Beyond The Swedish Postcard
On the last night of April, across Sweden, the fires are lit. In city parks and on hilltops, in university towns and tiny villages, people gather in the cold spring twilight. Choirs sing. Sparks rise into the dark. And for one night, an ancient tradition flickers back to life, older than the Swedish language, older than Christianity in the North, older than almost anything we can name. In this special bonus episode of Beyond the Swedish Postcard, released a day before the bonfires burn; we explore Valborg, or Walpurgis Night. What began as a pagan ritual to ward off witches on the most dangerous night of the year was eventually given the name of an English-born Frankish abbess who had absolutely nothing to do with bonfires. The church didn't stamp out the flames. It simply gave them a saint. We trace Valborg's journey from Viking-era protective fires through medieval Christianization to modern Sweden, where it has become something altogether different: a communal exhale after the long Scandinavian winter. Along the way, we visit the legendary student chaos of Uppsala, the chicken manure incident of 2020, and the quiet lagom beauty of a celebration that doesn't need to be extravagant to be meaningful. Whether you're standing before a bonfire tomorrow evening or listening from across the world, this episode will help you understand what the flames really mean; and why, for over a thousand years, Swedes have gathered on this night to burn the winter away. Glad Valborg!
22 episodios
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