Iran Events
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The festival of Jashn e Sadeh

Sadeh meaning hundred, is a mid
winter feast that was celebrated
with grandeur and magnificence
in ancient Iran. It was a
festivity to honor fire and to
defeat the forces of darkness,
frost and cold. Two different
days were observed for its
veneration. One celebration
marked the hundred day before
the religious Noe-Rooz on the
first day of the month Farvardin
(religious Noe-Rooz is different
from spring Noe-Rooz). The other
one was the hundredth day after
the gahambar of Ayathrima (one
of the six feasts of obligation)
held to be the beginning of
winter. This day coincides with
10th of Bahman in present
calendar. It is not clear why
there are two Sadeh Festivals
and why different regions have
had different dates. Many of
Zoroastrian holy days were and
are celebrated twice; this is
most likely caused by the
calendar reform in the 3rd
century AD.
From Achaemenid times the
Iranian calendar had 360 days
and was short of 5 days.
Ardeshir the first Sassanian
king reformed the calendar and 5
days were added at the end. The
new calendar receded slowly
against the solar year, and the
holy days, which with their
symbolism were closely linked
with the seasons, became
gradually divorced from them.
The months moved and so did the
holy days; to make sure
festivals were observed
correctly both the old and the
new dates were celebrated. The
festival celebrated in Yazd till
a few decades ago was according
to Fasli (seasonal) calendar and
in a few villages it was called
Hiromba. While the other
Zoroastrians celebrated the
Sadeh in Bahman. There was
confusion earlier in the century
as to when it should be
celebrated, but most
Zoroastrians have adopted the
10th of Bahman as the main
event.
In Sassanian times huge bon
fires were set up. Priests led
the prayers specific to fire
‘Atash Niyayesh’ and performed
the correct rituals before it
was lit at sunset. People would
dance around the fires. Wine an
expensive luxury was served
communally and like all other
Zoroastrian religious ceremonies
the occasion would end with fun,
merriment and feasts. The most
elaborate report of the
celebration comes from the 10th
century during the reign of
Mardavij Zeyari, the ruler of
Isfahan. From Iranian origin the
Zeyari family did their best to
keep the old traditions alive.
Huge bon fires were set up on
both sides of the ‘Zayandeh
Rood’, the main river dividing
the city. The fires were
contained in specially build
metal holders to maintain
control. Hundreds of birds were
released while carrying little
fireballs to light the sky.
There were fireworks, clowns,
dance and music with lavish
feasts of roasted lamb, beef,
chicken and other delicacies.
The tradition was virtually lost
even amongst the Zoroastrians.
In Pahlavi era it was revived
and adopted as a major
celebration by the whole
Zoroastrian community and it is
becoming known and increasingly
popular with the rest of the
Iranians as well. With
Zoroastrians the chief
preparation for Sadeh is the
gathering of wood the day before
the festival. Teen-age boys
accompanied by a few adult males
will go to local mountains in
order to gather camel’s thorn, a
common desert shrub in Iran. For
most it will be the first time
they are away from their
families. Wood is a scarce
commodity in Iran and the
occasion resembles a rite of
passage, a noteworthy step for
the boys on the way to manhood.
The wood gathered would be taken
to the local shrine and on their
return home if it is their first
time there will be a celebration
for the boys at home with
friends and relatives. However
this practice is becoming more
difficult these days and
attempts are made to preserve
it. The work is hard, wood more
scarcely than ever, fewer boys
are prepared to attempt it and
safety is a major concern. In
addition massive emigration into
the cities or outside the
country has significantly
reduced the number of boys
available for this occasion.
Traditionally young boys went
door to door and ask for wood
and collect whatever they could
get, from a broken spade-handle
to logs and broken branches.
While knocking on doors they
would chant simple verses like
"if you give a branch, god will
grant your wish, if you don’t,
god won’t favor your wish" and
similar verses. All wood
collected would be taken to the
local shrine. Before the sunset
all gathered outside the temple
to torch the wood. Prayers were
said with chants remembering the
great ones of the faith and the
deceased. In ancient times the
fires were always set near water
and temples. The great fire
originally meant (like winter
fires lit at other occasions) to
help revive the declining sun,
and bring back the warmth and
light of summer. It was also
designed to drive off the demons
of frost and cold, which turned
water to stone, and thus could
kill the roots of plants beneath
the earth. For this reasons the
fire was lit near and even over
water and by the shrine of Mihr,
who was lord both of fire and
the sun. Biruni in AD 1000 has
very accurately described all
these reasons for Sadeh
Festival.
The fire is kept burning all
night. The day after, first
thing in the morning, women
would go to the fire and each
one will carry a small portion
back to their homes and new
glowing fires are made from the
ritually blessed fire. This is
to spread the blessing of the
Sadeh fire to every household in
the neighborhood. Whatever that
is left of the fire will be
taken back to the shrine to be
pilled in one container and will
be kept at the temple. The
festivities would normally go on
for three days and the wood
gathering by the boys door to
door and blessing of the dead
happens every night and evenings
are spend eating and giving away
‘khairat’ (giving away as a good
deed). Food prepared from
slaughtered lamb and ‘ash e
khairat’ are distributed amongst
the less fortunate.
Today, Sadeh is mainly
celebrated on 10th of Bahman.
The fires may or may not be lit
outside and most activities take
place inside the shrines. The
wood gathering activities are
reduced though there are efforts
to preserve them. However the
bulk of the Iranians are
becoming more familiar with the
occasion and there are
gatherings and celebrations
outside Iran. Fires are lit,
music, dancing and merriment of
all kinds will go on for the
rest of the evening. The
occasion for the majority of
Iranians has no religious
significance and no specific
rituals are involved other than
torching bon fires at sunset and
having a merry time and
therefore keeping up with the
ancient traditions when
merriment was venerated and
practiced. |
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