This is an edited blog post that was originally written in 2008:
Today
is the day after Christmas. It is a day when kids play with their
Christmas presents and parents sleep in and relax, if they are lucky
enough to not have to go to work. It's also a day when lots of people
return Christmas presents to the stores and exchange them for something
else. For still others it has become a day to shop for super discounted
items as stores continue to make deals to get rid of their Christmas
supplies and overstocked items. For this reason, it is now being called
Black Friday #2. But on my calendar it says Boxing Day (Canada). Boxing
Day? What is Boxing Day and why is it on my calendar? It also says
Kwanzaa on my calendar today, but that is a topic for another day. I did
a little research and found out that Boxing Day is celebrated in Great
Britain (England), Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. It has it's roots
going back to the Middle Ages in England and spread to the previously
named countries over time. The name derives from the fact that in the
early days, servants were required to work on Christmas Day, but were
given the next day off. Their employers would give them gift "boxes" on
that day (hence, Boxing Day), to thank them for their services. As time
went on, people expanded the tradition to include other service people,
like doormen, porters, mail carriers, and the like. I think this is
possibly where the tradition of giving someone a tip comes from. Tipping
is a good idea for a future blog also. Anyway, for whatever reason
Boxing Day has continued on as a holiday in these other Anglo-Saxon
countries besides ours. I'm not sure why this tradition did not make it
to America (although tipping sure did). So that begs the question. Why
is it on my calendar? Is it because all calendars sold in America are
also sold in Canada where they celebrate Boxing Day? Or is it because
there are plenty of Canadians who now reside in the United States? I'm
not sure. Hey wait a minute...some calendars also say St. Stephen.
What's that? Now this is really getting confusing. St. Stephen's Day is
also an English holiday, and a Catholic Feast Day, marking the day that
Saint Stephen was martyred by being stoned to death in Jerusalem in 34
or 35 A.D. This is where we get the line "on the feast of Stephen" from
the Christmas carol, Good King Wenceslas. If fact, many websites on this
topic suggest that St. Stephen's Day was the name of the holiday before
it became known as Boxing Day. So there you have it. A history lesson
and my thoughts on Boxing Day.
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