Fiji Sun

Unusual Valentine’s Day Traditions Around the

- Source: Intrepid Travel Feedback: karalaini.waqanidrol­a@fijisun.

This week, shelves will be brimming with kissing teddy bears, heart-shaped chocolates and other novelty marketing gimmicks designed to make single people weep.

Yep, Valentine’s Day is here again. But although February 14 has become synonymous with Hallmark, smugness and consumeris­m in many parts of the world not every culture chooses to declare their love via a sappy greeting card or overpriced rose.

Some dedicate a day (or week) to celebratin­g friendship, while others choose to pin their hearts to their sleeve or burn photograph­s of people who’ve done them wrong (which we definitely don’t condone).

From mourning the single life over a plate of noodles to walking barefoot through frozen fields, here are some of the more unusual ways that Valentine’s Day is celebrated around the world:

Argentina

One day isn’t enough for the passionate Argentinia­ns – they also devote an entire week in July to the festival of love, calling it ‘Sweetness week’.

Between the 13th and 20th, lovers exchange kisses for candy, and finish up the week of celebratio­ns with a friendship day as well. Cute.

Finland & Estonia

Finland and Estonia slow things right down on Valentine’s Day, opting for a friendlier celebratio­n called Ystävän Päivä in Finnish and Sõbrapäev in Estonian instead. Here, February 14 is all about celebratin­g friendship, and people exchange presents and cards with the greeting ‘Happy Friends Day’. Probably not what you’ve been waiting to hear from your crush all this time.

France

Finding love can be a lottery, and no one knows this better than the French! Une loterie d’amour – a surprising­ly unromantic custom from the country of love – saw hopeful singles line up in houses facing each other and call through the windows until they eventually paired up.

Those women left partner-less then built a large bonfire, ceremoniou­sly burning images of the men who rejected them whilst hurling insults into the sky.

If that doesn’t call for an impassione­d ‘Sacre bleu!’ I don’t know what does!

Fortunatel­y, after things started getting a little unruly, the French government decided to ban the practice altogether.

We get it. Instead of setting things on fire, we recommend heading to

the nearest market and stocking up on the four Cs for a perfect Valentine’s Day: cheese, croissants, chocolate and champagne. C’est magnifique.

Japan

In Japan, it’s the gals who spoil the object of their affections with chocolates – but it’s the type of chocolate given that counts.

For husbands, boyfriends, or prospectiv­e partners, high quality/ very very delicious honmei-choco (‘true feeling’) chocolates are hand

delivered, while colleagues or acquaintan­ces receive giri-choco (the cheaper ‘obligation chocolate’).

If you’re unlucky (or unlikeable?), you might even end up with a box of cho-giri choco: ultra-obligation chocolate reserved for the most unpopular of male colleagues. Ouch.

When White Day comes around on March 14, those who received honmei-choco are expected to return the sweet favour by giving their loved ones presents

worth two to three times the chocolates they received, like jewellery or fancy underwear.

Norway

Translated into English roughly as ‘joke letters’, Gaekkebrev – a Norwegian tradition originatin­g in the 18th century – is more romantic than it sounds. Secret admirers pen poems to their beloved, before cutting intricate patterns into the paper and pressing a small white Snowdrop flower inside. The ‘joke’ comes from the letter’s signature – or rather, it’s absence. Instead, budding poets sign off with a dot for each letter of their name.

If the lady correctly guesses who her admirer is, she wins an Easter egg at Easter.

If not, the yolk’s on her and she has to give him one instead.

The Philippine­s

If you’ve ever dreamed of getting married alongside your best friends, acquaintan­ces, neighbours, colleagues, and the waiter from your favourite restaurant, Valentine’s Day in the Philippine­s may just be your celebratio­n. Every year on Valentine’s Day, hundreds (sometimes thousands) of couples come together to be married en masse in public places.

Often, the celebratio­ns are sponsored by the government as a public service, allowing underprivi­leged couples the opportunit­y to tie the knot.

Slovenia

In Slovenia, where St Valentine is one of the patron saints of spring, February 14 marks the first day of working in the fields for the New Year.

It’s believed that this is the day that plants start to regenerate (there’s even a proverb that says “St Valentine brings the keys of roots”).

There’s also a belief that birds ‘propose’ to each other on this day, and to bear witness to the occasion, you have to walk barefoot through fields that are often still frozen.

It’s Saint Gregory’s Day on March 12 when people generally celebrate their love for each other (in a hopefully warmer, less frostbite-y way).

South Korea

Adapted from the Japanese tradition, women in South Korea are also in charge of the chocolateg­iving on Valentine’s Day, receiving presents in return on White Day a month later.

If your first two Valentine’s Days pass without a whiff of romance, never fear.

The Koreans have taken things one step further by adding a third day: to mourn being forever alone. ‘Black Day’ on April 14, has become an informal celebratio­n/ commiserat­ion of the single life, when singletons dress in head to toe black, gather with their friends to enjoy jajangmyeo­n, Korean noodles with a black bean sauce (in all honesty, slurping up noodles actually sounds like a pretty great way to spend the day).

The romance, or lack of, doesn’t end there though, with romantic celebratio­ns continuing on the 14th of the month throughout the

year; May’s Rose Day, June’s Kiss Day, and December’s Hug Day to name a few.

South Africa

Many South Africans celebrate the day of love with chocolates, flowers, and candlelit dinners in romantic locations.

But, for the times when an anonymousl­y signed card doesn’t do the trick, South Africans don’t mind wearing their heart on their sleeve – literally.

Following a Roman festival

called ‘Lupercalia’ (thought to be the predecesso­r to Valentine’s Day), young girls pin the name of their love on their sleeve for the day.

Luckily, this is a much tamer version of the original festival, at which goats were sacrificed and men would run through the streets wearing the skins, whipping women to bless them with fertility.

 ??  ?? A woman seeking the nearest candy store in Argentina.
A woman seeking the nearest candy store in Argentina.
 ?? Just eat cheese in France ??
Just eat cheese in France
 ??  ?? A local sami celebrates the joy of friendship with his pooch in Finland.
A local sami celebrates the joy of friendship with his pooch in Finland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji