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The observation of the rhythm of the year with celebration and festival life is universal among humans everywhere and of every age. Since the beginning of time, there is evidence that all peoples have celebrated the rhythm of life, returning to ritual and routine year after year, marking time, showing reverence and connecting with each other and the world around us through the cycle of the year.

Universal Quality

Many cultures share common roots in the origins of celebration. Foods used in celebration often reflect the local harvest, or what has been put up from the harvest. Spices are often associated with seasons and celebration. Think of warming allspice, nutmeg and cinnamon in the fall. Sometimes foods are related symbolically to the celebration, by color, shape or quality. Song and dance often accompany celebrations along with performances of varied sorts.

Why Celebrate Festivals and Other days?

Festival life is an important and meaningful element of Waldorf/Steiner/LifeWays education and parenting communities. Celebrations help carry children, families, teachers and communities through the year with preparation and anticipation of what is to come, through song, story, movement, gathering and use of seasonal materials for practical and decorative use, and of course, specific foods. Festivals and celebrations provide homeschooling families regular moments in the year to come together and celebrate. Sometimes festivals are celebrated through a playgroup and can be a means for fostering community for its members. Schools often open their doors to welcome the broader community for festival celebrations. Online bloggers offer pictures of celebrations and descriptions of how to pull it together.

How Many Festivals to Celebrate?

The number of days for possible celebration is limitless and may seem overwhelming. In trying to decide which festivals to take up consider the mood of the season, what is the essential element? What speaks to you? What are your family’s beliefs and traditions? What traditions would you like to create or deepen that resonate deep within for you? What is celebrated in your community? What Festivals feel like social ones to you? Which ones feel more private or family oriented? How can you bring them about?

Mood of Autumn

Let’s begin with the mood of the season. In autumn, we continue with the harvest that began in summer, preserving food for winter through canning, drying and freezing. Autumn festivals begin as sustenance building, strength and courage making, and then move us through the dying and dropping of the leaves, the seeds dispersing, the veils between the worlds grows thin, we remember the ancestors, offering them sustenance and celebrating life and death with All Hallows Eve, All Saints and All Souls Days, the Day of the Dead, then move through the darkness of the year towards festivals of light, festivals of finding the light within and carrying it out into the world, in the cold dark night of winter, fanning our flames to create and sustain warmth for all the world. And one morning we awaken to find the world covered in crystals and note that Jack Frost has made his fist visit. We are in the season of autumn.

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September :: October :: November Celebrations and festivals of autumn with some favorite resources for building, deepening and nourishing a festival life at home or in community. Rosh Hashanah :: begins at sundown Sept 9th – ends at sundown Sept 11th

Yom Kippur :: begins at sundown Sept 18th – ends at sundown Sept 19th

Autumn Equinox :: Sept 23rd

Sukkot – Jewish festival of the harvest :: Sept 23rd – Sept 30th

Michaelmas ~ the Feast Day of St. Michael, the archangel :: Sept 29th

Feast Day of St. Francis ~ patron saint of animals :: Oct 4th

Canadian Thanksgiving :: Oct 8th

All Hallow’s Eve ~ Halloween :: Oct 31st

Dia de los Muertos ~ Days of the Dead :: Oct 31st- Nov 2nd

All Saints Day :: Nov 1st

All Souls Day :: Nov 2nd

Martinmas :: Nov 11th ~ the feast day of St. Martin of Tours, often celebrated with lantern walks

US Thanksgiving :: Nov 22nd

Chanukah :: begins at sundown Dec 2nd – ends at sundown Dec 10th

Advent :: Dec 2nd – Dec 24th

Saint Nicholas :: Dec 6th

Santa Lucia Day :: Dec 13th The Spiral Garden during Advent Christmas is rapidly approaching and the Winter Solstice brings the end to fall ::::::::::::::: Some Favorite Resources for Autumn All Year Round by Ann Druitt, Christine Frynes-Clinton and Marije Rowling The Children’s Year by Stephanie Cooper, Christine Frynes-Clinton and Marye Rowling Festivals, Family and Food by Diana Carey Calendar of the Soul by Rudolf Steiner In the Light of a Child by Michael Hedley Burton The Harvest Craft Book by Thomas Berger Celebrate the Rhythm of Life in September, October, November

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Lisa Boisvert Mackenzie is the Editor and Publisher of The Wonder of Childhood and has spent the past fifteen years with one of her own children in early childhood (under seven years of age.) She was blessed with a wondrous, rhythmic and outdoor childhood on the coast of Maine. Lisa has worked with children and their families for the past twenty four years, initially as a homebirth midwife. Lisa’s home based program The Children’s Garden began eighteen years ago on a remote tropical island in the Pacific Ocean. Lisa’s current focus is on supporting parents of young children to find rhythm in daily, weekly and seasonal life through her interactive curriculum program Celebrate the Rhythm of Life through the Year, more on that here. She lives with her family in Northern Vermont and blogs at Celebrate the Rhythm of Life . She also hosts a discussion groups for parents of young children here.