Yule For Children
Nov 22, 2000 -
© Kimberly Moore.
Yule is the holiday associated with the Winter Solstice, which is the longest night of the year. Much celebration was made as this long, cold night marked the rebirth of the return of the Sun King, also known as the Oak King and the god of the wood. Holly, ivy, and mistletoe were used to decorate the inside and the outside of homes during this festive season. They worked as an invitation for the woodland sprites or faeries to come in join in the celebrations. Children would be given baskets lined with evergreen boughs and wheat stalks sprinkled with flour. The baskets also contained clove-spiked apples and oranges to carry from house to house to share good wishes for Yule. The evergreen boughs are symbolic of immortality, the wheat stalks the harvest, and the flour is for the triumph of light. The apples and oranges are symbols for the returning sun. This is a lovely tradition to do even today. Children and adults love Christmas parties and one way to share the spirit of Yule with those around you is to have a Yuletide party. Let the children invite their friends and neighbours you are friendly with. Then have a decorating party. Here's a suggestion on how to do it. Have your children make invitations for the Yuletide Party. I usually draw out the shape of a few holly leaves and let the kids cut them out and colour them. Then, on the back, I write out the invitation. If your children are old enough, they can do this themselves. Next, either go on a hike and gather the holly, mistletoe, ivy, evergreen boughs, et cetera yourself, or hit the shops. Set all except the boughs and the wheat stalks aside for the party. If you cannot get wheat stalks, try straw, or make paper ones. Even broomstraw can be "wheat" for a day. Line a wicker basket with the evergreen boughs, placing the wheat stalks on top. Sprinkle the flour on top of the wheat. Be sure to explain the reasons you are doing this. The next activity is to take cloves and push them into apples and oranges. I find that a firm apple such as a Gala apple works the best. The common Delicious apples tend to get wrinkly and go bad sooner, so I don't recommend using them. Small oranges will fit best in the basket, so I recommend not using Navel oranges unless you want a three orange and two apples basket!
The copyright of the article Yule For Children in Pagan Homeschooling is owned by Kimberly Moore.. Permission to republish Yule For Children in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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