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Not
Like it Used To Be
Celebrated around the world on
14 February, has been unable to
escape controversy.
The Chinese authorities are
suspicious of the religious
origins of the celebrations,
while conservative Hindus in
India consider Valentine's Day
to be an alien Western import.
However, neither ideological
objection or militant
intervention appears to have
been able to check the growing
international popularity of this
day. .Although it is celebrated
as a lovers' holiday today, with
the giving of candy, flowers, or
other gifts between couples in
love, it originated in 5th
Century Rome as a tribute to St.
Valentine, a Catholic bishop.
For eight hundred years prior to
the establishment of Valentine's
Day, the Romans had practiced a
pagan celebration in
mid-February commemorating young
men's rite of passage to the god
Lupercus. The celebration
featured a lottery in which
young men would draw the names
of teenage girls from a box. The
girl assigned to each young man
in that manner would be his
sexual companion during the
remaining year.
In an effort to do away with the
pagan festival, Pope Gelasius
ordered a slight change in the
lottery. Instead of the names of
young women, the box would
contain the names of saints.
Both men and women were allowed
to draw from the box, and the
game was to emulate the ways of
the saint they drew during the
rest of the year. Needless to
say, many of the young Roman men
were not too pleased with the
rule changes.
Be My Valentine
Instead of the pagan god
Lupercus, the Church looked for
a suitable patron saint of love
to take his place. They found an
appropriate choice in Valentine,
who, in AD 270 had been beheaded
by Emperor Claudius.
Claudius had determined that
married men made poor soldiers.
So he banned marriage from his
empire. But Valentine would
secretly marry young men that
came to him. When Claudius found
out about Valentine, he first
tried to convert him to
paganism. But Valentine reversed
the strategy, trying instead to
convert Claudius. When he
failed, he was stoned and
beheaded.
During the days that Valentine
was imprisoned, he fell in love
with the blind daughter of his
jailer. His love for her, and
his great faith, managed to
miraculously heal her from her
blindness before his death.
Before he was taken to his
death, he signed a farewell
message to her, "From your
Valentine." The phrase has been
used on his day ever since.
Although the lottery for women
had been banned by the church,
the mid-February holiday in
commemoration of St. Valentine
was still used by Roman men to
seek the affection of women. It
became a tradition for the men
to give the ones they admired
handwritten messages of
affection, containing
Valentine's name. Cupid
The first Valentine card grew
out of this practice. The first
true Valentine card was sent in
1415 by Charles, duke of
Orleans, to his wife. He was
imprisoned in the Tower of
London at the time.
Cupid, another symbol of the
holiday, became associated with
it because he was the son of
Venus, the Roman god of love and
beauty. Cupid often appears on
Valentine cards
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WHO WAS SAINT VALENTINE ?
St. Valentine was a great Christian who worked as a priest and a
noble man. When St. Valentine was alive, the Roman Emperor, Claudius
II, would arrest the Christians. If the Christians didn't change
their religion, they would either be crucified, thrown to lions, or
beheaded . One legend says that St. Valentine would visit the jail
every day to taIk and to pray with the prisoners to help them to get
out safely. After a period of time, the jail keepers got suspicious
and asked him a few questions. That is when they found out that St.
Valentine was a Christian so they threw him in prison where he
stayed without changing his religion. Finally he was beheaded on
February 14, 269 A.D. After St Valentine's death, a church was named
after him, which was a hiding place under his grave for Christians,
and a public city gate, Porta Valetini (now called Porta del Popolo),
was also named after him. |
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