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Jashn e Sadeh
Sadeh meaning hundred, is a mid winter feast
that was celebrated with grandeur and magnificence in ancient Iran. It was a
festivity to honor fire and to defeat the forces of darkness, frost and cold.
Two different days were observed for its veneration. One celebration marked the
hundred day before the religious No Ruz on the first day of the month Farvardin
(religious No Ruz is different from spring No Ruz). The other one was the
hundredth day after the gahambar of Ayathrima (one of the six feasts of
obligation) held to be the beginning of winter. This day coincides with 10th
of Bahman in present calendar. It is not clear why there are two Sadeh Festivals
and why different regions have had different dates. Many of Zoroastrian holy
days were and are celebrated twice; this is most likely caused by the calendar
reform in the 3rd century AD.
From Achaemenid times the Iranian calendar had
360 days and was short of 5 days. Ardeshir the first Sassanian king reformed the
calendar and 5 days were added at the end. The new calendar receded slowly
against the solar year, and the holy days, which with their symbolism were
closely linked with the seasons, became gradually divorced from them. The months
moved and so did the holy days, to make sure festivals were observed correctly
both the old and the new dates were celebrated. The festival celebrated in Yazd
till a few decades ago was according to Fasli (seasonal) calendar and in a few
villages it was called Hiromba. While the other Zoroastrians celebrated the
Sadeh in Bahman. There was confusion earlier in the century as to when it should
be celebrated, but most Zoroastrians have adopted the 10th of Bahman
as the main event.
In Sassanian times huge bon fires were set up.
Priests led the prayers specific to fire ‘Atash Niyayesh’ and performed the
correct rituals before it was lit at sunset. People would dance around the
fires. Wine an expensive luxury was served communally and like all other
Zoroastrian religious ceremonies the occasion would end with fun, merriment and
feasts. The most elaborate report of the celebration comes from the 10th
century during the reign of Mardavij Zeyari, the ruler of Isfahan. From Iranian
origin the Zeyari family did their best to keep the old traditions alive. Huge
bon fires were set up on both sides of the ‘Zayandeh Rood’, the main river
dividing the city. The fires were contained in specially build metal holders to
maintain control. Hundreds of birds were released while carrying little
fireballs to light the sky. There were fireworks, clowns, dance and music with
lavish feasts of roasted lamb, beef, chicken and other delicacies.
The tradition was virtually lost even amongst
the Zoroastrians. In Pahlavi era it was revived and adopted as a major
celebration by the whole Zoroastrian community and it is becoming known and
increasingly popular with the rest of the Iranians as well. With Zoroastrians
the chief preparation for Sadeh is the gathering of wood the day before the
festival. Teen-age boys accompanied by a few adult males will go to local
mountains in order to gather camel’s thorn, a common desert shrub in Iran. For
most it will be the first time they are away from their families. Wood is a
scarce commodity in Iran and the occasion resembles a rite of passage, a
noteworthy step for the boys on the way to manhood.
The wood gathered would be taken to the local
shrine and on their return home if it is their first time there will be a
celebration for the boys at home with friends and relatives. However this
practice is becoming more difficult these days and attempts are made to preserve
it. The work is hard, wood more scarce than ever, fewer boys are prepared to
attempt it and safety is a major concern. In addition massive emigration into
the cities or outside the country has significantly reduced the number of boys
available for this occasion.
Traditionally young boys went door to door and
ask for wood and collect whatever they could get, from a broken spade-handle to
logs and broken branches. While knocking on doors they would chant simple verses
like "if you give a branch, god will grant your wish, if you don’t, god
won’t favor your wish" and similar verses. All wood collected would be
taken to the local shrine. Before the sunset all gathered outside the temple to
torch the wood. Prayers were said with chants remembering the great ones of the
faith and the deceased. In ancient times the fires were always set near water
and temples. The great fire originally meant (like winter fires lit at other
occasions) to help revive the declining sun, and bring back the warmth and light
of summer. It was also designed to drive off the demons of frost and cold, which
turned water to stone, and thus could kill the roots of plants beneath the
earth. For this reasons the fire was lit near and even over water and by the
shrine of Mihr, who was lord both of fire and the sun. Biruni in AD 1000 has
very accurately described all these reasons for Sadeh Festival.
The fire is kept burning all night. The day
after, first thing in the morning, women would go to the fire and each one will
carry a small portion back to their homes and new glowing fires are made from
the ritually blessed fire. This is to spread the blessing of the Sadeh fire to
every household in the neighborhood. Whatever that is left of the fire will be
taken back to the shrine to be pilled in one container and will be kept at the
temple. The festivities would normally go on for three days and the wood
gathering by the boys door to door and blessing of the dead happens every night
and evenings are spend eating and giving away ‘khairat’ (giving away as a
good deed). Food prepared from slaughtered lamb and ‘ash e khairat’ are
distributed amongst the less fortunate.
Today, Sadeh is mainly celebrated on 10th
of Bahman. The fires may or may not be lit outside and most activities take
place inside the shrines. The wood gathering activities are reduced though there
are efforts to preserve them. However the bulk of the Iranians are becoming more
familiar with the occasion and there are gatherings and celebrations outside
Iran. Fires are lit, music, dancing and merriment of all kinds will go on for
the rest of the evening. The occasion for the majority of Iranians has no
religious significance and no specific rituals are involved other than torching
bon fires at sunset and having a merry time and therefore keeping up with the
ancient traditions when merriment was venerated and practiced.
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