘Vintern Rasat Ut’. These spectacles are usually organized by the local municipality. It’s a great chance to spend some time with other members of your community, many of whom take the occasion to come out of hibernation and gather, singing Swedish folk songs and dancing. The bonfire also helps the Swedes keep warm as nights remain chilly at this time of year.

Where are the best places to go?

The most exciting action in Sweden occurs in the nation’s student cities, especially Lund in the south and Uppsala, just north of Stockholm, where revellers take the good weather with a good dose of extreme madness before they hunker down to revise for their summer exams. In Uppsala, this is especially true. People flock from far and wide for the biggest street-party of the year, where students let loose and lose their winter inhibitions and clothes for the first time of the year. In Lund, most of the celebrations tend to be confined to the town’s main park Stadsparken, where students also let loose, but at least in one space.

Stadsparken in Lund. The not-yet-lit bonfire can be seen in the background. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT

What is there to see apart from a big fire then?

For many students, the day begins with a champagne breakfast, which inevitably ends up with more champagne splashed around the rooms of the student nations than in champagne glasses. In Uppsala, thousands of eager residents then squeeze up along the walls of the little Fyris River to catch a glimpse of the 100 or so homemade rafts that students have decorated and painted specifically for the event.

With the two miniature waterfalls along the river, half the fun is watching to see if the ‘sailors’ manage to keep dry, or indeed, if the rafts keep in one piece at all. When the waters have calmed and the crowd has moved on, thousands gather in a boozy meeting in one of the city’s bigger parks, seeing in the warmer weather with loud music, dancing, and wild student antics.

In Lund, you bring a blanket, friends, something to drink and then spend the day and evening in Stadsparken. 

In the Swedish capital, the open-air museum Skansen is one of the most coveted venues. It puts on singing and music spectacles next to a giant bonfire, which will be lit at 9pm.

The Uppsala boat race. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT

Anything else?

Fireworks are also a common sight around the country and if you’re passed a strange-coloured hot liquid, it is probably nettle soup. The weeds pop up when the snow melts in Sweden, but provide a healthy warm snack to keep Swedes’ energy levels up throughout the celebrations.

Enjoy!

RECIPE: How to make warm Swedish nettle soup

Walpurgis Night in Lund. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT

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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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