Throughout human history, the celebration of a bountiful harvest is weaved into many different cultures. Many of these celebrations are rooted in religious or cultural practices, including the Thanksgiving holiday celebrated in the United States.
Today, harvests are celebrated around the world in different ways and for different reasons. Religious studies faculty in Arizona State University's School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies gave insight on some celebrations from countries around the world.
Sombile
Sombile is a fall harvest festival on the day of the autumnal equinox that was celebrated by Muslim Turkic-speaking people of the Russian Federation, or Tatars, before the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. Although many of the prerevolutionary agrarian festivals, such as Sombile, faded away during Soviet Union rule, the famous Sabantuy festival or the Plough festival remain in practice to this day.
“Currently Sombile is experiencing a comeback, especially in schools,” said Agnes Kefeli, clinical professor of religious studies. “People come from different villages to see children perform in plays that reenact the ancient festival as they imagined it to be in the past. A girl is chosen for her beauty and wit to represent Mother Nature.”
The girl is placed on a throne and people bring fruits of harvest to her. She is then asked to predict whether the winter will be cold or not.
“Because this festival has no Islamic basis, mullahs and female religious teachers, abystays, object to the renewal of this celebration in schools,” Kefeli said. “Nevertheless, many secular Tatar teachers welcome it because it is, in their view, an occasion for the community to speak and sing in Tatar, eat Tatar dishes and renew their commitment to their unique culture.”
Many Tatar people welcome Sombile as an ecological festival that reunites them with nature and their native landscape since many resent the damage caused by forced industrialization.
Zhongqiu Jie (Middle Autumn Festival)
Zhongqiu Jie, the Middle Autumn Festival or the Moon Festival, is celebrated in China. The Chinese traditionally used the lunar calendar and this festival was timed for the 15th day of the eighth month.
“The 15th of each month is always a full moon and, as you know, the ‘harvest moon’ is usually gorgeous,” said Regents Professor of religious studies and Chinese Stephen Bokenkamp. “It is also celebrated in Korea and Japan under other names. Chuseok ‘autumn eve’ in Korea and Tsukimi ‘moon viewing’ in Japan.”
This harvest’s earliest recorded celebration dates back to during the Shang dynasty, 1600–1046 BC, but its origin is unknown. Today, the festival is one of the few still based on the lunar calendar, so it falls at a different time each year according to the solar calendar. This year it was on Oct. 1.
There is a custom of putting out lanterns, viewing the moon and eating moon cakes and other foods based on major crops such as rice and wheat for the festival. Many stories are associated with the festival, including ones of gods, goddesses and emperors.
“My favorite is that, on one moon festival night, the Tang emperor Li Longji asked the Daoist Ye Jingneng where the best lanterns in the kingdom might be situated,” Bokenkamp said. “The Daoist responded, but said that none matched the brilliance of those in the Moon Palace. He then conducted the emperor to the palaces of the moon where he learned the music to the Daoist dance ‘Rainbow Skirts and Feathered Robes’ from the performance of the ‘silk white maidens’ who entertained him there.”
The Celebration of the Coronation of Emperor Haile Selassie I and Empress Menen Asfaw of Ethiopia
Rastafari communities around the world celebrate the coronation date of Emperor Haile Selassie I and Empress Menen Asfaw of Ethiopia on Nov. 2 of every year. The coronation occurred on that date in 1930 and was a monumental moment for the community because Ethiopia was one of the only sovereign nations in Africa at the time.
“The spectacle of a Black king and queen during white supremacist European imperialism was a transformative moment across Africa and the African diaspora,” said Shamara Wyllie Alhassan, assistant professor of religious studies. “This coronation was transformative because it exposed the lie or disinformation campaign that narrated Africa as ahistorical and Africans as inhuman. For Rastafari, the coronation signified Black humanity, Black royalty and Black divinity during a time when Black people desperately needed a symbol of hope.”
The celebration of the coronation is still held in Rastafari communities across the globe. Emperor Haile Selassie I and Empress Menen Asfaw are divine in Rastafari cosmology, which originated with Leonard Percival Howell in his 1935 book, “The Promised Key.”
“A typical celebration looks like a large gathering with singing, drums, sharing food, reasonings or extended debates about several issues pertaining to the world and Rastafari spirituality,” Alhassan said. “The celebration reaffirms community, shared orientation and ideas amongst Rastafari communities.”
Saints Days
There are many harvest holidays celebrated across Eurasia, all beginning at different times and for different reasons but most revolve around the Russian Orthodox Church.
In Ukraine, the harvest festivities begin on the feast day of the Great Martyr Saint Procopius the Harvester. The Russian Orthodox Church continues to use the Julian calendar, as did Russia from 1700 to 1918.
“Procopius’s feast day falls on July 8 in the Julian calendar, which is July 21 in the Gregorian,” said Eugene Clay, associate professor of religious studies. “The harvesters took the first few ears of grain solemnly to their home, where they placed them beneath a consecrated painted image of a saint or holy event and decorated them with crowns made from flowers. When the grain was milled, these first ears were processed separately so that they could be later mixed with the seeds that would be sown. In this way, the farmers returned fertility to the earth.”
In other places in Russia, the beginning of the harvest is celebrated on Saint Panteleimon’s Day with ears of grain solemnly brought to the church to be blessed.
“Likewise, at the end of the harvest, farmers left a few ears of grain in the field, which they call ‘the beard,’” said Clay. “According to the folklorist Vladimir Propp, people differed over whether these remaining grains represented the beard of St. Elijah, the beard of Christ or even the beard of the landlord. The peasants decorated these unharvested grains with ribbons or flowers and then made an appeal to them to guarantee the fertility of the fields.”
Andean Harvest Fiestas
Unlike most monotheistic harvest traditions, where there is a god who created crops and the Earth from outside of itself and therefore there is an abundance of resources, many native and Indigenous people view the Earth as something that needs to be replenished and thanked directly. This is true for people who are native to the Andes in South America.
“The mountains in the Andes are thought of as being reservoirs or storehouses of every good thing,” said Tod Swanson, associate professor of religious studies. “But they are like a human body. They are like human beings in the sense that they can wear out; they can be exhausted.”
The Andean harvest festivals take place around the winter solstice, which south of the equator is around June. People from neighboring communities from up and down the mountains come together for days of feasting, drinking and dancing.
The primary purpose of the festival is to elicit a reaction from the mountains to bring liquid rain so the next cycle of crops will grow. In these traditions, the fluids that come from the earth are thought of as emotional, bodily and sexual fluids such as tears or milk.
“The idea here is that the mountains that are up around the earth are flowing water down to nourish the people,” Swanson said. “The idea here is that the people that are having the festival are the children of the mountains and the ancestors are inside those mountains and on the Earth.”
These festivals last days as people eat and drink alcohol. They also pour their drinks out on the ground, so that they are sharing their harvest with their ancestors and the earth.
“You are engaging the earth that is tied into your body through a circulation of fluids,” Swanson said. “It is somehow tied into you and you are, not paying the earth, but you are flirting with the earth or engaging the earth so as to create a response of love.”
Now, the harvest fiestas have become attached to different Catholic feast days, but remain an important celebration in the regions.
Sukkoth
Sukkoth is the final harvest festival for Jewish people all over the world. It’s also known as Feast of Tabernacles or the Festival of Booths and commemorates God protecting the Israelites during their desert wanderings.
“It originates in the Hebrew Bible and is one of three pilgrimage festivals, along with Passover and Shavuot, when Jews would make pilgrimage to the Jerusalem temple with offerings,” said Timothy Langille, lecturer of religious studies. “For Sukkoth, that offering would be from the autumn harvest. Before the second temple was destroyed in 70 CE by the Romans, Sukkoth also was a water-drawing festival when libations would be poured over the altar as people prayed for rain.”
As part of the celebration, as prescribed by the Torah, people build a “sukkah,” also known as a booth or temporary shelter, as a reminder that the Israelites lived in sukkahs after the exodus from Egypt.
“These structures are built in yards, gardens or balconies and it’s customary to dwell in them,” Langille said. “The roof of the sukkah is covered with branches and plants and is decorated in various other ways, but the stars at night can be seen through the roof. If possible, meals during Sukkoth are eaten in the sukkah.”
This harvest is an eight-day festival for Jewish people in the diaspora and a seven-day festival for Jews living in Israel and it begins five days after Yom Kippur, the holiest of days on the Jewish calendar. Like an American Thanksgiving, Jewish people will use a cornucopia as a symbol of the holiday, but the holiday is also associated with palm, myrtle, willow and citron.
More Arts, humanities and education
ASU student finds connection to his family's history in dance archives
First-year graduate student Garrett Keeto was visiting the Cross-Cultural Dance Resources Collections at Arizona State University…
ASU alumna makes her way back to the ASU Gammage stage for '¡azúcar!'
As the Los Angeles-based CONTRA-TIEMPO dance group prepares for its upcoming production “¡azúcar!” at ASU Gammage, for one member…
ASU FIDM professor wins international award for fantastical, sustainable creation
The horror of an ailing Earth inspired an Arizona State University fashion professor to create a fantastical garment out of…