meskel finding
of the true cross
The legend
Meskel has been celebrated in Ethiopia for over 1600 years. The
word actually means “cross” and the feast commemorates
the discovery of the cross upon which Jesus was crucified, by the
Empress Helena, mother of Constantine the Great. The original event
took place on 19 March 326 AD but the feast is now celebrated on
27 September.
The origins of the celebration are expressed in Ethiopian manuscripts
of parchment. According to the manuscript, in the 20th year of the
reign of her son Constantine, she set off for Jerusalem in search
of the ‘life giving cross,’ which she eventually found
after many trials and tribulations. She is said to have compelled
the Jews to reveal the whereabouts of this ‘Honourable Cross’,
which allegedly lay under the hill of Golgotha, formed from sweepings,
ashes and offal piled on the grave of Jesus Christ.
Helena is said to have found the Cross by lighting incense and following
the smoke as it descended to earth. She caused bonfires to be lit
on the hills of Palestine which could be seen across the sea by
the people of Constantinople.
So how did the rediscovered cross come to Ethiopia? According to
Tefut, a massive volume dating from the 15th century which records
details of the alleged acquisition of a fragment of the True Cross
by Ethiopia, the Christian Kings of Ethiopia were often called upon
in the early Middle Ages to protect Egyptian Copts against the Egyptian
Muslims. In return for this delivery from Muslim persecution, fabulous
gifts of precious gold were offered to Ethiopian Emperor Dawit.
He rejected these offerings and asked instead for four pieces of
the True Cross, which were under the custody of the patriarch of
Alexandria. The request was granted and the pieces brought to Ethiopia.
They were guarded on the journey by torchbearers and then deposited
in a church at Gishen, in northern Wollo dedicated to the Virgin
Mary. Rejoicing followed throughout the whole country and the Emperor
ordered that the capes of the priests be embroidered with flowers.
Since that day, Ethiopian Christians are believed to have commemorated
the occasion with flaming torches and huge bonfires.
Emperor Dawit’s fourth son, Zara Yacob(1434 - 1468), succeeded
him as Emperor and, when he was a very old man, dreamt that God
ordered him to ‘place the cross upon a cross.’ Zara
Yacob spent two years in abstinence, searching in seclusion, and
at last discovered a mountain shaped like a cross. There he built
the beautiful church of Egziabher Ab, the remote mountain monastery
of Gishen Mariam located 483 kms north of Addis Ababa in Wello,
and a fragment of the True Cross was kept within a gold box in the
church. The priests of Gishen still safeguard this treasure along
with the Tefut, which is handwritten in Ge’ez on beautiful
parchment and records the story of how a fragment of the cross was
acquired.
The celebration
Many of the rites observed throughout the festival are said to be
directly connected to the legend of Empress Helena. On the eve of
Meskel, tall branches are tied together and yellow daisies, popularly
called Meskel Flowers, are placed at the top. During the night those
branches are gathered together in front of the compound gates and
ignited - this symbolizes the actions of the Empress who, when no
one would show the Holy Sepulcher, lit incense and prayed for help.
Where the smoke drifted, she dug and found three roses. To one of
the three, on the True Cross of Jesus, many miracles were attributed.
During this time of the year flowers bloom on mountains and plains
and meadows are yellow with the brilliant Meskel daisy. Dancing,
feasting, merrymaking, bonfires and even gun salutes mark the occasion.
The festival begins by planting a green tree on Meskel eve in town
squares and village market places. Everyone brings a pole topped
with Meskel daisies to form the towering pyramid that will be a
beacon of flame. Torches of tree branches tied up together, called
“Chibo”, are used to light the bundle called “Demera”.
In Addis Ababa, celebrations start in the early afternoon when a
procession bearing flaming torches approaches Meskel Square from
various directions. A colour procession of priests, deacons and
choir boys and girls from Sunday schools wearing embroidered robes
walk around a huge pyre, bearing ceremonial crosses and wooden torches
decorated with olive branches. As the sun begins to set, the torch-bearers
move forward in unison to set alight the slender pyramid-shaped
structure, topped with a cross made from the yellow flowers known
as Meskel daisies which are placed on the tallest central pole.
The crowd of spectators are kept at bay while visitors are allowed
to enter the inner circle in accordance with the Ethiopians age-old
tradition of hospitality. The casually dressed tourists form an
incongruous contrast as they brandish their cameras, while around
them the procession of proud clergy clad in dazzling ceremonial
robes chant as they perform this ancient rite.
Today Meskel is a religious and joyful annual social occasion that
Christians throughout the country look forward to each year. Both
women and men wear their national clothes, while youths boast and
compete in fights with sticks. There is also jesting as well as
flirting and courting sanctioned by the festival. These days, people
return from the capital parade to their houses and bring the torches
called Chibbo to neighbourhood bonfire gatherings. The torchbearers
chant as they circle the pyre, the Damera, (literally stack or pile
of wooden torches), which are covered with cloth until a priest
blesses it. The torchbearers then hurl their flames into the midst
of the Dameras, while the gathering watches the blaze light up the
night sky.
On the following day people go to the bonfire and make the sign
of the cross on their foreheads with the ash.
Meskel and the Guragae
Though Meskel is a national holiday, its celebration is extra special
among the Guragae who begin preparations for Meskel three months
in advance. The celebration is not also a one day affair, as opposed
to the rest of the Ethiopian nationalities, for the tribe as they
dedicate the entire month to Meskel, which is for the Guragae, a
time when they go back to their localities from different parts
of the country. Members of the tribe who live in other administrative
regions save for the celebration and do their best to ensure that
their relatives back home have a great holiday. The expenses are
such that it is said that the Guragae start saving for the coming
Meskel right after the end of the celebration.
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