Germans Love David Hasselhoff/Real Life/Holidays: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
Examples of [[{{TOPLEVELPAGE}}]] in [[{{SUBPAGENAME}}]] include:
* While ''Cinco de Mayo'' is rather popular and well-celebrated in the US, it has only limited recognition within its own country of origin, Mexico. Most Americans only know that it's about some sort of battle[[hottip:*:It commemorates the Battle of Puebla in 1862, when the French invasion of Mexico was temporarily stalled by a much smaller Mexican force.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Puebla You can read more here.], and most assume that it's the actual Mexican Independence Day, which it isn't.
 
* While ''Cinco de Mayo'' is rather popular and well-celebrated in the US, it has only limited recognition within its own country of origin, Mexico. Most Americans only know that it's about some sort of battle[[hottip:*:<ref>It commemorates the Battle of Puebla in 1862, when the French invasion of Mexico was temporarily stalled by a much smaller Mexican force.[http[wikipedia://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_PueblaBattle of Puebla|You can read more here.]]</ref>, and most assume that it's the actual Mexican Independence Day, which it isn't.
* St. Patrick's Day in Ireland is a boisterous but religious holiday. Irish-Americans, however, turned it into a celebration of their unique immigrant culture. The first St Patrick's Day parade was in [[New York City]] in ''1762'', while the first in Ireland was in Dublin in 1931. Over the years it's become, like Cinco de Mayo, an excuse to throw a theme party and drink a lot. In England, St. Patrick's Day is also far more widely celebrated in England than St. George's Day, though mostly as an excuse for drinking. This can be largely attributed to the Guinness Corporation.
* [[All HallowsHallow's Eve|Halloween]] is more popular in the US, despite its Irish origins as ''Oíche Shamhna'', the ancient New Year's Day; the bridging of the boundary between years is mirrored by the weakening of the gap between the world of the living and that of the dead. Bonfire is a calque of the Irish ''tine cnámh'', "bone fire". Americans turned it into a secular holiday about playful scares, costumes and candy. The new holiday has spread throughout countries such as Germany, Austria, and even back into Ireland, where the new style has largely replaced the old.
** It's a double example in that the holiday is one of the many pagan holidays [[Hijacked Byby Jesus]] to help converts adjust to the new religion. All Hallow's Eve is the evening before All Saint's Day, was a minor prelude to the much larger celebration the next day, and was actually completely forgotten among Christians for years before some Americans decided to revive it and the modern version was born.
* Chanukah is more popular, proportionately, among Jews in the West than in Israel or elsewhere. Being the least important and most recently ordained holiday on the Jewish calendar, in Israel (where most of the population is Jewish and a significant number are Orthodox), it tends to be overshadowed by more serious holidays like Passover and Sukkot. American Jews, however, elevated the importance of Chanukah to compare with Christmas, so that they too could enjoy a "Holiday Season" with their Gentile neighbors. Jewish parents added the custom of gift-giving so their children would not feel left out (although there was an old tradition of giving money, or ''gelt'', at Chanukah among Ashkenazi Jews, it apparently just isn't the same).
** In modern Israel, Chanukah has gained some importance... as a nationalistic holiday celebrating [[Badass Israeli|Jewish military prowess]], which is what the holiday ''originally'' meant.
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* Lucia, 13th December. Sweden, a Protestant country, celebrating the Catholic St. Lucy.
** Finland, because of being occupied by Sweden for something like 700 years, celebrates Lucia too. Not quite as much, but you can still see little girls dressed up as Lucia on the 13th of December.
* The United Kingdom has no national day equivalent to Bastille day or the 4th of July. That has not stopped Hamburg from celebrating [https://web.archive.org/web/20111006025508/http://www.britishday.com/ British Day] every 5th and 6th of September.
** Well, yes, but that dates back to when [[The House of Hanover|Britain and Hanover were ruled by one monarch]], as Hamburg was closely connected to the Kingdom of Hanover. Additionally, Hanover was part of the British Zone of Occupation after [[World War II]].
* In Maine and Massachusetts, anybody will tell you that Patriots' Day is the third Monday of April, commemorating the Battle of Lexington and Concord- you know, the first battle of the American Revolution? Outside of there, people seem to think it's September 11th.
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* What is Evacuation Day? If you live in Boston (but not smaller towns in Massachusetts), you'd know that it commemorates the day that the British evacuated the city. It's celebrated on March 17 (St. Patrick's Day) and kids get the day off from school. Schools are also closed on June 17 to commemorate Bunker Hill Day in the same areas of Massachusetts.
 
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[[Category:GermansHoliday Love David HasselhoffTropes]]
[[Category:Holidays]]