Blue Umbrella Official May 2020 issue | Page 16

AppreciatingMothers By Rebecca G. Mother?s Day is a special day, when we take some time to appreciate our mothers. Everyone does it differently; some might buy chocolates, cards, or flowers and yet others do the dishes or housework for their mom. Have you ever wondered where Mother?s Day really started? Or even how it started? Well, some celebrations of mothers can be taken all the way back to the Greeks and Romans. These people performed ceremonies in honor of their ?mother goddesses?. Mother?s Day was also used by the Christians. Christians called it the ?Mothering Sunday.? When it became a major tradition in certain areas of Europe and the United Kingdom, it fell on the fourth Sunday in Lent. This celebration was seen primarily as a time when faithful people would go back to their ?mother church.? In later years, the holiday?s traditions changed. Some of these changes included children giving their mothers chocolates, candies, or flowers on Mother?s Day. In 1870, another woman, Julia Ward Howe, wrote the ?Mother?s Day Proclamation.? This Proclamation was a call for action. It asked for mothers to gather together and help boost world peace. At the time, Howe called for Mother's Peace Day to be celebrated every June 2. Sometime in the 1900s, Mother?s Day grew in importance thanks to Anna Jarvis. Jarvis helped to begin a ?Mother?s Day Works Club.? This club helped to teach mothers and other women proper childcare techniques. In fact, in May 1908, Jarvis organized the first official Mother's Day celebration. Some traditions of Mother?s Day around the world are celebrated differently. In Thailand, Mother's Day is celebrated in August, on the birthday of the queen, Sirikit. In Ethiopia, families get together every fall and sing songs along with eating a large feast. While in the United States, mothers are given flowers or other gifts. Let?s take time to thank our mothers for all they do for us. This Day in Histor y 16 Features