In the Bulgarian calendar, the  day of St. Ignatius (Ignazhden) is a folklore as well as a religious feast, marked by the  Orthodox church on 20 December. The day is dedicated to Ignatius Theophorus, bishop  of Antioch, hence he was also known as Ignatius of Antioch. He died as a martyr  of the Christian faith under Roman Emperor Trajan in 108.
In the Bulgarian lands, the  biblical story of St. Ignatius intertwines with folklore beliefs and rituals,  connected with the winter solstice and the start of the period between the new  and the old year. This is the context in which families attach such importance  to who enters their home on this day.
Iliya Valev, doctor of  ethnology at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Ethnography and Folklore  Studies says that St. Ignatius day is  connected with interesting beliefs concerning the first person to enter the  home. That person is called polaznik:
“In the morning, people rise  early so the woman can clean and get the home ready for the first guest,” the  ethnographer says. “The kind of guest that enters the house first will  determine what the year will be like. Interestingly, on this day people don’t  go visiting much. They avoid going to other people’s homes, because they do not  want people to talk about them as being a good or a bad polaznik. It very much depends on how the lady of the house regards  the person who may come calling, but also on what their own attitude to that home  is. It is customary to invite a person  who is wealthy and is enjoying a happy, healthy and prosperous life, so some of  his well-being may enter the house with him. It is believed to be a good  thing for a child to step across the threshold of the home – because of  children’s innocence and purity, they are very welcome visitors.”
Iliya Valev goes back to the  bible, and Christ’s warning to his disciples to remain pure and righteous as a  child so as to inherit the kingdom of God. “St. Ignatius is in fact the child Christ  takes in his lap,” the researcher says and goes on to quote Christ’s words that  “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will  never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position  of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoever welcomes  one such child in my name welcomes me.”
“As a matter of fact, in the past  we had more faith and were, to some degree, more superstitious. The rituals  followed everyday life and the surrounding reality – farming, stockbreeding,  everyday occupations. Today things are different – we observe the visible part  of the rituals without knowing why we do it. We should think about that.  Believing is difficult to explain. We, as Christians, should not observe superstitious  practices and practice rituals for luck. We ought to purify our hearts, and that  is what the modest, lean dinner on the day of St. Ignatius, preceding Christmas,  is all about.”
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Translated and posted by Milena  Daynova
Photos: pravoslavieto.com, BTA, Regional Expert Consulting Information Centres Chitalishta - Silistra, chitalishte Vazrazhdane in the village of Sitovo
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