Chaharchanbe-Souri (چهارشنبهسوری), also called the Fire Festival, has been celebrated on Tuesday evening on the eve of the last Wednesday of the year by Iranians for at least 1,700 years BCE (i.e. since the first period of the Zoroastrianism).
Contents
ToggleTchaharchanbé-Souri, the Festival of Fire
On the occasion of this festival, lights and decorations are installed in major Iranian cities, and fires are lit in public squares. The lights and the fire symbolize the hope of enlightenment and radiant happiness for the coming year.
Concretely, people bring together more or less large piles of wood, to ignite them and jump over the flames, pronouncing the sentence: “Zardi-yé man az to; sorkhi-yé to az man” ( زردی من از تو، سرخی تو از من) which literally means: “my [color] yellow for you, your [color] red for me” (red is the color of fire), that is to say, figuratively, "I give you my pallor — or my illness — I take your strength — your health".
It is the occasion of a large popular gathering where Iranians go out into public spaces (streets and parks) and treat themselves to sweets known as Adjile Moshkel Gosha (mixture of hazelnuts, cashews, walnuts, pistachios, raisins and dried white mulberries) to glorify the health and happiness of the past year. Firecrackers are thrown in the streets.
According to tradition, the spirits of ancestors visit the living on the last days of the year, and many children surround themselves with sheets, thus symbolically reenacting the visits of the dead. They also run around the streets banging on boxes and pans and knocking on doors to play tricks on people. This ritual is called qashogh-zany (literally: spoon tapping) and symbolizes chasing away the last unlucky Wednesday of the year.
There are several other traditions on this night, including the rituals of Kouze Chekastan ( کوزه شکستن), during which earthen jars are broken which symbolically contain someone's bad fortune, Fal-gouch (فالگوش) or the art of divination by listening to the conversations of passers-by and the ritual of Guéré-gochâyi (گرهگشایی), tie a knot in a handkerchief or cloth and ask the first passer-by to undo it in order to ward off bad luck from someone
Here is the text of our social networks:
Today, the people Persians and the Zoroasters celebrate Tchaharchanbé-Souri, the Fire Festival. Fire symbolizes hope and radiant happiness for the year to come. People build large fires and jump over them to bring good luck and ward off misfortune. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #Tchaharchanbé-Souri #Perse #zoroastre