It is customary in many churches for worshippers to receive fresh palm leaves on Palm Sunday. In parts of the world where this has historically been impractical, substitute traditions have arisen.
Belgium In
Hoegaarden, one of the last remaining Palm Sunday processions takes place every year. A fellowship of Twelve Apostles carries a wooden statue of Christ around the town, while children go door to door offering the palms (
box) for coins.
Bulgaria In
Bulgaria, Palm Sunday is known as
Tsvetnitsa (, "flower") or
Vrabnitsa (
varba, "willow"), or
Flower's Day. People with flower-related names (e.g., , etc.) celebrate this day as their
name day.
England In the 15th through the 17th centuries in England, Palm Sunday was frequently marked by the burning of
Jack o' Lent figures. This was a straw
effigy which would be stoned and abused on Ash Wednesday, and kept in the parish for burning on Palm Sunday. The symbolism was believed to be a kind of revenge on
Judas Iscariot, who had betrayed Christ. The effigy could also have represented the hated figure of Winter, whose destruction prepares the way for Spring.
Egypt and Ethiopia In the
Coptic Orthodox Church and
Orthodox Ethiopia, this holiday is referred to as Hosanna. Palm leaves will be blessed and distributed, they are used to create crucifixes, rings and other ornaments.
Finland es in Finland In
Finland, it is popular for children to dress up as
Easter witches and go door to door in neighborhoods and trade decorated
pussy willow branches for coins and candy. This is an old
Karelian custom called
virpominen. It is customary for the children to chant, with some variation, "Virvon varvon tuoreeks, terveeks, tulevaks vuodeks, vitsa sulle, palkka mulle!" which very roughly translates as "I'm wishing you a fresh, healthy upcoming year, a branch for you, a prize for me!" The chant has been translated in
Juha Vuorinen's novel
Totally Smashed! as "Willow switch, I'm the Easter witch! I wish you health and a love that's rich! From me I bring some luck today, for this branch what will you pay?"
Germany In some regions of Germany, long stakes with pussy willow, box and other twigs are taken for the Palm procession rather than
nosegays. In some Southern regions either the priest leads the palm procession, riding on a donkey, or a wooden donkey (called
Palmesel) with a figure of Christ is traditionally trundled with the procession of the faithful.
India In most of the Christian churches in India, palms are blessed by the priest on Palm Sunday and are then distributed among the people after the celebration of the
Holy Mass. There is a tradition of folding palm
fronds into palm crosses. ) strewn about the sanctuary in an
Oriental Orthodox church in
Mumbai, India, on Palm Sunday In the
South Indian state of
Kerala (and in
Indian Orthodox,
Church of South India (CSI),
Syro-Malankara Catholic Church, and
Syriac Orthodox Church (Jacobite) congregations elsewhere in India and throughout the world), flowers are strewn about the sanctuary on Palm Sunday during the reading of the Gospel, at the words uttered by the crowd welcoming Jesus, "Hosanna! Blessed is he who is come and is to come in the name of the Lord God". These words are read to the congregation thrice. The congregation then repeats, "Hosanna!", and the flowers are scattered, a common custom in Indian celebrations. This symbolizes Jesus' triumphant entry into Jerusalem. (
Oriental Orthodox) of
Kerala – People holding tender leaves of coconut palms (kuruthola) and flowers are thrown upwards during Gospel reading Indian Orthodoxy traces its roots to the arrival in India of Saint
Thomas the Apostle (traditionally dated to AD 52) and his evangelism among both the Brahmans of the
Malabar Coast and the ancient Jewish community there. Its rites and ceremonies are Jewish, Indian and Levantine Christian, in origin. In
Syro-Malabar Catholic Church's palm leaves are blessed during Palm Sunday ceremony and a
Procession takes place holding the palms.
Ireland In
Ireland's cold climate, real palm leaves are generally not available, so
yew,
silver fir,
spruce or
cypress are used instead; it is known in
Irish as , "Yew Sunday". The historian
Patrick Weston Joyce noted that yew was always called "palm" in his 1830s childhood, and he only later learned the tree's correct name. "Palm" branches were often worn in the
buttonhole or hung on the wall; the second practise is still common, and palm branches are blessed with
holy water at
Catholic Masses. In the past in some areas, a palm stem was charred and a cross was marked on eggs set for hatching, while in parts of Counties Galway and Mayo, shredded palm was mixed through the seed grain. The coincidence of Palm Sunday and
Saint Patrick's Day (March 17), "when the
shamrock and the palm are worn together", was said to presage a great event; this last happened in 1940, at the beginning of the
Second World War, and will not reoccur until 2391.
Italy , Italy In
Italy, palm leaves are used along with small olive branches, readily available in the Mediterranean climate. These are placed at house entrances (for instance, hanging above the door) to last until the following year's Palm Sunday. For this reason, usually palm leaves are not used whole, due to their size; instead, leaf strips are braided into smaller shapes. Small olive branches are also often used to decorate traditional Easter cakes, along with other symbols of birth, like eggs.
Latvia In Latvia, Palm Sunday is called "Pussy Willow Sunday", and pussy willows – symbolizing new life – are blessed and distributed to the faithful. Children are often awakened that morning with ritualistic swats of a willow branch.
Lithuania When Christianity came to Lithuania, the plants which sprouted earliest were honored during spring feasts. The name "Palm Sunday" is a misnomer; the "verba" or "dwarfed spruce" is used instead. According to tradition, on the Saturday before Palm Sunday the Lithuanians take special care in choosing and cutting well-formed branches, which the women-folk decorate with flowers. The flowers are meticulously tied onto the branches, making the "Verba".
The Levant In
Israel,
Jordan,
Lebanon,
Palestine, and
Syria, Palm Sunday ( in Arabic) is perhaps the best-attended liturgy in the Christian Calendar, among the
Orthodox, Catholic (
Latin and
Eastern), and
Anglican Churches, perhaps because it is notably a family occasion. On this day, children attend church with branches from
olive and palm trees. Also, there will be carefully woven
crosses and other symbols made from palm fronds and
roses and a procession at the beginning of the liturgy, during which at some point, the priest will take an
olive branch and splash
holy water on the faithful.
Malta All the parishes of
Malta and
Gozo on Palm Sunday () bless the palm leaves and the olive leaves. Those parishes that have the statues of
Good Friday bless the olive tree they put on the statues of "Jesus prays in the Olive Garden" () and the "Betrayal of Judas" (). Also, many people take a small olive branch to their homes because it is a
sacramental.
Netherlands In the
Saxon regions of the Netherlands, crosses are decorated with candy and bread, made in the form of a
rooster. In the
Diocese of Groningen-Leeuwarden, a great
procession with oil lamps is held the night before Palm Sunday in honour of the
Sorrowful Mother of Warfhuizen.
Philippines ,
Pangasinan, Philippines In the
Philippines, a statue of Christ riding a donkey (the
Humenta), or the presiding priest on horseback, is brought to the local church in a morning procession. Congregants line the route, waving
palaspás (ornately woven palm branches) and spreading
tapis (heirloom "aprons" made for this ritual) in imitation of the excited Jerusalemites. At the church parvise, a house, or the town plaza, children dressed as angels scatter flowers as they sing the day's
antiphon Hosanna filio David in the vernacular and to traditional tunes. The first Mass of the day then follows. Once blessed, the
palaspás are brought home and placed on altars, doorways, and windows. The Church teaches that this is a sign of welcoming Christ into the home, but folk belief holds that the blessed
palaspás are
apotropaic, deterring evil spirits, lightning, and fires. Another folk custom is to feed pieces of blessed
palaspás to
roosters used in
sabong (cockfighting); this was strongly discouraged by the
Archbishop of Manila, Cardinal
Luis Antonio Tagle. In other provinces, the flowers strewn by the angels during the procession are added to the rice seeds being planted, in the belief that these will ensure a bountiful harvest.
Poland ,
Poland Many
Polish towns and villages organize decorated
Easter palm competitions: the best known are
Lipnica Murowana in
Lesser Poland and
Łyse in
Mazovia. The biggest of those reach above in length; for example, the highest palm in 2008 was .
Romania and Moldova In
Romania and
Moldova, Palm Sunday is known as
Duminica Floriilor or simply
Florii, translating ''Flowers' Sunday''. This name has its roots in a pre-Christian fertility festival, where flowers played a prominent role.
Spain In Spain, there is a tradition at the Palmeral of Elche (Europe's largest palm grove) in which local people cover palm leaves from the sun to allow them to whiten, and then they tie and braid them into intricate shapes. A
Spanish rhyming proverb states: ("On Palm Sunday, the hands drop off of those who fail to wear something new"). On Palm Sunday, it is customary to don new clothing or shoes.
Syria In
Syria, it is popular for children to go door to door in neighborhoods, chanting about Lazarus' rising from the dead, for which they are given coins or eggs.
Wales In southern
Wales and nearby portions of England, '' or 'Flowering Sunday' is a grave decoration tradition commonly observed on Palm Sunday, although historically Flowering Sunday grave decoration was also observed on other days as well. Today, the names Palm Sunday and Flowering Sunday are used interchangeably in those regions. In 1829, Thomas Wallace of
Llanbadoc,
Monmouthshire published a poem which contains the first known reference to the custom being practiced only on Palm Sunday. Welsh cemetery cleaning and decoration traditions may have begun as an Easter celebration before becoming more commonly associated with Palm Sunday. As early as 1786, cleaning and flower decorations were attested by William Matthews during a tour of South Wales. Richard Warner attested in 1797 "the ornamenting of the graves of the deceased with various plants and flowers, at certain seasons, by the surviving relatives" and noted that Easter was the most popular time for this tradition. By 1803, Malkin's observations in "The Scenery, Antiquities, and Biography of South Wales from materials collected during two excursions in the year 1803" reflect the shift away predominantly associating the custom with Easter. ==See also==