St. Lucia Day, December 13th
- By Hunter Homesteader
- Published 12/12/2008
- Holidays
- Unrated
Hunter Homesteader
The Homesteader family lives off-the-grid in northern Southeast Alaska. Living off the land and sea, we grow, gather, hunt and fish most of our food. Urged by family and friends to share our experiences, we have turned to the Blogosphere to begin that process. To preserve our privacy, we are identified only as father Hunter, mother Gardener, and teenaged daughter, Apprentice. Each member of the family submits articles and blog entries if and when they have something to say.
View all articles by Hunter Homesteader(Hunter)
December 13th is Saint Lucia Day. This is an important day in many family Christmas celebrations around the world, and has become so in our family as well.
Sometimes known as "Little Yule," St. Lucia Day is a festival of lights in Sweden, traditionally the first day of their Christmas season. Before the change to the current calendar, the day was the Winter Solstice. The root word of the names Lucia and Lucy is Luce, or light. As such, Saint Lucia is an appropriate personification of the returning light of the sun.
This same root applies to the name Lucifer, by the way, which actually means "light bringer." Apparently a deeply-reviled Babylonian king was known as "the evening star." He became known as Lucifer, and eventually was promoted to the role of Satan! However, "light bringer" also applies to the Christ, which is why Jesus was sometimes referred to as Lucifer as well! That little bit of trivia really messes with some people's minds.
The customs of St. Lucia Day are quite charming. Early on that morning, in many homes all across Sweden, the eldest daughter of the house dresses in a white gown and dons a crown of evergreens set with four candles. She then serves her parents breakfast in bed. Ceremoniously bearing a tray of hot coffee and Saint Lucia buns, escorted by younger brothers and sisters, who wear conical hats with stars on top, they enter their parents' bedroom singing the Italian song, Santa Lucia. Swedish tradition holds that St. Lucia saved the country from famine by bringing food. The legend holds that she appeared with a halo of light about her head. Apparently the breakfast in bed ritual commemorates this event.
I learned of these customs years ago, and told Apprentice about them one Christmas. She identified with the photos and paintings of little Swedish girls, all invariably blonde like her, and decided she would like to follow this custom. We made a construction paper crown of evergreen and candles using a paper plate, and she had a lot of help setting up the breakfast tray before Gardener and I returned to bed to receive our visit. It was delightful!
The next year, she and Gardener made a white gown for Apprentice. The receptionist at my office was a native of Sweden, and had even been chosen as Saint Lucia many years running in her youth—apparently Sweden holds an annual beauty contest for the honor of representing St. Lucia for the nation in Stockholm. She wrote to her sister in Sweden, and received a modern St. Lucia crown, a headband with artificial greens and battery-powered candles.
Since then, it has been our custom to greet the morning of December 13th as the Swedes do. However, she's a teenager now, so each year I broach the subject delicately. One of these years she's going to lose interest, if not decided she's outgrown it. Also, as she reaches the age where she needs more growth-sustaining sleep, the idea of getting up before the family loses some of its allure. It helps that she no longer has to accommodate our work schedules. In years past I rose at 5:30 am to prepare for work, so her St. Lucia day "job" meant getting up way too early for her liking. Now that we live on the homestead, she gets to sleep in a bit longer.
At the point that I write this, this year's celebration is an open question. I plan to ask her about it a few days before, in time to make the St. Lucia buns. I'm hopeful—she borrowed the battery-powered crown candles for light when she went trick-or-treating at Halloween. If she's still up for trick-or-treats at her age, she'll probably still want to dress up as Saint Lucia.
If this sounds like fun to you, a recipe for St. Lucia buns can be found in Betty Crocker's International Cookbook.

