KLECHALNY CUSTOM AS A SPIRITUAL PHENOMENON OF UKRAINIAN CULTURE

Authors

  • Inna PAHOLOK PhD (History), Senior Lecturer at Separated Subdivision “Lviv Branch of Kyiv National University of Culture and Arts”,
  • Natalia HRYNOKH PhD (History), Associate Professor, The Deputy Director of Educational Work, Separated Subdivision “Lviv Branch of Kyiv National University of Culture and Arts”,

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24919/2519-058x.17.218198

Keywords:

spiritual culture, calendar ritual traditions, klechalny custom, the Trinity greenery, mermaids, “dіdy”, “Provody”

Abstract

The Purpose of the article. The research paper aims at introducing a scientifically substantiated characteristics of the klechalny custom, its origin and content within the context of the Ukrainian spiritual culture. The Methodology of the Research. The research methodology is based on the principles of historicism, objectivity and comprehensiveness. The authors have applied the methods of a typological and comparative historical analysis. The Scientific Novelty. The scientific novelty of the obtained results consists in the attempt to reconstruct the tradition of decorating dwellings and farm buildings with tree branches and herbs as well as to present a new perspective on its origin and semantic content. The Conclusions. In the research it has been proved that the Ukrainians used ritual greener, primarily, to invite deceased relatives to their homes on the eve of Zeleni Sviata (Pentecost holidays) and Holy Trinity Day. Indeed, according to traditional beliefs, all major calendar holidays should occur with the obligatory presence of deceased relatives, since the success of the living people in household management and family life depended on their support and help. The meticulous analysis of the data-based materials suggests that the klechalny custom is very ancient in origin, its roots go back to the historical period when there was no division of deceased people into different categories. The absence of ancient ideas about demons in the Ukrainian worldview testifies to the vague reception of them, their predominant identification with the spirits of ancestors (anthropomorphic, zoomorphic, phytomorphic, not personified); all traditional ceremonies were ended with the ancestors’ send-offs, rather than the destruction of “evil”. Just only later, the reception of “close ones” (forefathers) and various demonological characters were formed on the basis of the cult of the dead. Simultaneously, we can observe the differentiation in using verdure embellishment, that is to say, in the interior the greenery was designed for “didy” (ancestors) and in the exterior the greenery was designed for “rusalky” (mermaids). In turn, this fact explains the existence of different ways the Ukrainians treat and deal with the Trinity greenery after the holiday.

References

Agapkina, T. A. (2002). Mifopoeticheskie osnovy slavyanskogo narodnogo kalendarya: vesenne-letniy tsikl [Mythopoetic Foundations of the Slavic Folk Calendar. Spring-Summer Cycle]. Moscow: Indrik, 816 p. [in Russian]

Davydyuk, V. (Comp.). (2008). Polisʹka doma. Vol. III. Lito [Polissya Region Doma. III. Summer]. Lutsʹk: PVD “Tverdynya”, 404 p. [in Ukrainian]

Hnatyuk, V. (Comp.). (1912). Pokhoronni zvychayi i obryady [Funeral Customs and Rituals]. Etnografichnyy zbirnyk, (31–32), 139–424. [in Ukrainian]

Kolessa, F. (2001). Viruvannya pro dushu i zahrobne zhyttya v ukrayins`kiy pokhoronniy i pomynalʹniy obryadovosti [Beliefs Concerning the Soul and Afterlife in the Ukrainian Funeral and Commemoration Rituality]. Zapysky` Naukovoho tovarystva imeni Shevchenka, (242), 7–82. [in Ukrainian]

Kozholyanko, H. (2007). Dukhovna kul`tura ukrayintsiv Bukovyny. [Spiritual Culture of Bukovyna Ukrainians]. Chernivtsi: Prut, 404 p. [in Ukrainian]

Kutel`makh, K. (2005). Do vytokiv klechal`noho zvychayu (za materialamy Polissya) [Roots of the Klechalny Tradition (based on Polissya Region)]. Folklore Notebooks, 5–6, 467–483. [in Ukrainian]

Kutelʹmakh, K. (2001). Rusalky v povir’yakh polishchukiv [Mermaids in Polissya Region Beliefs]. Zapysky Naukovoho tovarystva imeni Shevchenka, (242), 87–152. [in Ukrainian]

Makoviy, H. P. (1993). Zatoptanyy tsvit: narodoznavchi opovidky [Trampled Blossom: Ethnographic Stories]. Kyiv: Ukr. Pysʹmennyk, 205 p. [in Ukrainian]

Petrov, V. (1994). Peredkhrystyyansʹki relihiyno-svitohlyadovi elementy. Geneza narodnykh zvychayiv i obryadiv [Pre-Christian Religious and Worldview Elements. Genesis of Folk Customs and Rituals]. Entsyklopediya ukrayinoznavstva [Encyclopedia of Ukrainian Studies]. (Vol. 1, pp. 244–249). Kyiv: Naukova dumka. [in Ukrainian]

Propp, V. Ya. (1963). Russkiye agrarnyye prazdniki: (opyt istoriko-etnograficheskogo issledovaniya) [Russian Agrarian Holidays. (The Experience of the Historical and Ethnographic Research)]. Leningrad: Leningradskiy gos. un-t im. A. A. Zhdanova, 143 p. [in Russian]

Vinogradova, L. N. & Usacheva, V. V. (1999). Zelen’ [Greenery]. Slavyanskiye drevnosti: etnolingvisticheskiy slovar [Slavic Antiquities: Ethno-linguistic Dictionary]. (in 5 vol., Vol. 2, pp. 308–312). Moscow: Mezhdunarodnyye otnosheniya. [in Russian]

Vinogradova, L. N. (2000). Narodnaya demonologiya i mifo-ritualnaya traditsiya slavyan [Folk Demonology and the Mythological Ritual Tradition of the Slavs]. Moscow: Indrik, 432 p. [in Russian]

Zelenin’, D. K. (1914). Opisanіye rukopisey uchenago arkhiva Imperatorskago Russkago geograficheskago obshchestva. [Description of Manuscripts by the Scholarly Archive of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society]. Petrograd: Izdanіye Imperatorskago Russkago geograficheskago obshchestva, Vyp. І. 483 p. [in Russian]

Downloads

Issue

Section

Articles