Wednesday 27 April 2016

Germany's most bizarre May 1st traditions


Germany's most bizarre May 1st traditions 

May 1st brings out weird and wonderful traditions in Germany, from mountain-top witch parties to day-drinking and dancing. Something wicked this way comes...

1. Putting up (and stealing) the ‘May tree’
Left: Dresdeners put up the Maibaum. Right: A young woman climbs the Maibaum in Nesselweg, Bavaria. Photos: DPA.
Similar to the maypole of Anglo traditions, the German Maibaum (May tree) is erected on May 1st or the day before. Residents in Bavaria, East Frisia in Lower Saxony, Baden-Württemberg and elsewhere celebrate this originally pagan ritual each year within their local communities.
The tree (or pole) is decorated with colourful streamers, flowers and in some places with scenes showing local crafts or activities.
Parades, brass band music and sausage-eating usually accompany the event of the actual raising of the tree. And don’t forget the special dark Maibock beer, brewed just for the occasion.
Locals from Ruhpolding, Bavaria ride a stolen Maibaum down the street. Photo: DPA.
Perhaps the most thrilling part is the tradition of towns trying to steal one another’s May trees, requiring locals to keeps a close watch day and night to ward off their sneaky neighbours. If and when a tree is stolen, towns must then hash out a ransom for it, usually involving copious amounts of beer and food.
In 2004, some clever thieves used a helicopter to steal a May tree that had been placed atop Germany’s highest mountain, the Zugspitze.
Another challenge in some areas is that people (the Maibaumkraxler in Bavaria) compete to climb the tree to get to the top as fast as possible.

2. Dancing until May comes

A Tanz in den Mai party in Dortmund. Photo: DPA.
Another tradition often associated with the May tree is Tanz in den Mai, or dancing into May, starting on April 30th and not stopping until every one of your toes are aching.
But getting footloose on the eve of May 1st now also extends outside of the small town circles, with major clubs in big cities planning special events around the tradition.

3. Partying with witches and devils

Celebrations of the 'Witches' Night' in the Harz mountains. Photo: DPA.
The dancing tradition is also associated with Walpurgisnacht or Hexennacht (Witches’ Night), on which Germanic folklore says witches would meet on the peak of Brocken within the Harz mountains to revel with the Devil.
To this day, women in the Harz area (and beyond) will dress up and go dance on the mountain top, warts, horns and all.

4. Jumping over fires

A 'May fire' in Sieversdorf, Brandenburg. Photo: DPA.
Another way to celebrate the witches’ night on May 1st is to light a bonfire, or Maifeuer, and jump over it, though in some regions this isn’t always connected to magical sorceresses.
Other regions like Brandenburg do stick wooden figures of witches into the flames to ward off any evil-doers.

5. Protesting (or perhaps partying)

Berlin's Kreuzberg district turns into a massive street party, while elsewhere in the city more serious activists hold protests on May 1st. Photo: DPA.
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A more modern tradition is to use the International Workers' Day as a way to promote labour rights and for left-wingers to protest injustices.
Berlin’s Kreuzberg neighbourhood became a hotbed for such demonstrations in 1987, when riots there were so intense that police had to retreat from the area for hours.
Protests still carry on and sometimes get violent on this day, but there are also now alternative events in Kreuzberg that essentially turn the area into a massive street party, with musical performances, dance parties in Görlitzer Park and endless day-drinking.

6. Revealing a secret crush

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