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What do you do for Ayyam-i-Ha?

Booko

Deviled Hen
For Ayyam-i-Ha, about every other year I cook a dinner for my Baha'i community, with cuisine all from Iran through the Middle East to N. Africa. The usual menu is something like:
  • homemade non-i-Barbari bread and pita
  • dips like hummus, babaganous, and "fool" (fava beans), yogurt cheese & cucumber
  • salads like tabouli, choriatiki (Greek salad), fatoush
  • appetizers like falafel
  • veggies like "Fainting Imam" (eggplant, onions and bell peppers, roasted), fasoulakia (green beans in a tomato/onion sauce)
  • meat dishes like kibbe (a kind of meatloaf cut into cubes), roast leg of lamb (well done Middle Eastern style, not medium rare like the Europeans do it), fesenjam (pomegranate-walnut chicken)
  • desserts like almond-stuffed dates, apricot balls and the ever-popular baklava. :D
We decorate the house with red and white lights, silver, pearl and red bead garlands, and though it really does fit -- camels we've picked up here and there. It's sort of an "Ayyam-i-Ha Camel" American Baha'i joke that works well here. :D I have a friend who decorates with Peacocks.

We put out really cool candles in keeping with the red&white theme, as well as the lace tablecloth of course.

Why red & white, you ask? Well, one night when Feast was over and we were down to just 3 people hanging out at 1am talking, I jokingly asked the question of a friend of mine: So, what are the traditional colors for Ayyam-i-Ha anyway? He thought about it for a moment and replied: Red & white.

It sort of made sense, and so it stuck with us. The only thing red & white is used for is Valentines day, but since Ayyam-i-Ha is after Valentine's Day (late February) there's no conflict. So many other good color combinations are taken by other religions' holy days or national celebrations. And then, it's sort of a veiled reference to the whole "Crimson Ark" thing, so it works on that level too.

For presents, we try not to get carried away with that, but we exchange gifts with some friends, and within the family we each open a small gift each day during the holiday. It's 4 days long, except in leap years it's 5 days. Gifts for the kids range to a book or game, or smaller things like really really good chocolate.

The nicest thing about celebrating our gift-giving season is the Christmas crowds are gone, the sales are on, and everything is available again, and usually marked down. Woot!

Our community often has a party with games, dancing, music, and whatever anyone hosting wants to add in with it.

Sometimes we pick a restaurant to eat out at on one day, and reserve space and order a special menu if there are enough of us. For those who are strapped for cash, the LSA is always ready to provide assistance, because no one should be left out of a celebration.

There's a pretty steady group of people who make a point of volunteering at the local Food Bank at this time, and there's another group that volunteers later during the Fast. It's hard to get many people "in the spirit" during February. Most people here think of such things during Thanksgiving and on into Christmas, and after that it's off the radar, so it's a great time for us to show up en masses to help out.

Well, that's the short version of what we typically do for Ayyam-i-Ha.
 

arthra

Baha'i
Well we do have an Ayyam-i-Ha Camel that is responsible for carrying and distributing gifts for Ayyam-i-Ha..

Originally my son and I made a papier mache Camel using some chicken wire (No offence meant Booko!) and in time this Camel met it's demise

so now I have an Ayyam-i-Ha Camel hand -held puppet that serves rather well to distribute gifts for my grandsons.

The idea of a camel with panniers or side pockets was that you could put gifts in the pockets...

Apparently you can still order the Ayyam-i-Ha Camel book:

http://www.amazon.ca/Ayyam-I-Ha-Camel-Cher-Holt-Fortin/dp/093377074X

We use some lights also that are star shaped for decorations.

We usually have a round of Ayyam-i-Ha parties before the Fast so everyone has a chance to party with treats and gifts. We also used to play the Bill Sears hosting Ayyam-i-Ha record.

- Art

:dan: :dan: :cloud9:
 

Ninerays

Member
Sounds almost like Christmas,Ramadan and Chanukkah all rolled into one...but wasn't Ayyam-i-Ha when Baha'u'llah made His Declaration in the Garden of Ridvan, or am I thinking of another holiday??Oh, is Ayyam-i-Ha before or after the Fast?
Allah-u-Abha!
 

9harmony

Member
Ninerays said:
Sounds almost like Christmas,Ramadan and Chanukkah all rolled into one...but wasn't Ayyam-i-Ha when Baha'u'llah made His Declaration in the Garden of Ridvan, or am I thinking of another holiday??Oh, is Ayyam-i-Ha before or after the Fast?
Allah-u-Abha!

Hi Ninerays,

:)

Allah-u-Abha!

Baha'u'llah's Declaration in the Garden of Ridvan is the "Festival of Ridvan" or the 12 Days of Ridvan. (April 21-May 2)

Ayyam-i-Ha is the 4 (or 5) days before the fast begins. :) (Feb 26 - Mar 1)

here's some good info with background on all the Baha'i Holy Days.

http://www.planetbahai.org/cgi-bin/linklibrary.pl?pageid=116

Take Care!

-Amy
 

Ninerays

Member
Thank you so much for the links :) .LOL,if I knew the Farsi word for Questioner, I'd probably tack that on my name somewhere, I've been so busy interrogating people (especially the friend who helped guide me in to the Faith and some other friends as well) about the Feasts, the Fast, the Holidays, who the Arabian Youth was in the Tablet of the Holy Mariner,even whether or not the Baha'i had a liturgical language (a rather meaningless question, seeing as how congregational worship is abrogated except in the case of funerals)...anyway, thank you so much for the links..
Allah-u-Abha!
 

arthra

Baha'i
Ninerays said:
Sounds almost like Christmas,Ramadan and Chanukkah all rolled into one...but wasn't Ayyam-i-Ha when Baha'u'llah made His Declaration in the Garden of Ridvan, or am I thinking of another holiday??Oh, is Ayyam-i-Ha before or after the Fast?
Allah-u-Abha!

O.K.... Here's how I explain it ... The Baha'i year has nineteen months with nineteen days in each month so that comes to 361 days.. normally this would mean four days would be Intercalary days or Ayyam-i-Ha! the days of four or four days to arrive at a 365 solar year, BUT in a leap year we will have five (5) days of Ayyam-i-Ha.

So this calendar is calle dthe Badi calendar and was largely revealed by the Bab...

Ayyam-i-Ha is also I think to prepare us for a more austere season of fasting from sunrise to sunset for the nineteen days of the month of Ala.

- Art
 

arthra

Baha'i
Ridwan or Rizwan is the twelve days with three Holy Days that we celebrate the Declaration of Baha'u'llah that He was Him Whom God would make manifest promised by the Bab and this occurred in the Rizwan Garden on an island in the Tigris River in Bagdad. Baha'u'llah was summoned by the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire to Istanbul.

- Art
 

Ninerays

Member
Oh, okay, thanks again:) .So, is the Fast a customary Persian holiday, or why was it established??I know talking to people who have fasted, it's a great way for people to clear out their minds and bodies so they can focus on God and His Will, but why was the month of 'Ala designated the fasting month??
 

arthra

Baha'i
Good questions!

Oh, okay, thanks again:) .So, is the Fast a customary Persian holiday, or why was it established??I know talking to people who have fasted, it's a great way for people to clear out their minds and bodies so they can focus on God and His Will, but why was the month of 'Ala designated the fasting month??

My comment:

The fast we observe is nineteen days between around March 2 to March 20th. This is the Baha'i Fast and was set up by the Bab and later modified by Baha'u'llah:

The Bab introduced a new calendar, known now as the Badi' or Baha'i calendar (see notes 27 and 147). According to this calendar, a day is the period from sunset to sunset. In the Bayan, the Bab ordained the month of Ala' to be the month of fasting, decreed that the day of Naw-Ruz should mark the termination of that period, and designated Naw-Ruz as the Day of God. Baha'u'llah confirms the Badi' calendar wherein Naw-Ruz is designated as a feast.
Naw-Ruz is the first day of the new year. It coincides with the spring equinox in the northern hemisphere, which usually occurs on 21 March. Baha'u'llah explains that this feast day is to be celebrated on whatever day the sun passes into the constellation of Aries (i.e. the vernal equinox), even should this occur one minute before sunset (Q and A 35). Hence Naw-Ruz could fall on 20, 21, or 22 March, depending on the time of the equinox.

Source:

http://bahai-library.com/provisionals/aqdas/aqdas043.notes.html


Also see:

http://bahai-library.com/?file=warwick_bahai_fast

Only Baha'is observe it.

What is customery in Iran and Afganistan is Naw-Ruz March 21st and that is also our New Year ..

:clap
- Art
 

anders

Well-Known Member
Days of H? I was puzzled, and after some searching I made up a theory. From the initial quotation at this site, I think it stands for "these days", with the ha as a shorter form of the Arabic demonstrative pronoun haadhaa. I find my solution less complicated than stating that 'H' stands for the maximum number of H days, 5.

But in this case, as an exception, I don't claim infallibility, so please submit more explanations of the expression.
 

arthra

Baha'i
anders said:
Days of H? I was puzzled, and after some searching I made up a theory. From the initial quotation at this site, I think it stands for "these days", with the ha as a shorter form of the Arabic demonstrative pronoun haadhaa. I find my solution less complicated than stating that 'H' stands for the maximum number of H days, 5.

But in this case, as an exception, I don't claim infallibility, so please submit more explanations of the expression.

Welcome Anders! and all the way form Sweden?

Thanks for your theory and very interesting...makes sense to me!

Have you been around Baha'is where you live?

- Art
 

BruceDLimber

Well-Known Member
Greetings, greetings! :)

>What do you do for Ayyam-i-Ha?

On one of the more memorable Ayyam-i-Has, I met my wife-to-be.

The Baha'is were celebrating with a square dance, she needed a partner, and I got drafted.

And as Booko can tell you, the rest is history! :)

Best,

Bruce
 

oneness

Member
We usually do something different every year to prevent developing rituals, while keeping in mind of course "to feed and be fed" as hospitality is a very important aspect. Also gift-giving, particularly for children, is important and in a sense, although not the main objective, may prevent having "missing experience" of other kids during Christmas and similar Holy Days.

I have to admit however, it is difficult to come up with new ideas and therefore these are some great ideas and should cover us for the next few years! If I may ask though, what is an Ayyam-e Ha "camel" book?
 

anders

Well-Known Member
arthra said:
Have you been around Baha'is where you live?
I had a colleague who had managed to get out of Iran, but we never discussed religion.

The other encounter I've had was the Lotus Temple in Delhi. Fabulous! I'll visit it again in October, but three Sikh gurdwaras (Harmandir Sahib in Amritsar, and Sis Ganj Sahib and Bangla Sahib in Delhi) are scheduled and will be more of a main point of the journey.

So, now it's official here. I'll be back in January, thus Season's Greetings to all of you in the meantime.
 
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