While many people might assume that Mothers’ Day is a holiday invented by the fine folks at Hallmark, it’s not so. The earliest Mothers’ Day celebrations can be traced back to the spring celebrations of ancient Greece, honoring Rhea, the Mother of the Gods. The Romans called their version of the the Hilaria, and celebrated on the Ides (古罗马历中的3月15日)of March by offerings in the temple of Cybele, the mother of the Gods. Early Christians celebrated the festival on the fourth Sunday of Lent in honor of the Virgin Mary, the Mother of Christ.
In more recent times, relatively speaking—England in the 1600s—the celebration was expanded to include all mothers with "Mothering Sunday" being celebrated on the 4th Sunday of Lent (the 40 day period leading up to Easter). 46) Besides attending church services in honor of the Virgin Mary, children returned home from the cities with gifts, flowers, and special Mothering Day cakes that were important parts of the celebration.
Mothers’ Day festivities in the United States date back to 1872 when Julia Ward Howe (her other claim to fame was writing the lyrics(歌词) for the "Battle Hymn of the Republic") suggested the day be dedicated to peace. Ms. Howe would hold organized Mothers’ Day meetings in Boston, Massachusetts ever year.
In 1907, Ana Jarvis, a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania school teacher, furthered the cause by beginning a campaign to establish a national Mothers’ Day. 47) Ms. Jarvis persuaded her mother’s church in Grafton, West Virginia to celebrate Mothers’ Day on the second anniversary of her mother’s death, which happened to be on the 2nd Sunday of May that year. By the following year, Mothers’ Day was also being celebrated in Philadelphia.
Not content to rest on her laurels(殊荣), Ms. Jarvis and her supporters began to write to ministers, businessmen, and politicians in their quest to establish a national Mothers’ Day and in 1912, the Mothers’ Day International Association was incorporated for the purpose of promoting the day and its observance. 48) In 1914, President Woodrow Wilson made it official by proclaiming Mothers’ Day a national holiday that was to be held each year on the 2nd Sunday of May.
It is somewhat ironic that after all her efforts, Ana Jarvis ended up growing bitter over what she perceived as the corruption of the holiday she created. 49) She hated the commercialization of the holiday and grew so enraged by it that she filed a lawsuit to stop a 1923 Mothers’ Day festival and was even arrested for disturbing the peace at a mothers’ gathering where women sold white carnations(康乃馨)—Jarvis’ symbol for mothers—to raise money. Ana Jarvis’ story is not a happy one. Things went from bad to worse and she ually lost everything and everyone that was close to her and died alone in a sanatorium(疗养地) in 1948. Shortly before her death, Jarvis told a reporter she was sorry she had ever started Mothers’ Day.
50) Aha may be gone. but Mothers’ Day lives on, regardless of whether it meets her approval. Many countries throughout the world celebrate Mothers’ Day at various times throughout the year, but some such as Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia, and Belgium also celebrate Mothers’ Day on the second Sunday of May.
Besides attending church services in honor of the Virgin Mary, children returned home from the cities with gifts, flowers, and special Mothering Day cakes that were important parts of the celebration.