Monday, January 6, 2020

January 06 - Three Kings Day


Happy Three Kings Day! On the twelfth day of Christmas, January 6th, we celebrate this day!  

Observed most in Spain and Latin America, but also across Europe, “El Dia de los Reyes”, as it's called in Spanish, marks the adoration of baby Jesus by the three wise men.  

HISTORY  

In Mexico and many other Latin American countries, Santa Claus isn’t as popular as he is in the United States. Rather, it is the three wise men who are the bearers of gifts and leave presents in or near the shoes of small children.  

The holiday is also known by the name Epiphany and dates back to the 4th century. A grand feast would be held on this day to honor the occasion of Jesus’ baptism and to pay homage to the three wise men. 

Many believe mysterious events preceded Jesus’ birth with perhaps the most notable being the appearance of the star in Bethlehem. This new star appeared in the evening sky just prior to the arrival of Jesus Christ.  

Three wise men, or Magi as they were known, whose names were Caspar, Melchior, and Balthasar, traveled a far distance to pay homage to Christ. They brought with them fine gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. 

Three Kings Day, or El Dia de Reyes, remains an important holiday for Latin America. In addition to gift-giving, there is also a culinary treat that is specific to the holiday.  

Known as Rosca de Reyes (King’s Cake), this holiday dessert is a symbolic pastry. Shaped in a circle to signify a king’s crown, this sweet bread holds a special surprise.  

Inside is a small plastic figurine representing the baby Jesus. Whoever finds this token is obligated to host an upcoming party for the occasion Dia de la Condelaria (Candlemas Day) which occurs each year on February 2nd.

THREE KINGS DAY TIMELINE 

1969 

The twelfth day of Christmas Revisions of the General Roman Calendar made the Three Kings Day date to some extent variable, assigning the celebration of the day to occur on the Sunday between January 2 and 8, though it is still more widely celebrated on January 6, 12 days after Christmas. 

385 AD  

Epiphany 

The pilgrim Egeria described a celebration in Jerusalem and Bethlehem, which she called "Epiphany" that commemorated the Nativity.  

December 25, 380 AD

Theophany  

St. Gregory of Nazianzus referred to the day as "the Theophany", saying that the day commemorates the holy nativity of Christ. 

200 AD

From Rome to Egypt 

Though Three Kings Day originated in the Greek speaking eastern half of the Roman Empire, Clement of Alexandria wrote that followers of Basilides in Egypt also celebrated the day of Jesus' baptism.  

Gifts 

On January 5th, the Three Kings are added to nativity decorations and children leave their shoes out overnight waiting for a visit from the wise men.  

When they wake up in the morning, they will find that the Kings have left them gifts inside and near their shoes. 

Rosca de Reyes 

King’s cake, Rosca de Reyes, is the highlight of the Three Kings Day celebrations. The cake is shaped into an open circle, or wreath, and studded with candied fruit and nuts to represent the jewels in the Magi’s crowns.  

The tradition of the cake requires that a tiny baby Jesus doll is hidden within the cake. Whoever receives the serving with the Baby Jesus must host February’s Candlemas celebration.  

Al fresco feast 

In its core, Three Kings Day is in fact a feast day. Therefore, it makes perfect since that on this day, families enjoy a big filling meal.In Latin American countries, this feast is enjoyed al fresco, outdoors.  

Traditional dishes include black beans and rice with some families switching out the beans for peas or corn, soups and salads that feature yucca, nopales, and plantains, and a slow cooked meat sautéed with onions, garlic, and herbs. 

STATISTICS 

60,000 Rosca de Reyes 

California’s Northgate Gonzalez Market sells about 60,000 Rosca de Reyes each year. They start selling the original, small rosca just before Thanksgiving.  

About a week before Christmas, they sell the cakes in four sizes and two varieties: original and filled. One year, the fillings consisted of guava and cheese or pineapple and cajeta 
  
2,065.43 meters World Record 

In 2019, chefs from La Universidad Vizcaya de las Americas were awarded the Guinness World Record for the longest Rosca de Reyes bread in the world.  

Measuring at 2,065.43 meters, the lengthy traditional bread beat the previous world holder for the longest loaf, which was Switzerland.  

Carlos Tapia of Guinness World Records for Latin America verified the length of the bread and its new world record, noting that the previous record held by Switzerland measured in at 973.24 meters. 

The ring also included more than seven thousand dolls inside of the pastry.  
  
200,000 people annually 

Every year in Mexico on the eve of Three Kings Day, a mile-long Rosca de Reyes cake is made to celebrate the holiday.  

More than two hundred thousand people gather annually in Zocalo Square to eat a piece of the King’s cake or take some home to save for later.  

Starting in 2018, Mexico City’s government emphasized that a portion of the delicacy shall be made without sugar so that people who need to avoid sweets are also able to partake in the tradition. 

FAQS 

Why do we celebrate Three kings Day? 

Three Kings Day is considered the end of Christmas celebrations, representing the day the Three Wise Men gave gifts to Jesus Christ. 

What do people eat on Three Kings Day? 

A traditional Three Kings Day meal consists of a starter of soup or salad, a main course of picadillo meat with rice and beans (though some families exchange beans for corn or peas), and a King’s cake for dessert. 

Is Three Kings Day a religious holiday? 

Three Kings Day is a religious Christian and Catholic holiday mostly celebrated in Latin America and Spain. 

ACTIVITIES 
  
1.Get a “Rosca de Reyes” 
 The King Cake tradition is alive in New Orleans as well as across South America, and recipes to make one are found fairly easily online. 

Imagine a deliciously sweet cake with cinnamon and sugary sauce, with a variety of fillings depending on how decadent you’re feeling. 
  
2. Read the Holy Bible  

If you’re going to celebrate a Christian festival, why not read the gospel it’s all based on? Twelfth night (Epiphany) marks the baptism of Jesus Christ by John the Baptist.  

The word “Epiphany" also means “manifestation" and celebrates the revelation of God in human form as Jesus Christ. Start at Matthew 2:11, and see what happens. 

3. Jump in some freezing cold water 

In Prague, there’s a traditional Three Kings swim in the Vltava River. People wear speedos, some of them wear crowns, and then they jump from a barge into the water. Afterwards they drink mulled wine and eat delicious, warming Czech snacks. 

WHY WE LOVE THREE KINGS DAY 

A. A reason for more gifts 

Christmas isn’t the end of presents! In Europe, children look forward to receiving more gifts on Three Kings Day, lining their shoes up outside their doors so the Three Kings will know to leave their gifts inside. 

B. An excuse for more eating  

Three Kings Day is celebrated in South America with a delicious dinner crowned with a “Rosca de Reyes” or King Cake for dessert.  

The “Rosca de Reyes” is a round cake with a plastic Jesus figurine hidden inside, and the person at the party who finds the baby Jesus has to make tamales for everyone on the Day of the Candles, which comes on February 2nd. 

C. It has fun traditions 

Many families leave a box of grass or hay and some water for the Three Kings’ camels (and horses and elephants) to eat.The camels usually leave a trail of hay behind that children can follow to find their gifts. 

How do you celebrate Three Kings Day? 

#ThreeKingsDay 
#Epiphany 
#TheThreeWiseMen 
#WeThreeKings 
@nationaltoday
@GuinnessWorldRecords 
@nichecinema 

DATES 
January 06, 2021 
January 06, 2022 
January 06, 2023 
January 06, 2024 

January 06 - Larisa Shepitko


Happy Birthday, Larisa Shepitko! Born today in 1938 as Larisa Efimovna Shepitko, this Soviet actress, screenwriter and film director is best known for co-writing and directing the 1977 Soviet black and white drama/art film 'Voskhozhdeniye' (literally 'The Ascent'). 

The film was based off of the 1974 Soviet fiction novel "Sotnikov" by Vasil BykaÅ­, a prolific author of novels and novellas about World War II and a significant figure in soviet and Belarusian literature and civic thought. 
  
Shepitko passed in a car crash on a highway near the city of Tver with four members of her shooting team while scouting locations for her planned adaptation of a Russian novel on July 2, 1979. She was 41.  
  
The following year, her husband, Soviet Russian film director Elem Klimov ('Come and See'), made the twenty-five-minute 1980 West German biography documentary/short film tribute entitled 'Larisa'. 

Three years later, Klimov finished Shepitko's final work with the 1983 Soviet drama film 'Proshchanie'(under the title 'Farewell'). 

Shepitko had been active from 1956–1979.
  
#borntodirect 
@Criterion 
@WomenInFilm 

January 06 - John Singleton


Happy Birthday, John Singleton! Born today in 1968 as John Daniel Singleton, this African-American actor, screenwriter, producer and film director was best known for directing the 1991 American teen hood drama/crime film 'Boyz n the Hood'. 

The following year, Singleton was nominated for an Oscar for Best Director at the 64th Academy Awards in late March 1992. From this, he became, at age twenty-four, the first African-American and youngest person to have ever been nominated for that award. 

Singleton had been active from 1991–2019. 

#borntodirect 
#BlackDirectorsMatter 
@tcm

January 06 - Anthony Minghella


Happy Birthday, Anthony Minghella! Born today in 1954, this British playwright, screenwriter and film director was chairman of the board of Governors at the British Film Institute between 2003 and 2007. 

In 1997, Minghella won an Oscar for Best Director for the 1996 American romantic war drama film 'The English Patient' at the 69th Academy Awards in late March. 

The film was based off of Sri Lankan-born Canadian poet, fiction writer, essayist, novelist, editor and filmmaker Michael Ondaatje's 1992 eponymous war story historiographic metafiction novel. 

Minghella had been active from 1981–2008. 

#borntodirect 
@BFI