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Fasnacht is the last wild splurge before Lent C
the ancient Christian period of fasting, self reflection, penance,
and abstinence from meat beginning on Ash Wednesday and lasting
40 days until Easter. Corresponding to Mardi Gras, Carnival,
and similar celebrations, the Fasnacht was brought to Randolph
County from Switzerland by the settlers of Helvetia. They combined
this Catholic celebration with the Protestant Winterfest of
Zurich, wherein Old Man Winter is burned in effigy to hasten
the advent of spring.
Helvetians prepare for Fasnacht by deep-frying donuts, rosettes, and
hosenblatt pastries in lard, a meat by-product foregone during Lent.
They decorate the community hall in colorful Swiss lampions (paper
lanterns with candles), ribbons, and a gruesome Old Man Winter hanging
by the neck in the middle of the dance floor. And they create elaborate
masks.
At dark on the Saturday night before Ash Wednesday, the villagers and
guests don their masks, congregate at the local restaurant, light
lampions, then proceed up the road to the community hall where they
parade around the dance floor as their masks are judged. They dance
schotisches, waltzes, polkas, and squares until midnight, when the
fiddler announces the hour to burn Old Man Winter. The prettiest maiden
then mounts the shoulders of the tallest man and cuts down the ghoul. He
is dragged out into the snow, roughed up and cursed, then thrown onto
the bonfire amid shrieks and applause.
See also Helvetia
Sutton, David. One's Own Hearth is Like Gold: A History of
Helvetia, West Virginia.
New York: Peter Lang, 1990.
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