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Wikipedia

Mother's Day

Mother's Day is a celebration honoring the mother of the family or individual, as well as motherhood, maternal bonds, and the influence of mothers in society. It is celebrated on different days in many parts of the world, most commonly in the months of March or May. It complements similar celebrations, honoring family members, such as Father's Day, Siblings Day, and Grandparents' Day.

Mother's Day
Maternal Admiration, painted by William-Adolphe Bouguereau
Observed by40+ countries
TypeWorldwide
SignificanceHonors mothers and motherhood
DateVaries per country
FrequencyAnnual
Related to

While some countries have a multi-century history of a day to celebrate mothers, the modern American version of the holiday began in the United States in the early 20th century at the initiative of Anna Jarvis, who organized the first Mother's Day service of worship and celebration at Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton, West Virginia, which serves as the International Mother's Day Shrine today.[1] It is not directly related to the many traditional celebrations of mothers and motherhood that have existed throughout the world over thousands of years, such as the Greek cult to Cybele, the mother deity Rhea, the Roman festival of Hilaria, or the other Christian ecclesiastical Mothering Sunday celebration (associated with the image of Mother Church).[2][3][4][5] However, in some countries, Mother's Day is still synonymous with these older traditions.[6][7][8]

Mother's Day

The American version of Mother's Day has been criticized for having become too commercialized.[9][10] Jarvis herself, who began the celebration as a liturgical observance, regretted this commercialism and expressed that this was never her intention.[1][11] In response, Constance Adelaide Smith successfully advocated for Mothering Sunday as a commemoration of a broader definition of motherhood in many other parts of the English-speaking world.[12]

Establishment of holiday

 
Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church, the site of the first Mother's Day service of worship in 1908; it serves as the International Mother's Day Shrine.

The modern holiday was first celebrated in 1907, when Anna Jarvis held the first Mother's Day service of worship at Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton, West Virginia.[1][13] Andrew's Methodist Church now holds the International Mother's Day Shrine.[1] Her campaign to make Mother's Day a recognized holiday in the United States began in 1905, the year her mother, Ann Reeves Jarvis, died. Ann Jarvis had been a peace activist who cared for wounded soldiers on both sides of the American Civil War, and created Mother's Day Work Clubs to address public health issues. She and another peace activist and suffragist Julia Ward Howe had been urging for the creation of a "Mother's Day For Peace" where mothers would ask that their husbands and sons were no longer killed in wars. 40 years before it became an official holiday, Ward Howe had made her Mother's Day Proclamation in 1870, which called upon mothers of all nationalities to band together to promote the "amicable settlement of international questions, the great and general interests of peace."[14] Anna Jarvis wanted to honor this and to set aside a day to honor all mothers because she believed a mother is "the person who has done more for you than anyone in the world".[15]

In 1908, the U.S. Congress rejected a proposal to make Mother's Day an official holiday, joking that they would also have to proclaim a "Mother-in-law's Day".[16] However, owing to the efforts of Anna Jarvis, by 1911 all U.S. states observed the holiday,[17] with some of them officially recognizing Mother's Day as a local holiday[18] (the first being West Virginia, Jarvis' home state, in 1910). In 1914, Woodrow Wilson signed a proclamation designating Mother's Day, held on the second Sunday in May, as a national holiday to honor mothers.[19]

Although Jarvis, who started Mother's Day as a liturgical service, was successful in founding the celebration, she became resentful of the commercialization of the holiday, and it became associated with the phrase "Hallmark holiday". By the early 1920s, Hallmark Cards and other companies had started selling Mother's Day cards. Jarvis believed that the companies had misinterpreted and exploited the idea of Mother's Day and that the emphasis of the holiday was on sentiment, not profit. As a result, she organized boycotts of Mother's Day, and threatened to issue lawsuits against the companies involved.[20] Jarvis argued that people should appreciate and honor their mothers through handwritten letters expressing their love and gratitude, instead of buying gifts and pre-made cards.[19] Jarvis protested at a candy makers' convention in Philadelphia in 1923, and at a meeting of American War Mothers in 1925. By this time, carnations had become associated with Mother's Day, and the selling of carnations by the American War Mothers to raise money angered Jarvis, who was arrested for disturbing the peace.[19][20]

In Britain, Constance Adelaide Smith was inspired to advocate for Mothering Sunday, an already-existing Christian ecclesiastical celebration in which the faithful visit the church in which they received the sacrament of baptism, as an equivalent celebration.[21][22][23][24] She referred to medieval traditions of celebrating Mother Church, 'mothers of earthly homes', Mary, mother of Jesus, and Mother Nature.[23][12] Her efforts were successful in the British Isles and other parts of the English-speaking world.[25]

Spelling

In 1912, Anna Jarvis trademarked the phrase "Second Sunday in May, Mother's Day, Anna Jarvis, Founder", and created the Mother's Day International Association.[26] She specifically noted that "Mother's" should "be a singular possessive, for each family to honor its own mother, not a plural possessive commemorating all mothers in the world."[27] This is also the spelling used by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson in his 1914 presidential proclamation, by the U.S. Congress in relevant bills,[28][29] and by various U.S. presidents in their proclamations concerning Mother's Day.[30]

Dates around the world

While the United States holiday was adopted by some other countries, existing celebrations, held on different dates, honoring motherhood have become described as "Mother's Day", such as Mothering Sunday in the United Kingdom[31] or, in Greece, the Eastern Orthodox celebration of the presentation of Jesus Christ to the temple (2 February of Julian Calendar). Both the secular and religious Mother Day are present in Greece.[32] Mothering Sunday is often referred to as "Mother's Day" even though it is an unrelated celebration.[31]

In some countries, the date adopted is one significant to the majority religion, such as Virgin Mary Day in Catholic countries. Other countries selected a date with historical significance. For example, Bolivia's Mother's Day is a fixed date, commemorating a battle in which women participated to defend their children.[33]

Some countries, such as Russia, celebrated International Women's Day instead of Mother's Day[34] or simply celebrate both holidays, which is the custom in Ukraine. Kyrgyzstan has recently introduced Mother's Day, but "year on year International Women's Day is certainly increasing in status".[35]

Gregorian calendar
Occurrence Dates Country

Second Sunday of February

13 February 2022
12 February 2023
11 February 2024

  Norway

3 March

  Georgia[36]

8 March (with International Women's Day)

Fourth Sunday in Lent (Mothering Sunday)

27 March 2022
19 March 2023
10 March 2024

21 March
(Spring equinox)

25 March

  Slovenia

7 April (Annunciation day)

  Armenia (Motherhood and Beauty Day)

First Sunday of May

1 May 2022
7 May 2023
5 May 2024

8 May

  South Korea (Parents' Day)

10 May

Second Sunday of May

8 May 2022
14 May 2023
12 May 2024

14 May

  Benin

15 May

  Paraguay (same day as Día de la Patria)[50]

19 May

  Kyrgyzstan (Russian: День матери, Kyrgyz: Энэ күнү)

26 May

  Poland (Polish: Dzień Matki)

27 May

  Bolivia[33]

Last Sunday of May

29 May 2022
28 May 2023
26 May 2024

Last Sunday of May, or first Sunday of June if the last Sunday of May is Pentecost

29 May 2022
4 June 2023
26 May 2024

  France[38]
French Antilles

30 May

  Nicaragua[52]

1 June

  Mongolia (together with Children's Day)

Second Sunday of June

12 June 2022
11 June 2023
9 June 2024

  Luxembourg

14 June

  Afghanistan

First Monday of July

4 July 2022
3 July 2023
1 July 2024

  South Sudan

12 August

  Thailand (birthday of Queen Sirikit)

15 August (Assumption of Mary)

  Antwerp (Belgium)
  Costa Rica

This Sunday of September 18 September 2022

17 September 2023
15 September 2024

  Kazakhstan

14 October

  Belarus (since 1996[53])

15 October, or following work day

17 October 2022
16 October 2023
15 October 2024

  Malawi

20 October   Vietnam (Vietnamese Women's Day)

Third Sunday of October

16 October 2022
15 October 2023
20 October 2024

  Argentina (Día de la Madre)[54]

3 November

  Timor Leste

16 November

  North Korea[55]

Last Sunday of November

  Russia

8 December (Feast of the Immaculate Conception)

  Panama[56]

22 December

  Indonesia[57]
(Hari Ibu)

Hebrew calendar
Occurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates Country
30 Shevat Between 30 January and 1 March

1 February 2022
21 February 2023
9 February 2024

  Israel[58] (Family Day)

Hindu calendar
Occurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates Country

Vaisakha[59] Amavasya (Mata Tirtha Aunsi[60])

Between 19 April and 19 May

    Nepal

Islamic calendar
Occurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates Country
20 Jumada al-Thani 22 January 2022
13 January 2023
2 January 2024
22 December 2024

  Iran[61]

Vietnamese calendar
Occurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates Country
15th day of seventh month Between 6 August and 6 September

12 August 2022
30 August 2023
18 August 2024

  Vietnam (Vu-lan Báo Hiếu)

International history and tradition

Mother's Day in the Netherlands in 1925
 
Northern Pacific Railway postcard for Mother's Day 1916.
 
Mother's Day gift in 2007
 
Mother and daughter and Mother's Day card

In most countries, Mother's Day is an observance derived from the holiday as it has evolved in the United States, promoted by companies who saw benefit in making it popular.[9] As adopted by other countries and cultures, the holiday has different meanings, is associated with different events (religious, historical or legendary), and is celebrated on different dates.

In some cases, countries already had existing celebrations honoring motherhood, and their celebrations then adopted several external characteristics from the US holiday, such as giving carnations and other presents to one's mother.

The extent of the celebrations varies greatly. In some countries, it is potentially offensive to one's mother not to mark Mother's Day. In others, it is a little-known festival celebrated mainly by immigrants, or covered by the media as a taste of foreign culture.[citation needed]

Religion

In certain traditional branches of Christianity, the holiday is strongly associated with revering the Virgin Mary.[62] In some Catholic, Lutheran and Anglican homes, families have a special shrine on their home altar devoted to the Blessed Virgin Mary.[63] In many Eastern Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches, a special prayer service is held in honor of the Theotokos Virgin Mary.[64][65]

In Islam there is no concept of Mother's Day, but the Quran teaches that children should give priority to loving their mother over their father.[66]

In Hindu tradition, Mother's Day is called "Mata Tirtha Aunshi" or "Mother Pilgrimage fortnight", and is celebrated in countries with a Hindu population, especially in Nepal, where mothers are honored with special foods. The holiday is observed on the new moon day in the month of Baisakh, i.e., April/May. This celebration is based on the Hindu religion and it pre-dates the creation of the US-inspired celebration by at least a few centuries.[67]

In Buddhism, the festival of Ullambana is derived from the story of Maudgalyayana and his mother.[68]

By country (A–G)

Albania

In Albania, as in a number of Balkan and Eastern European countries, Mother's Day is celebrated on 8 March, in conjunction with International Women's Day.[69]

Arab world

Mother's Day in most Arab countries is celebrated on 21 March. It was introduced in Egypt by journalist Mustafa Amin[70] and was first celebrated in 1956.[71] The practice has since been adopted by other Arab countries.[citation needed]

Argentina

In Argentina, Mother's Day is celebrated on the third Sunday of October. The holiday was originally celebrated on 11 October, the old liturgical date for the celebration of the Maternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary but after the Second Vatican Council, which moved the Virgin Mary festivity to 1 January, the Mother's Day started to be celebrated the third Sunday of October because of popular tradition.[54] Argentina is the only country in the world that celebrates Mother's Day on this date.[72]

Armenia

In Armenia, Mother's Day is celebrated on 8 March, and on 7 April as Maternity and Beauty Day.

Australia

In Australia, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday in May. Australia celebrated Mother’s Day for the first time in 1910 with special church services, however, it was not popularly observed until the 1920s.[73][74] The tradition of giving gifts on Mother’s Day in Australia started in 1924. Sydney woman Janet Heyden was inspired to collect charitable gifts for lonely, old mothers in Newington hospital who had lost husbands and sons during WW1.[75] Because it is autumn in Australia for Mother’s Day, and carnations are a spring flower, white chrysanthemums are the traditional Mother’s Day flower in Australia.[76]

Bangladesh

There is no historical tradition of celebrating Mother's Day in Bangladesh (Bangla: মা/আম্মু দিবস, Ma/ammu dibosh), and has become popular in the country due to western influences. It is celebrated on the second Sunday of May and is not a public holiday. Mother's Day was not very popular and in recent times it has been spread more widely by the Millennial and Generation Z communities across the country through social media. Although many religious families do not celebrate it, it is more widespread than ever before. There is a popular phrase used by many parents, including mothers, which is "Every day is Father's/Mother's Day so you will love your parents every day." Most people just wish or pray for their mother, but many from big cities like Dhaka, Chittagong, Khulna, Sylhet, Barishal, Narayangonj, Bogura etc. go to restaurants to celebrate, many also cut cakes. Many others cut cakes at home or order meals online. Some children may give small gifts to their mothers.

Belarus

Belarus celebrates Mother's Day on 14 October. Like other ex-Communist republics, Belarus used to celebrate only International Women's Day on 8 March. Mother's Day in Belarus was officially established by the Belarusian government, and it was celebrated for the first time in 1996.[53] The celebration of the Virgin Mary (the holiday of Protection of the Holy Mother of God) is celebrated on the same day.[77]

Bhutan

Mother's Day in Bhutan is celebrated on 8 May. It was introduced in Bhutan by the Tourism Council of Bhutan.[78]

Belgium

In Belgium, Mother's Day (Moederdag or Moederkesdag in Dutch and Fête des Mères in French) is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. In the week before this holiday children make little presents at primary school, which they give to their mothers in the early morning of Mother's Day. Typically, the father will buy croissants and other sweet breads and pastries and bring these to the mother while she is still in bed – the beginning of a day of pampering for the mother. There are also many people who celebrate Mother's Day on 15 August instead; these are mostly people around Antwerp, who consider that day (Assumption) the classical Mother's Day and the observance in May an invention for commercial reasons. It was originally established on that day as the result of a campaign by Frans Van Kuyck, a painter and Alderman from Antwerp.[79]

Bolivia

In Bolivia, Mother's Day is celebrated on 27 May. El Día de la Madre Boliviana was passed into law on 8 November 1927, during the presidency of Hernando Siles Reyes. The date commemorates the Battle of La Coronilla, which took place on 27 May 1812, during the Bolivian War of Independence, in what is now the city of Cochabamba. In this battle, women fighting for the country's independence were slaughtered by the Spanish army. It is not a public holiday, but all schools hold activities and festivities throughout the day.[33]

Brazil

In Brazil, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. The first Mother's Day in Brazil was promoted by Associação Cristã de Moços de Porto Alegre (Young Men's Christian Association of Porto Alegre) on 12 May 1918. In 1932, then President Getúlio Vargas made the second Sunday of May the official date for Mother's Day. In 1947, Archbishop Jaime de Barros Câmara, Cardinal-Archbishop of Rio de Janeiro, decided that this holiday would also be included in the official calendar of the Catholic Church.[citation needed]

Mother's Day is not an official holiday (see Public holidays in Brazil), but it is widely observed and typically involves spending time with and giving gifts to one's mother. Because of this, it is considered one of the celebrations most related to consumerism in the country, second only to Christmas Day as the most commercially lucrative holiday.[80]

Canada

See also Other observances in Canada
 
Mother's Day cookie cake

Mother's Day in Canada is celebrated on the second Sunday in May (it is not a public holiday or bank holiday), and typically involves small celebrations and gift-giving to one's mother, grandmother, or other important female figures in one's family.[81] Celebratory practices are very similar to those of other western nations. A Québécois tradition is for Québécois men to offer roses or other flowers to the women.[82]

China

Mother's Day is becoming more popular in China. Carnations are a very popular Mother's Day gift and the most sold flowers in relation to the day.[83] In 1997 Mother's Day was set as the day to help poor mothers and to remind people of the poor mothers in rural areas such as China's western region.[83] In the People's Daily, the Chinese government's official newspaper, an article explained that "despite originating in the United States, people in China accept the holiday without hesitation because it is in line with the country's traditional ethics – respect for the elderly and filial piety towards parents."[83]

In recent years, the Communist Party member Li Hanqiu began to advocate for the official adoption of Mother's Day in memory of Meng Mu, the mother of Mèng Zǐ. He formed a non-governmental organization called Chinese Mothers' Festival Promotion Society, with the support of 100 Confucian scholars and lecturers of ethics.[84][85] Li and the Society want to replace the Western-style gift of carnations with lilies, which, in ancient times, were planted by Chinese mothers when children left home.[85] Mother's Day remains an unofficial festival, except in a small number of cities.[86]

Czech Republic

In the Czech Republic, Mother's Day is celebrated every second Sunday in May. It started in former Czechoslovakia in 1923.[47] The promoter of this celebration was Alice Masaryková.[47] After World War II communists replaced Mother's Day with International Woman's Day, celebrated on 8 March.[47] The former Czechoslovakia celebrated Women's Day until the Velvet Revolution in 1989.[47] After the split of the country in 1993, the Czech Republic started celebrating Mother's Day again.[47]

Egypt

Mother's Day in Egypt is celebrated on 21 March, the first day of spring in the northern hemisphere. It was introduced in Egypt by journalist Mustafa Amin[70] in his book Smiling America (1943). The idea was overlooked at the time. Later Amin heard the story of a widowed mother who devoted her whole life to raising her son until he became a doctor. The son then married and left without showing any gratitude to his mother. Hearing this, Amin became motivated to promote "Mother's Day". The idea was first ridiculed by president Gamal Abdel Nasser but he eventually accepted it and Mother's Day was first celebrated on 21 March 1956. The practice has since been copied by other Arab countries.[87]

When Mustafa Amin was arrested and imprisoned, there were attempts to change the name of the holiday from "Mother's Day" to "Family Day" as the government wished to prevent the occasion from reminding people of its founder. These attempts were unsuccessful and celebrations continued to be held on that day; classic songs celebrating mothers remain famous to this day.[citation needed]

Ethiopia

Mother's Day is celebrated for three days in Ethiopia, after the end of the rainy season. It comes in mid-fall where people enjoy a three-day feast called "Antrosht".[88]

For the feast, ingredients will be brought by the children for a traditional hash recipe. The ingredients are divided along genders, with girls bringing spices, vegetables, cheese and butter, while the boys bring a lamb or bull. The mother hands out to the family the hash.[89]

A celebration takes place after the meal. The mothers and daughters anoint themselves using butter on their faces and chests. While honoring their family and heroes, men sing songs.[90]

Estonia

In Estonia, Mother's Day (emadepäev in Estonian) is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. It is recognized nationally, but is not a public holiday.[91]

Finland

In Finland, Mother's Day (äitienpäivä in Finnish) is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. It is recognized nationally and is a public holiday. It is usually celebrated at homes where children or grandchildren bring Mother´s day cards that they have drawn to their mothers and grandmothers. Usually, some food, coffee and cakes are served for guests. Grown up children visit their parents' homes and bring traditionally Mother´s day roses or other flowers accompanied with a Mother´s day card. The president of Finland honors with medals every year some mothers who have done something exceptional and positive during the year.[92]

France

In France, amidst alarm at the low birth rate, there were attempts in 1896 and 1904 to create a national celebration honoring the mothers of large families.[93] In 1906 ten mothers who had nine children each were given an award recognising "High Maternal Merit" ("Haut mérite maternel").[94] American World War I soldiers fighting in France popularized the US Mother's Day holiday created by Anna Jarvis. They sent so much mail back to their country for Mother's Day that the Union Franco-Américaine created a postal card for that purpose.[93] In 1918, also inspired by Jarvis, the town of Lyon wanted to celebrate a "journée des Mères", but instead decided to celebrate a "Journée Nationale des Mères de familles nombreuses." The holiday was more inspired by anti-depopulation efforts than by the US holiday, with medals awarded to the mothers of large families.[93] The French government made the day official in 1920 as a day for mothers of large families.[95] Since then the French government awards the Médaille de la Famille française to mothers of large families.[96]

In 1941, by an initiative of Philippe Pétain, the wartime Vichy government used the celebration in support of their policy to encourage larger families, but all mothers were now honored, even mothers with smaller families.[95]

In 1950, after the war, the celebration was reinstated. The law of 24 May 1950 required (in Article 1) that the Republic pay official homage to French Mothers. Article 2 stated it should be celebrated on the last Sunday in May as the "Fête des Mères" (except when Pentecost fell on that day, in which case it was moved to the first Sunday in June). Article 3 stated that all expenditure shall be covered from the budget of the Ministry of Public Health and Population.[97]

During the 1950s, the celebration lost all its patriotic and natalist ideologies, and became heavily commercialized.[93]

In 1956, the celebration was given a budget and integrated into the new Code de l'action Sociale et des familles. In 2004 responsibility for the holiday was transferred to the Minister responsible for families.[citation needed]

Georgia

Georgia celebrates Mother's Day on 3 March. It was declared by the first President of Georgia Zviad Gamsakhurdia in order to replace the International Women Day, and it was officially approved by the Supreme Council in 1991. Nowadays Georgia celebrates both Mother's Day on 3 March and International Women's Day on 8 March.[36]

Germany

 
Mother's Day cake in Germany

In the 1920s, Germany had the lowest birthrate in Europe, and the declining trend was continuing. This was attributed to women's participation in the labor market. At the same time, influential groups in society (politicians of left and right, churchwomen, and feminists) believed that mothers should be honored but could not agree on how to do so. However, all groups strongly agreed on the promotion of the values of motherhood. In 1923, this resulted in the unanimous adoption of Muttertag, the Mother's Day holiday as imported from America.[98] The head of the Association of German Florists cited "the inner conflict of our Volk and the loosening of the family" as his reason for introducing the holiday. He expected that the holiday would unite the divided country. In 1925, the Mother's Day Committee joined the task force for the recovery of the volk, and the holiday stopped depending on commercial interests and began emphasizing the need to increase the population in Germany by promoting motherhood.[99]

The holiday was then seen as a means to encourage women to bear more children, which nationalists saw as a way to rejuvenate the nation. The holiday did not celebrate individual women, but an idealized standard of motherhood. The progressive forces resisted the implementation of the holiday because it was backed by so many conservatives and because they saw it as a way to eliminate the rights of working women. Die Frau, the newspaper of the Federation of German Women's Associations, refused to recognize the holiday. Many local authorities adopted their own interpretation of the holiday: it would be a day to support economically larger families or single-mother families. The guidelines for the subsidies had eugenics criteria, but there is no indication that social workers ever implemented them in practice, and subsidies were given preferentially to families in economic need rather than to families with more children or "healthier" children.[99]

With the Nazi party in power during 1933–1945, the situation changed radically. The promotion of Mother's Day increased in many European countries, including the UK and France. From the position of the German Nazi government, the role of mothers was to give healthy children to the German nation. The Nazi party's intention was to create a pure "Aryan race" according to nazi eugenics. Among other Mother's Day ideas, the government promoted the death of a mother's sons in battle as the highest embodiment of patriotic motherhood.[99][100]

The Nazis quickly declared Mother's Day an official holiday and put it under the control of the NSV (National Socialist People's Welfare Association) and the NSF (National Socialist Women Organization). This created conflicts with other organizations that resented Nazi control of the holiday, including Catholic and Protestant churches and local women's organizations. Local authorities resisted the guidelines from the Nazi government and continued assigning resources to families who were in economic need, much to the dismay of the Nazi officials.[99]

In 1938, the government began issuing an award called Mother's Cross (Mutterkreuz), according to categories that depended on the number of children a mother had. The medal was awarded on Mother's Day and also on other holidays due to a large number of recipients. The Cross was an effort to encourage women to have more children, and recipients were required to have at least four.[99][100]

By country (H–M)

Hungary

In Hungary, Mother's Day is celebrated on the first Sunday of May.[101] It was first celebrated in 1925[102] by the Hungarian Red Cross Youth.[103]

India

The modern Mother's Day has been assimilated into Indian culture[104] and is celebrated every year on the second Sunday of May.[105][106] Indians do not celebrate the occasion as a religious event; its celebration is mostly restricted to urban areas where the occasion has been largely commercialized.[107]

Indonesia

Indonesian Mother's Day (Indonesian: Hari Ibu) is celebrated nationally on 22 December. The date was made an official holiday by President Sukarno under Presidential Decree No. 316/1953, on the 25th anniversary of the 1928 Indonesian Women Congress. The day originally sought to celebrate the spirit of Indonesian women and to improve the condition of the nation. Today, the meaning of Mother's Day has changed, and it is celebrated by expressing love and gratitude to mothers. People present gifts to mothers (such as flowers) and hold surprise parties and competitions, which include cooking and kebaya wearing. People also allow mothers a day off from domestic chores.[108]

The holiday is celebrated on the anniversary of the opening day of the first Indonesian Women Congress (Kongres Perempuan Indonesia), which was held from 22 to 25 December 1928.[57][109] The Congress took place in a building called Dalem Jayadipuran, which now serves as the office of the Center of History and Traditional Values Preservation (Balai Pelestarian Sejarah dan Nilai Tradisional) in Brigjen Katamso Street, Yogyakarta. The Congress was attended by 30 feminist organizations from 12 cities in Java and Sumatra. In Indonesia, feminist organizations have existed since 1912, inspired by Indonesian heroines of the 19th century, e.g., Kartini, Martha Christina Tiahahu, Cut Nyak Meutia, Maria Walanda Maramis, Dewi Sartika, Nyai Ahmad Dahlan, Rasuna Said, etc.[57] The Congress intended to improve women's rights in education and marriage.[110]

Indonesia also celebrates the Kartini Day (Hari Kartini) on 21 April, in memory of activist Raden Ajeng Kartini. This is a celebration of the emancipation of women.[109] The observance was instituted at the 1938 Indonesian Women Congress.[110]

During President Suharto's New Order (1965–1998), government propaganda used Mother's Day and Kartini Day to inculcate into women the idea that they should be docile and stay at home.[110]

Iran

 
Commemorative gold medal issued in the Pahlavi era on the occasion of Mother's Day, dated 1975. Obv: Bust of Empress Farah Pahlavi. Rev: Mother and children standing around a seated Farah Pahlavi, holding open book

In Iran, Mother's Day is celebrated on 20 Jumada al-thani. This is the sixth month in the Islamic calendar (a lunar calendar) and every year the holiday falls on a different day of the Gregorian calendar. This is the birthday anniversary of Fatimah, the Islamic prophet Muhammad's only daughter according to Shia Islam.[61][111] On this day, banners reading "Ya Fatemeah (O! Fatemeh)" are displayed on "government buildings, private buildings, public streets and car windows."[61] Mother's Day was originally observed on 16 December but the date was changed after the Iranian Revolution in 1979. The celebration is both Women's Day (replacing International Women's Day) and Mother's Day.[61][112]

In 1960, the Institute for Women Protection adopted the Western holiday and established it on 25 Azar (16 December), the date the Institute was founded. The Institute's action had the support of Empress Farah Pahlavi, the wife of the last Shah of Persia, who promoted the construction of maternity clinics in remote parts of the country to commemorate the day.[113] Pahlavi regime used the holiday to promote "gender ideologies" of the regime.[61] The Shah's government honored and gave awards to women who represented the idealized view of the regime, including mothers who had many healthy children.[113]

According to Shahla Haeri, the Islamic Republic government has used the holiday to "control and channel women's movements" and to promote role models for the traditional concept of family.[114] Fatimah is seen by these critics as the chosen model of a woman completely dedicated to certain traditionally sanctioned feminine roles.[115] However, supporters of the choice contend that there is much more to her life story than simply such "traditional" roles.[116]

Ireland

In Ireland, Mother's Day is celebrated on the fourth Sunday of Lent, as in the United Kingdom, and has the same roots in Mothering Sunday. The practice died out in Ireland around the late 18th century but was revived around the 1950s due to Americanisation.[117][118][119]

Israel

The Jewish population of Israel used to celebrate Mother's Day on Shevat 30 of the Jewish calendar, which falls between 30 January and 1 March. The celebration was set as the same date that Henrietta Szold died (13 February 1945). Henrietta had no biological children, but her organization Youth Aliyah rescued many Jewish children from Nazi Germany and provided for them. She also championed children's rights. Szold is considered the "mother" of all those children, and that is why her annual remembrance day (יום השנה) was set as Mother's Day (יוֹם הָאֵם, yom ha'em). The holiday has evolved over time, becoming a celebration of mutual love inside the family, called Family Day (יוֹם הַמִשְּפָּחָה, yom hamishpacha). This holiday is mainly celebrated in preschools with an activity to which parents are invited. Mother's Day is mainly celebrated by children at kindergartens. There are no longer mutual gifts among members of the family, and there is no longer any commercialization of the celebration. It is not an official holiday.[58]

Italy

Mother's Day in Italy was celebrated for the first time on 24 December 1933 as the "Day of the mother and the child" (Giornata della madre e del fanciullo). It was instituted by the Opera nazionale maternità e infanzia in order to publicly reward the most prolific Italian women every year.[120]

After World War II, Mother's Day was first celebrated on 12 May 1957 in Assisi, at the initiative of Reverend Otello Migliosi, the parish priest of the Tordibetto church.[121] This celebration was so popular that in the following year Mother's Day was adopted throughout Italy. On 18 December 1958, a proposal was presented to the Italian Senate to make the holiday official.[122]

Japan

In Japan, Mother's Day (母の日, Haha no Hi) was initially commemorated during the Shōwa period as the birthday of Empress Kōjun (mother of Emperor Akihito) on 6 March. This was established in 1931 when the Imperial Women's Union was organized. In 1937, the first meeting of "Praise Mothers" was held on 8 May, and in 1949 Japanese society adopted the second Sunday of May as the official date for Mother's Day in Japan. Today, people typically give their mothers gifts of flowers such as red carnations[123] and roses. Giving carnations on Mother's Day is the most common in Japan.[citation needed]

Kyrgyzstan

In Kyrgyzstan, Mother's Day is celebrated on 19 May every year. The holiday was first celebrated in 2012.[124] Mothers are also honored on International Women's Day[125]

Latvia

Mother's Day in Latvia was celebrated for the first time in 1922. Since 1934, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May.[126] After the end of the Soviet occupation of Baltic states celebration was resumed in 1992.[127] Mothers are also honored on International Women's Day.[128]

Lithuania

Mother's Day in Lithuania was celebrated for the first time in 1928. In Lithuania, Mother's Day is celebrated on the first Sunday of May.

Malawi

In Malawi, Mother's Day is a public holiday. The day is observed on 15 October or the following workday. It is celebrated on the UN's World Rural Women's Day.

Maldives

In the Maldives, Mother's Day is celebrated on 13 May. The day is celebrated in different ways. Children give gifts and spend time with their mothers. Daughters give their mothers cards and handmade gifts and sons give their mothers gifts and flowers. Maldivians love to celebrate Mother's day, and they have it specially written on their calendar.[citation needed]

Malta

The first mention of Mother's Day in Malta occurred during the Radio Children's Programmes run by Frans H. Said in May 1961. Within a few years, Mother's Day became one of the most popular dates in the Maltese calendar. In Malta, this day is commemorated on the second Sunday in May. Mothers are invariably given gifts and invited for lunch, usually at a good quality restaurant.[citation needed]

Mexico

In Mexico, the government of Álvaro Obregón imported the Mother's Day holiday from the US in 1922, and the newspaper Excélsior held a massive promotional campaign for the holiday that year.[129] The conservative government tried to use the holiday to promote a more conservative role for mothers in families, but that perspective was criticized by the socialists as promoting an unrealistic image of a woman who was not good for much more than breeding.[129]

In the mid-1930s, the leftist government of Lázaro Cárdenas promoted the holiday as a "patriotic festival". The Cárdenas government tried to use the holiday as a vehicle for various efforts: to stress the importance of families as the basis for national development; to benefit from the loyalty that Mexicans felt towards their mothers; to introduce new morals to Mexican women; and to reduce the influence that the church and the Catholic right exerted over women.[130] The government sponsored the holiday in the schools.[130] However, ignoring the strict guidelines from the government, theatre plays were filled with religious icons and themes. Consequently, the "national celebrations" became "religious fiestas" despite the efforts of the government.[130]

Soledad Orozco García, the wife of President Manuel Ávila Camacho, promoted the holiday during the 1940s, resulting in an important state-sponsored celebration.[131] The 1942 celebration lasted a full week and included an announcement that all women could reclaim their pawned sewing machines from the Monte de Piedad at no cost.[131]

Due to Orozco's promotion, the Catholic National Synarchist Union (UNS) took heed of the holiday around 1941.[132] Shop-owner members of the Party of the Mexican Revolution (now the Institutional Revolutionary Party) observed a custom allowing women from humble classes to pick a free Mother's Day gift from a shop to bring home to their families. The Synarchists worried that this promoted both materialism and the idleness of lower classes, and in turn, reinforced the systemic social problems of the country.[133] Currently this holiday practice is viewed as very conservative, but the 1940s' UNS saw Mother's Day as part of the larger debate on the modernization that was happening at the time.[134] This economic modernization was inspired by US models and was sponsored by the state. The fact that the holiday was originally imported from the US was seen as evidence of an attempt at imposing capitalism and materialism in Mexican society.[134]

The UNS and the clergy of the city of León interpreted the government's actions as an effort to secularize the holiday and to promote a more active role for women in society. They concluded that the government's long-term goal was to cause women to abandon their traditional roles at home in order to spiritually weaken men.[134] They also saw the holiday as an attempt to secularize the cult to the Virgin Mary, inside a larger effort to dechristianize several holidays. The government sought to counter these claims by organizing widespread masses and asking religious women to assist with the state-sponsored events in order to "depaganize" them.[135] The clergy preferred to promote 2 July celebration of the Santísima Virgen de la Luz, the patron of León, Guanajuato, in replacement of Mother's Day.[132] In 1942, at the same time as Soledad's greatest celebration of Mother's Day, the clergy organized the 210th celebration of the Virgin Mary with a large parade in León.[135]

There is a consensus among scholars that the Mexican government abandoned its revolutionary initiatives during the 1940s, including its efforts to influence Mother's Day.[132]

Today the "Día de las Madres" is an unofficial holiday in Mexico held each year on 10 May,[136] the day on which it was first celebrated in Mexico.[137]

In Mexico, to show affection and appreciation to the mother, it is traditional to start the celebration with the famous song "Las Mañanitas", either a cappella, with the help of a mariachi or a contracted trio. Families usually gather to celebrate, trying to spend as much time as possible with mothers to honor them. They bring some dishes and eat together or visit a restaurant.[138]

Myanmar

In Myanmar, Mothers' Day (the plural form of mother is used as an official title[139]) is celebrated on the full moon day of Pyatho, the tenth month of the Myanmar calendar, which usually falls in January.[140] At the proposal and initiative of U Thukha, who put a lot of effort into founding this day, it was first celebrated in Mandalay on the full moon day of Pyatho in 1995, but it was officially added to the Myanmar calendar in 1997, two years after its first celebration.[141]

People who are away from home, send postcards or phone their mothers to express love and gratitude and those who live with their mother, give her personal service, like bathing or shampooing, and usually take her to pagodas.[142]

By country (N–S)

Nepal

In Nepal, there is a festival equivalent to Mother's Day, called Mata Tirtha Aunsi ("Mother Pilgrimage New Moon"), or Mata Tirtha Puja ("Mother Pilgrimage Worship"). It is celebrated according to the lunar calendar. It falls on the last day of the dark fortnight in the month of Baishakh which falls in April–May (in 2015, it will occur on 18 April). The dark fortnight lasts for 15 days from the full moon to the new moon. This festival is observed to commemorate and honor mothers, and it is celebrated by giving gifts to mothers and remembering mothers who are no more.[citation needed]

To honor mothers who have died, it is the tradition to go on a pilgrimage to the Mata Tirtha ponds, located 6 km to the southwest of downtown Kathmandu. The nearby Mata Tirtha village is named after these ponds. Previously, the tradition was observed primarily by the Newar community and other people living in the Kathmandu Valley. Now this festival is widely celebrated across the country.[citation needed]

Many tragic folklore legends have been created, suggesting different reasons why this pond became a pilgrimage site. The most popular version says that, in ancient times, the mother of a shepherd died, and he made offerings to a nearby pond. There he saw the face of his mother in the water, with her hand taking the offerings. Since then, many people have visited the pond, hoping to see their deceased mother's face. Pilgrims believe that they will bring peace to their mothers' souls by visiting the sacred place. There are two ponds. The larger one is for ritual bathing. The smaller one is used to "look upon mother's face", and is fenced by iron bars to prevent people from bathing in it.[citation needed]

Traditionally, in the Kathmandu valley the South-Western corner is reserved for women and women-related rituals, and the North-Eastern is for men and men-related rituals. The worship place for Mata Tirtha Aunsi is located in Mata Tirtha in the South-Western half of the valley, while the worship place for Gokarna Aunsi, the equivalent celebration for deceased fathers is located in Gokarna, Nepal, in the North-Eastern half. This division is reflected in many aspects of the life in Kathmandu valley.[143]

Mother's Day is known as Aama ko Mukh Herne Din in Nepali, which literally means "day to see mother's face". In Nepal Bhasa, the festival is known as Mām yā Khwā Swayegu, which can be translated as "to look upon mother's face".[citation needed]

Netherlands

In the Netherlands, Mother's Day was introduced as early as 1910 by the Dutch branch of the Salvation Army.[144] The Royal Dutch Society for Horticulture and Botany, a group protecting the interest of Dutch florists, worked to promote the holiday; they hoped to emulate the commercial success achieved by American florists.[145] They were imitating the campaign already underway by florists in Germany and Austria, but they were aware that the traditions had originated in the US.[145]

Florists launched a major promotional effort in 1925. This included the publication of a book of articles written by famous intellectuals, radio broadcasts, newspapers ads, and the collaboration of priests and teachers who wanted to promote the celebration for their own reasons.[145] In 1931 the second Sunday of May was adopted as the official celebration date. In the mid-1930s the slogan Moederdag – Bloemendag (Mother's Day – Flowers' Day) was coined, and the phrase was popular for many years.[146] In the 1930s and 1940s "Mother's Day cakes" were given as gifts in hospitals and to the Dutch Queen, who is known as the "mother of the country".[146] Other trade groups tried to cash in on the holiday and to give new meaning to the holiday in order to promote their own wares as gifts.[146]

Roman Catholic priests complained that the holiday interfered with the honoring of the Virgin Mary, the divine mother, which took place during the whole month of May. In 1926 Mother's Day was celebrated on 7 July in order to address these complaints.[147] Catholic organizations and priests tried to Christianize the holiday, but those attempts were rendered futile around the 1960s when the church lost influence and the holiday was completely secularized.[147]

In later years, the initial resistance disappeared, and even leftist newspapers stopped their criticism and endorsed Mother's Day.[148]

In the 1980s, the American origin of the holiday was still not widely known, so feminist groups who opposed the perpetuation of gender roles sometimes claimed that Mother's Day was invented by Nazis and celebrated on the birthday of Klara Hitler, Hitler's mother.[149]

New Zealand

In New Zealand, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday in May. Mother's Day is not a public holiday. The New Zealand tradition is to send or give cards and gifts and at-home youngsters to attempt to serve mothers a variation on breakfast in bed.[150]

Nicaragua

In Nicaragua, the Día de la Madre has been celebrated on 30 May since the early 1940s. The date was chosen by President Anastasio Somoza García because it was the birthday of Casimira Sacasa, his wife's mother.[52]

North Korea

Mother's Day is celebrated on 16 November as a public holiday in North Korea. The date takes its significance from the First National Meeting of Mothers held in 1961, for which Kim Il Sung, the leader of the country, published a work called The Duty of Mothers in the Education of Children. The date was designated as Mother's Day in May 2012 by the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly but only became a public holiday and appeared on the North Korean calendar starting in 2015.[55]

Norway

Mother's Day was first celebrated on 9 February 1919 and was initially organized by religious institutions. Later it has become a family day, and the mother is often treated to breakfast in bed, flowers and cake.[151][better source needed]

It has gradually become a major commercial event, with special pastries, flowers and other presents offered by retailers. Day-cares and primary schools often encourage children to make cards and other gifts.[citation needed]

Pakistan

In Pakistan, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. Media channels celebrate with special shows. Individuals honor their mothers by giving gifts and commemorative articles. Individuals who have lost their mothers pray and pay their respects to their loved ones lost. Schools hold special programs in order to acknowledge the efforts of their mothers.[152]

Panama

In Panama, Mother's Day is celebrated on 8 December, the same day as the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. This date was suggested in 1930 by the wife of Panama's President Florencio Harmodio Arosemena. 8 December was adopted as Mother's Day under Law 69, which was passed the same year.[56]

According to another account, in 1924 the Rotary Club of Panama asked that Mother's Day be celebrated on 11 May. Politician Aníbal D. Ríos changed the proposal so that the celebration would be held on 8 December. He then established Mother's Day as a national holiday on that date.[153]

Paraguay

In Paraguay, Mother's Day is celebrated on 15 May, the same day as the Dia de la Patria, which celebrates the independence of Paraguay.[50] This date was chosen to honor the role played by Juana María de Lara in the events of 14 May 1811 that led to Paraguay's independence.[154]

In 2008, the Paraguayan Minister of Culture, Bruno Barrios, lamented this coincidence because, in Paraguay, Mother's Day is much more popular than independence day and the independence celebration goes unnoticed. As a result, Barrios asked that the celebration be moved to the end of the month.[155] A group of young people attempted to gather 20,000 signatures to ask the Parliament to move Mother's Day.[155] In 2008, the Comisión de festejos (Celebration Committee) of the city of Asunción asked that Mother's Day be moved to the second Sunday of May.[156]

Philippines

In the Philippines, Mother's Day is officially celebrated on the second Sunday of May, but it is not a public holiday.[157] Although not a traditional Filipino holiday, the occasion owes its popularity to American Colonial Period influence.

According to a 2008 article by the Philippine News Agency, in 1921 the Ilocos Norte Federation of Women's Clubs asked to declare the first Monday of December as Mother's Day "to honor these fabulous women who brought forth God's children into this world." In response, Governor-General Charles Yeater issued Circular No. 33 declaring the celebration. In 1937 President Manuel L. Quezon issued Presidential Proclamation No. 213, changing the name of the occasion from "Mother's Day" to "Parent's Day" to address the complaints that there wasn't a "Father's Day". In 1980 President Ferdinand Marcos issued Presidential Proclamation No. 2037 proclaiming the date as both Mother's Day and Father's Day. In 1988 President Corazon Aquino issued Presidential Proclamation No. 266, changing Mother's Day to the second Sunday of May, and Father's Day to the third Sunday of June, discontinuing the traditional date.[158] In 1998 President Joseph Estrada returned both celebrations to the first Monday of December.[157]

Portugal

In Portugal, the "Dia da Mãe" ("Mother's Day") is an unofficial holiday held each year on the first Sunday of May (sometimes coinciding with Labour Day). In the weeks leading up to this Sunday, school children spend a few hours a day preparing a gift for their mothers, aided by their school teachers. In general, mothers receive gifts from their family members and this day is meant to be celebrated with the whole family. It used to be celebrated on 8 December, the same date as the Conception of the Virgin celebration.[citation needed]

Romania

In Romania, Mother's Day has been celebrated on the first Sunday of May since 2010. Law 319/2009 made both Mother's Day and Father's Day official holidays in Romania. The measure was passed thanks to campaign efforts from the Alliance Fighting Discrimination Against Fathers (TATA).[43] Previously, Mother's Day was celebrated on 8 March, as part of International Women's Day (a tradition dating back to when Romania was part of the Eastern bloc). Today, Mother's Day and International Women's Day are two separate holidays, with International Women's Day being held on its original date of 8 March.[citation needed]

Russia

Traditionally Russia had celebrated International Women's Day and Mother's Day on 8 March, an inheritance from the Soviet Union, and a public holiday.[159]

Women's Day was first celebrated on the last Sunday in February in 1913 in Russia.[160]

In 1917, demonstrations marking International Women's Day in Saint Petersburg on the last Sunday in February (which fell on 8 March on the Gregorian calendar) initiated the February Revolution. Following the October Revolution later that year, the Bolshevik Alexandra Kollontai persuaded Vladimir Lenin to make it an official holiday in the Soviet Union, and it was established, but was a working day until 1965.[citation needed]

On 8 May 1965, by the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, International Women's Day was declared a non-working day in the Soviet Union "in commemoration of the outstanding merits of Soviet women in communistic construction, in the defense of their Fatherland during the Great Patriotic War, in their heroism and selflessness at the front and in the rear, and also marking the great contribution of women to strengthening friendship between peoples, and the struggle for peace. But still, women's day must be celebrated as are other holidays."[161]

Samoa

In Samoa, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday in May, and as a recognised national holiday on the Monday following.

Singapore

In Singapore, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. It is not recognized as a holiday by the government.

Slovakia

Czechoslovakia celebrated only Women's Day until the Velvet Revolution in 1989. After the country split in 1993, Slovakia started celebrating both Women's Day and Mother's Day. The politicization of Women's Day has affected the official status of Mother's Day. Center-right parties want Mother's Day to replace Women's Day, and social-democrats want to make Women's Day an official holiday. Currently, both days are festive, but they are not "state holidays". In the Slovak Republic, Mother's Day is celebrated every second Sunday in May.[47]

South Africa

In South Africa, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. It is not recognized as a holiday by the government. The tradition is to give cards and gifts and to serve mothers breakfast in bed or to go out to lunch together as a family.

South Sudan

In South Sudan, Mother's Day is celebrated on the first Monday in July. The president Salva Kiir Mayardit proclaimed Mother's Day as the first Monday in July after handing over from Sudan. Children in South Sudan are presenting mothers with gifts and flowers. The first Mother's Day was held in that country on 2 July 2012.[citation needed]

Spain

In Spain, Mother's Day or Día de la Madre is celebrated on the first Sunday of May. The weeks leading up to this Sunday, school children spend a few hours a day preparing a gift for their mothers, aided by their school teachers. In general, mothers receive gifts from their family members & this day is meant to be celebrated with the whole family. It is also said to be celebrated in May, as May is the month dedicated to the Virgin Mary (mother of Jesus) according to Catholicism. The idea of a month dedicated specifically to Mary can be traced back to baroque times. Although it wasn't always held during May, Mary Month included thirty daily spiritual exercises honoring Mary.[162]

In 1925 the Valencian poet Julio Menéndez García published a Hymn to Mother in a pamphlet in which he proposed the celebration of Mother's Day in all Spanish-speaking countries.[163] The official declaration was never produced, but at that time the initiative was adopted at a local level on different dates; thus, for example, in Madrid, Mother's Day was celebrated on 4 October 1926.[164]

In 1939 the Youth Front of FET y de las JONS party, promoted the celebration of Mother's Day coinciding with the feast of the Immaculate Conception, on 8 December.

In the early 1960s, on the initiative of a chain of department stores (Galerías Preciados), which copied the custom established in Cuba, Mother's Day was also celebrated on the first Sunday of May (El Corte Inglés, the great competitor of Galerías Preciados, celebrated the holiday in December). The two dates, May and December, coexisted until 1965 when the ecclesiastical authorities chose to celebrate the festival in May, within the month consecrated to the Virgin, to recover the authentic character of the Day of the Immaculate Conception.[165]

Sri Lanka

In Sri Lanka, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May.

Sweden

In Sweden, Mother's Day was first celebrated in 1919, by an initiative of the author Cecilia Bååth-Holmberg. It took several decades for the day to be widely recognized. Swedes born in the early nineteen hundreds typically did not celebrate the day because of the common belief that the holiday was invented strictly for commercial purposes. This was in contrast to Father's Day, which has been widely celebrated in Sweden since the late 1970s. Mother's Day in Sweden is celebrated on the last Sunday in May. A later date was chosen to allow everyone to go outside and pick flowers.[citation needed]

Switzerland

In Switzerland, the "règle de Pentecôte" law allows Mother's Day to be celebrated a week late if the holiday falls on the same day as Pentecost. In 2008, merchants declined to move the date.[166]

By country (T–Z)

Taiwan

In Taiwan, Mother's Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of the month of May, coinciding with Buddha's birthday and the traditional ceremony of "washing the Buddha". In 1999 the Taiwanese government established the second Sunday of May as Buddha's birthday, so they would be celebrated in the same day.[167][168]

Since 2006,[169] the Tzu Chi, the largest charity organization in Taiwan, celebrates the Tzu Chi Day, Mother's Day and Buddha's birthday all together, as part of a unified celebration and religious observance.[170][171][172]

Thailand

Mother's day in Thailand is celebrated on the birthday of the Queen Mother of Thailand, Sirikit (12 August).[173][174] The holiday was first celebrated around the 1980s as part of the campaign by the Prime Minister of Thailand Prem Tinsulanonda to promote Thailand's Royal family.[175] Father's Day is celebrated on the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej's birthday.[175]

Ukraine

Ukraine celebrates Mother's Day (Ukrainian: День Матері) on the second Sunday of May. In Ukraine, Mother's Day officially became a holiday in 1999[176] and has been celebrated since 2000. Ukrainian society also celebrates International Women's Day, a holiday adopted under the Soviet Union that remained a tradition in Ukraine after its collapse.[citation needed]

United Kingdom

 
Balloons outside, in the week before Mother's Day 2008

The United Kingdom celebrates Mother's Day on the Fourth Sunday in Lent (19 March 2023).[177] In the United Kingdom, the holiday has its roots in the religious Mothering Sunday celebration and was originally unrelated to the international Mother's Day holiday.[31] Most historians believe that Mothering Sunday evolved from a medieval practice of visiting one's mother church annually on Laetare Sunday.[178]

United States

 
Prince Harry, Michelle Obama and Jill Biden helping children create Mother's Day cards at the White House, 9 May 2013
 
Handmade Mother's Day gifts

The United States celebrates Mother's Day on the second Sunday in May. In 1872 Julia Ward Howe called for women to join in support of disarmament and asked for 2 June 1872, to be established as a "Mother's Day for Peace". Her 1870 "Appeal to womanhood throughout the world" is sometimes referred to as Mother's Day Proclamation. But Howe's day was not for honouring mothers but for organizing pacifist mothers against war. In the 1880s and 1890s there were several further attempts to establish an American "Mother's Day", but these did not succeed beyond the local level.[179]

In the United States, Mother's Day remains one of the biggest days for sales of flowers, greeting cards, and the like; Mother's Day is also the biggest holiday for long-distance telephone calls.[180] Moreover, churchgoing is also popular on Mother's Day, yielding the highest church attendance after Christmas Eve and Easter. Many worshippers celebrate the day with carnations, coloured if the mother is living and white if she is dead.[13][181]

Mother's Day continues to be one of the most commercially successful U.S. occasions.[182]

It is possible that the holiday would have withered over time without the support and continuous promotion of the florist industries and other commercial industries. Other Protestant holidays from the same time, such as Children's Day and Temperance Sunday, do not have the same level of popularity.[183]

See also

Notes

Footnotes

Citations

Enstam, Elizabeth York. "The Dallas equal suffrage association, political style, and popular culture: grassroots strategies of the Woman Suffrage Movement, 1913–1919." Journal of Southern History 68.4 (2002):817+. Student Resources in Context. Web. 14 November 2014.

References

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  2. ^ L. James Grold (April 1968), "Mother's Day", American Journal of Psychiatry, 124 (10): 1456–1458, doi:10.1176/ajp.124.10.1456, PMID 5643668, Mother's Day, conceived by Anna Jarvis to honor unselfish mothers (...) Although there is no direct lineal descent to our modern Mother's Day custom, secular and religious motherhood have existed for thousands of years before 10 May 1908: the first church – St. Andrew's in Grafton, West Virginia – responded to her request for a Sunday service honoring mothers . Cybele (...)
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General

  • Schmidt, Leigh Eric (1997). Princeton University Press (ed.). Consumer Rites: The Buying and Selling of American Holidays (reprint, illustrated ed.). Princeton University Press. pp. 256–275. ISBN 978-0-691-01721-1.
  • Larossa, Ralph (1997). University of Chicago Press (ed.). The Modernization of Fatherhood: A Social and Political History (illustrated ed.). University of Chicago Press. pp. 90, 170–192. ISBN 978-0-226-46904-1. Ann Jarvis OR Anna Jarvis mother's day.
  • Helsloot, John (2007), "10. Vernacular Authenticity: Negotiating Mother's Day and Father's Day in the Netherlands", in Margry, Peter Jan; Roodenburg, Herman (eds.), Reframing Dutch Culture: Between Otherness and Authenticity, Progress in European Ethnology (illustrated ed.), Ashgate Publishing, pp. 6–7, 203–224, ISBN 978-0-7546-4705-8
  • Newcomer, Daniel (2004). Reconciling Modernity: Urban State Formation in 1940s León, Mexico (illustrated ed.). University of Nebraska Press. pp. 132–139. ISBN 978-0803233492.
  • Sherman, John W. (1997). The Mexican Right: The End of Revolutionary Reform, 1929–1940 (illustrated ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 44. ISBN 978-0275957360.

External links

  •   Media related to Mother's Day at Wikimedia Commons
  • Anna Jarvis: The woman who regretted creating Mother's Day, By Vibeke Venema BBC Stories, 10 May 2020.

mother, originally, different, religious, celebration, held, some, countries, mothering, sunday, other, uses, disambiguation, celebration, honoring, mother, family, individual, well, motherhood, maternal, bonds, influence, mothers, society, celebrated, differe. For the originally different religious celebration held in some countries see Mothering Sunday For other uses see Mother s Day disambiguation Mother s Day is a celebration honoring the mother of the family or individual as well as motherhood maternal bonds and the influence of mothers in society It is celebrated on different days in many parts of the world most commonly in the months of March or May It complements similar celebrations honoring family members such as Father s Day Siblings Day and Grandparents Day Mother s DayMaternal Admiration painted by William Adolphe BouguereauObserved by40 countriesTypeWorldwideSignificanceHonors mothers and motherhoodDateVaries per countryFrequencyAnnualRelated toChildren s DaySiblings DayFather s DayParents DayGrandparents DayWhile some countries have a multi century history of a day to celebrate mothers the modern American version of the holiday began in the United States in the early 20th century at the initiative of Anna Jarvis who organized the first Mother s Day service of worship and celebration at Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton West Virginia which serves as the International Mother s Day Shrine today 1 It is not directly related to the many traditional celebrations of mothers and motherhood that have existed throughout the world over thousands of years such as the Greek cult to Cybele the mother deity Rhea the Roman festival of Hilaria or the other Christian ecclesiastical Mothering Sunday celebration associated with the image of Mother Church 2 3 4 5 However in some countries Mother s Day is still synonymous with these older traditions 6 7 8 Mother s DayThe American version of Mother s Day has been criticized for having become too commercialized 9 10 Jarvis herself who began the celebration as a liturgical observance regretted this commercialism and expressed that this was never her intention 1 11 In response Constance Adelaide Smith successfully advocated for Mothering Sunday as a commemoration of a broader definition of motherhood in many other parts of the English speaking world 12 Contents 1 Establishment of holiday 2 Spelling 3 Dates around the world 4 International history and tradition 4 1 Religion 4 2 By country A G 4 2 1 Albania 4 2 2 Arab world 4 2 3 Argentina 4 2 4 Armenia 4 2 5 Australia 4 2 6 Bangladesh 4 2 7 Belarus 4 2 8 Bhutan 4 2 9 Belgium 4 2 10 Bolivia 4 2 11 Brazil 4 2 12 Canada 4 2 13 China 4 2 14 Czech Republic 4 2 15 Egypt 4 2 16 Ethiopia 4 2 17 Estonia 4 2 18 Finland 4 2 19 France 4 2 20 Georgia 4 2 21 Germany 4 3 By country H M 4 3 1 Hungary 4 3 2 India 4 3 3 Indonesia 4 3 4 Iran 4 3 5 Ireland 4 3 6 Israel 4 3 7 Italy 4 3 8 Japan 4 3 9 Kyrgyzstan 4 3 10 Latvia 4 3 11 Lithuania 4 3 12 Malawi 4 3 13 Maldives 4 3 14 Malta 4 3 15 Mexico 4 3 16 Myanmar 4 4 By country N S 4 4 1 Nepal 4 4 2 Netherlands 4 4 3 New Zealand 4 4 4 Nicaragua 4 4 5 North Korea 4 4 6 Norway 4 4 7 Pakistan 4 4 8 Panama 4 4 9 Paraguay 4 4 10 Philippines 4 4 11 Portugal 4 4 12 Romania 4 4 13 Russia 4 4 14 Samoa 4 4 15 Singapore 4 4 16 Slovakia 4 4 17 South Africa 4 4 18 South Sudan 4 4 19 Spain 4 4 20 Sri Lanka 4 4 21 Sweden 4 4 22 Switzerland 4 5 By country T Z 4 5 1 Taiwan 4 5 2 Thailand 4 5 3 Ukraine 4 5 4 United Kingdom 4 5 5 United States 5 See also 6 Notes 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Citations 7 References 8 External linksEstablishment of holiday nbsp Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church the site of the first Mother s Day service of worship in 1908 it serves as the International Mother s Day Shrine Main article Mother s Day United States History The modern holiday was first celebrated in 1907 when Anna Jarvis held the first Mother s Day service of worship at Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton West Virginia 1 13 Andrew s Methodist Church now holds the International Mother s Day Shrine 1 Her campaign to make Mother s Day a recognized holiday in the United States began in 1905 the year her mother Ann Reeves Jarvis died Ann Jarvis had been a peace activist who cared for wounded soldiers on both sides of the American Civil War and created Mother s Day Work Clubs to address public health issues She and another peace activist and suffragist Julia Ward Howe had been urging for the creation of a Mother s Day For Peace where mothers would ask that their husbands and sons were no longer killed in wars 40 years before it became an official holiday Ward Howe had made her Mother s Day Proclamation in 1870 which called upon mothers of all nationalities to band together to promote the amicable settlement of international questions the great and general interests of peace 14 Anna Jarvis wanted to honor this and to set aside a day to honor all mothers because she believed a mother is the person who has done more for you than anyone in the world 15 In 1908 the U S Congress rejected a proposal to make Mother s Day an official holiday joking that they would also have to proclaim a Mother in law s Day 16 However owing to the efforts of Anna Jarvis by 1911 all U S states observed the holiday 17 with some of them officially recognizing Mother s Day as a local holiday 18 the first being West Virginia Jarvis home state in 1910 In 1914 Woodrow Wilson signed a proclamation designating Mother s Day held on the second Sunday in May as a national holiday to honor mothers 19 Although Jarvis who started Mother s Day as a liturgical service was successful in founding the celebration she became resentful of the commercialization of the holiday and it became associated with the phrase Hallmark holiday By the early 1920s Hallmark Cards and other companies had started selling Mother s Day cards Jarvis believed that the companies had misinterpreted and exploited the idea of Mother s Day and that the emphasis of the holiday was on sentiment not profit As a result she organized boycotts of Mother s Day and threatened to issue lawsuits against the companies involved 20 Jarvis argued that people should appreciate and honor their mothers through handwritten letters expressing their love and gratitude instead of buying gifts and pre made cards 19 Jarvis protested at a candy makers convention in Philadelphia in 1923 and at a meeting of American War Mothers in 1925 By this time carnations had become associated with Mother s Day and the selling of carnations by the American War Mothers to raise money angered Jarvis who was arrested for disturbing the peace 19 20 In Britain Constance Adelaide Smith was inspired to advocate for Mothering Sunday an already existing Christian ecclesiastical celebration in which the faithful visit the church in which they received the sacrament of baptism as an equivalent celebration 21 22 23 24 She referred to medieval traditions of celebrating Mother Church mothers of earthly homes Mary mother of Jesus and Mother Nature 23 12 Her efforts were successful in the British Isles and other parts of the English speaking world 25 SpellingIn 1912 Anna Jarvis trademarked the phrase Second Sunday in May Mother s Day Anna Jarvis Founder and created the Mother s Day International Association 26 She specifically noted that Mother s should be a singular possessive for each family to honor its own mother not a plural possessive commemorating all mothers in the world 27 This is also the spelling used by U S President Woodrow Wilson in his 1914 presidential proclamation by the U S Congress in relevant bills 28 29 and by various U S presidents in their proclamations concerning Mother s Day 30 Dates around the worldWhile the United States holiday was adopted by some other countries existing celebrations held on different dates honoring motherhood have become described as Mother s Day such as Mothering Sunday in the United Kingdom 31 or in Greece the Eastern Orthodox celebration of the presentation of Jesus Christ to the temple 2 February of Julian Calendar Both the secular and religious Mother Day are present in Greece 32 Mothering Sunday is often referred to as Mother s Day even though it is an unrelated celebration 31 In some countries the date adopted is one significant to the majority religion such as Virgin Mary Day in Catholic countries Other countries selected a date with historical significance For example Bolivia s Mother s Day is a fixed date commemorating a battle in which women participated to defend their children 33 Some countries such as Russia celebrated International Women s Day instead of Mother s Day 34 or simply celebrate both holidays which is the custom in Ukraine Kyrgyzstan has recently introduced Mother s Day but year on year International Women s Day is certainly increasing in status 35 This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Gregorian calendarOccurrence Dates CountrySecond Sunday of February 13 February 202212 February 2023 11 February 2024 nbsp Norway3 March nbsp Georgia 36 8 March with International Women s Day nbsp Albania nbsp Armenia nbsp Azerbaijan nbsp Belarus nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina nbsp Bulgaria nbsp Burundi nbsp Burkina Faso nbsp Kazakhstan nbsp Kosovo nbsp Laos nbsp Moldova nbsp Montenegro nbsp North Macedonia nbsp Russia nbsp Serbia nbsp Tajikistan nbsp Uzbekistan nbsp Vietnam 37 Fourth Sunday in Lent Mothering Sunday 27 March 202219 March 2023 10 March 2024 nbsp Guernsey nbsp Ireland nbsp Isle of Man nbsp Jersey nbsp Nigeria nbsp United Kingdom 38 21 March Spring equinox nbsp Bahrain 39 nbsp Comoros nbsp Djibouti nbsp Egypt 39 nbsp Iraq nbsp Jordan 39 nbsp Kuwait 39 nbsp Libya 39 nbsp Lebanon 40 41 nbsp Mauritania nbsp Oman 39 nbsp Palestine 39 41 nbsp Qatar 39 nbsp Saudi Arabia 42 nbsp Somalia nbsp Sudan 39 nbsp Syria 39 nbsp United Arab Emirates 39 nbsp Yemen 39 25 March nbsp Slovenia7 April Annunciation day nbsp Armenia Motherhood and Beauty Day First Sunday of May 1 May 20227 May 2023 5 May 2024 nbsp Angola nbsp Cape Verde nbsp Hungary nbsp Lithuania nbsp Mozambique nbsp Romania 43 nbsp Portugal nbsp Sao Tome and Principe nbsp Spain8 May nbsp South Korea Parents Day 10 May nbsp El Salvador nbsp Guatemala nbsp MexicoSecond Sunday of May 8 May 202214 May 2023 12 May 2024 nbsp Anguilla nbsp Antigua and Barbuda nbsp Aruba nbsp Australia nbsp Austria nbsp Bahamas nbsp Bangladesh nbsp Barbados nbsp Belgium nbsp Belize nbsp Bermuda nbsp Bhutan nbsp Bonaire nbsp Botswana nbsp Brazil nbsp Brunei nbsp Canada nbsp Cambodia nbsp Cayman Islands nbsp Central African Republic nbsp Chad nbsp Chile 44 nbsp China 45 nbsp Colombia nbsp Congo Dem Rep nbsp Congo Rep nbsp Cote d Ivoire nbsp Croatia nbsp Cuba 46 nbsp Curacao nbsp Cyprus nbsp Czech Republic 47 nbsp Denmark nbsp Dominica nbsp Ecuador nbsp Equatorial Guinea nbsp Estonia nbsp Ethiopia nbsp Faroe Islands nbsp Fiji nbsp Finland nbsp Gabon nbsp Gambia nbsp Germany nbsp Ghana nbsp Greece nbsp Greenland nbsp Grenada nbsp Guyana nbsp Honduras nbsp Hong Kong nbsp Iceland nbsp India nbsp Italy nbsp Jamaica nbsp Japan nbsp Kenya nbsp Latvia nbsp Liberia nbsp Liechtenstein nbsp Macau nbsp Malaysia nbsp Malta nbsp Myanmar nbsp Namibia nbsp Netherlands nbsp New Zealand nbsp Pakistan nbsp Papua New Guinea nbsp Peru 48 nbsp Philippines nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis nbsp Saint Lucia nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines nbsp Samoa nbsp Singapore nbsp Sint Maarten nbsp Slovakia 47 nbsp South Africa 49 nbsp Sri Lanka nbsp Suriname nbsp Switzerland nbsp Taiwan nbsp Tanzania nbsp Tonga nbsp Trinidad and Tobago nbsp Turkey nbsp Uganda nbsp Ukraine nbsp United States nbsp Uruguay nbsp Vietnam 37 nbsp Venezuela nbsp Zambia nbsp Zimbabwe14 May nbsp Benin15 May nbsp Paraguay same day as Dia de la Patria 50 19 May nbsp Kyrgyzstan Russian Den materi Kyrgyz Ene kүnү 26 May nbsp Poland Polish Dzien Matki 27 May nbsp Bolivia 33 Last Sunday of May 29 May 202228 May 2023 26 May 2024 nbsp Algeria nbsp Cameroon nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp Haiti 51 nbsp Madagascar nbsp Mali nbsp Mauritius nbsp Morocco nbsp Niger nbsp Senegal nbsp Sweden nbsp TunisiaLast Sunday of May or first Sunday of June if the last Sunday of May is Pentecost 29 May 20224 June 2023 26 May 2024 nbsp France 38 French Antilles30 May nbsp Nicaragua 52 1 June nbsp Mongolia together with Children s Day Second Sunday of June 12 June 202211 June 2023 9 June 2024 nbsp Luxembourg14 June nbsp AfghanistanFirst Monday of July 4 July 20223 July 2023 1 July 2024 nbsp South Sudan12 August nbsp Thailand birthday of Queen Sirikit 15 August Assumption of Mary nbsp Antwerp Belgium nbsp Costa RicaThis Sunday of September 18 September 202217 September 2023 15 September 2024 nbsp Kazakhstan14 October nbsp Belarus since 1996 53 15 October or following work day 17 October 202216 October 2023 15 October 2024 nbsp Malawi20 October nbsp Vietnam Vietnamese Women s Day Third Sunday of October 16 October 202215 October 2023 20 October 2024 nbsp Argentina Dia de la Madre 54 3 November nbsp Timor Leste16 November nbsp North Korea 55 Last Sunday of November nbsp Russia8 December Feast of the Immaculate Conception nbsp Panama 56 22 December nbsp Indonesia 57 Hari Ibu Hebrew calendarOccurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates Country30 Shevat Between 30 January and 1 March1 February 202221 February 2023 9 February 2024 nbsp Israel 58 Family Day Hindu calendarOccurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates CountryVaisakha 59 Amavasya Mata Tirtha Aunsi 60 Between 19 April and 19 May nbsp NepalIslamic calendarOccurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates Country20 Jumada al Thani 22 January 202213 January 20232 January 202422 December 2024 nbsp Iran 61 Vietnamese calendarOccurrence Equivalent Gregorian dates Country15th day of seventh month Between 6 August and 6 September 12 August 202230 August 202318 August 2024 nbsp Vietnam Vu lan Bao Hiếu International history and traditionThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message source source Mother s Day in the Netherlands in 1925 nbsp Northern Pacific Railway postcard for Mother s Day 1916 nbsp Mother s Day gift in 2007 nbsp Mother and daughter and Mother s Day cardIn most countries Mother s Day is an observance derived from the holiday as it has evolved in the United States promoted by companies who saw benefit in making it popular 9 As adopted by other countries and cultures the holiday has different meanings is associated with different events religious historical or legendary and is celebrated on different dates In some cases countries already had existing celebrations honoring motherhood and their celebrations then adopted several external characteristics from the US holiday such as giving carnations and other presents to one s mother The extent of the celebrations varies greatly In some countries it is potentially offensive to one s mother not to mark Mother s Day In others it is a little known festival celebrated mainly by immigrants or covered by the media as a taste of foreign culture citation needed Religion In certain traditional branches of Christianity the holiday is strongly associated with revering the Virgin Mary 62 In some Catholic Lutheran and Anglican homes families have a special shrine on their home altar devoted to the Blessed Virgin Mary 63 In many Eastern Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches a special prayer service is held in honor of the Theotokos Virgin Mary 64 65 In Islam there is no concept of Mother s Day but the Quran teaches that children should give priority to loving their mother over their father 66 In Hindu tradition Mother s Day is called Mata Tirtha Aunshi or Mother Pilgrimage fortnight and is celebrated in countries with a Hindu population especially in Nepal where mothers are honored with special foods The holiday is observed on the new moon day in the month of Baisakh i e April May This celebration is based on the Hindu religion and it pre dates the creation of the US inspired celebration by at least a few centuries 67 In Buddhism the festival of Ullambana is derived from the story of Maudgalyayana and his mother 68 By country A G Albania In Albania as in a number of Balkan and Eastern European countries Mother s Day is celebrated on 8 March in conjunction with International Women s Day 69 Arab world Mother s Day in most Arab countries is celebrated on 21 March It was introduced in Egypt by journalist Mustafa Amin 70 and was first celebrated in 1956 71 The practice has since been adopted by other Arab countries citation needed Argentina In Argentina Mother s Day is celebrated on the third Sunday of October The holiday was originally celebrated on 11 October the old liturgical date for the celebration of the Maternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary but after the Second Vatican Council which moved the Virgin Mary festivity to 1 January the Mother s Day started to be celebrated the third Sunday of October because of popular tradition 54 Argentina is the only country in the world that celebrates Mother s Day on this date 72 Armenia In Armenia Mother s Day is celebrated on 8 March and on 7 April as Maternity and Beauty Day Australia In Australia Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday in May Australia celebrated Mother s Day for the first time in 1910 with special church services however it was not popularly observed until the 1920s 73 74 The tradition of giving gifts on Mother s Day in Australia started in 1924 Sydney woman Janet Heyden was inspired to collect charitable gifts for lonely old mothers in Newington hospital who had lost husbands and sons during WW1 75 Because it is autumn in Australia for Mother s Day and carnations are a spring flower white chrysanthemums are the traditional Mother s Day flower in Australia 76 Bangladesh There is no historical tradition of celebrating Mother s Day in Bangladesh Bangla ম আম ম দ বস Ma ammu dibosh and has become popular in the country due to western influences It is celebrated on the second Sunday of May and is not a public holiday Mother s Day was not very popular and in recent times it has been spread more widely by the Millennial and Generation Z communities across the country through social media Although many religious families do not celebrate it it is more widespread than ever before There is a popular phrase used by many parents including mothers which is Every day is Father s Mother s Day so you will love your parents every day Most people just wish or pray for their mother but many from big cities like Dhaka Chittagong Khulna Sylhet Barishal Narayangonj Bogura etc go to restaurants to celebrate many also cut cakes Many others cut cakes at home or order meals online Some children may give small gifts to their mothers Belarus Belarus celebrates Mother s Day on 14 October Like other ex Communist republics Belarus used to celebrate only International Women s Day on 8 March Mother s Day in Belarus was officially established by the Belarusian government and it was celebrated for the first time in 1996 53 The celebration of the Virgin Mary the holiday of Protection of the Holy Mother of God is celebrated on the same day 77 Bhutan Mother s Day in Bhutan is celebrated on 8 May It was introduced in Bhutan by the Tourism Council of Bhutan 78 Belgium In Belgium Mother s Day Moederdag or Moederkesdag in Dutch and Fete des Meres in French is celebrated on the second Sunday of May In the week before this holiday children make little presents at primary school which they give to their mothers in the early morning of Mother s Day Typically the father will buy croissants and other sweet breads and pastries and bring these to the mother while she is still in bed the beginning of a day of pampering for the mother There are also many people who celebrate Mother s Day on 15 August instead these are mostly people around Antwerp who consider that day Assumption the classical Mother s Day and the observance in May an invention for commercial reasons It was originally established on that day as the result of a campaign by Frans Van Kuyck a painter and Alderman from Antwerp 79 Bolivia In Bolivia Mother s Day is celebrated on 27 May El Dia de la Madre Boliviana was passed into law on 8 November 1927 during the presidency of Hernando Siles Reyes The date commemorates the Battle of La Coronilla which took place on 27 May 1812 during the Bolivian War of Independence in what is now the city of Cochabamba In this battle women fighting for the country s independence were slaughtered by the Spanish army It is not a public holiday but all schools hold activities and festivities throughout the day 33 Brazil In Brazil Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May The first Mother s Day in Brazil was promoted by Associacao Crista de Mocos de Porto Alegre Young Men s Christian Association of Porto Alegre on 12 May 1918 In 1932 then President Getulio Vargas made the second Sunday of May the official date for Mother s Day In 1947 Archbishop Jaime de Barros Camara Cardinal Archbishop of Rio de Janeiro decided that this holiday would also be included in the official calendar of the Catholic Church citation needed Mother s Day is not an official holiday see Public holidays in Brazil but it is widely observed and typically involves spending time with and giving gifts to one s mother Because of this it is considered one of the celebrations most related to consumerism in the country second only to Christmas Day as the most commercially lucrative holiday 80 Canada See also Other observances in Canada nbsp Mother s Day cookie cakeMother s Day in Canada is celebrated on the second Sunday in May it is not a public holiday or bank holiday and typically involves small celebrations and gift giving to one s mother grandmother or other important female figures in one s family 81 Celebratory practices are very similar to those of other western nations A Quebecois tradition is for Quebecois men to offer roses or other flowers to the women 82 China Mother s Day is becoming more popular in China Carnations are a very popular Mother s Day gift and the most sold flowers in relation to the day 83 In 1997 Mother s Day was set as the day to help poor mothers and to remind people of the poor mothers in rural areas such as China s western region 83 In the People s Daily the Chinese government s official newspaper an article explained that despite originating in the United States people in China accept the holiday without hesitation because it is in line with the country s traditional ethics respect for the elderly and filial piety towards parents 83 In recent years the Communist Party member Li Hanqiu began to advocate for the official adoption of Mother s Day in memory of Meng Mu the mother of Meng Zǐ He formed a non governmental organization called Chinese Mothers Festival Promotion Society with the support of 100 Confucian scholars and lecturers of ethics 84 85 Li and the Society want to replace the Western style gift of carnations with lilies which in ancient times were planted by Chinese mothers when children left home 85 Mother s Day remains an unofficial festival except in a small number of cities 86 Czech Republic In the Czech Republic Mother s Day is celebrated every second Sunday in May It started in former Czechoslovakia in 1923 47 The promoter of this celebration was Alice Masarykova 47 After World War II communists replaced Mother s Day with International Woman s Day celebrated on 8 March 47 The former Czechoslovakia celebrated Women s Day until the Velvet Revolution in 1989 47 After the split of the country in 1993 the Czech Republic started celebrating Mother s Day again 47 Egypt Mother s Day in Egypt is celebrated on 21 March the first day of spring in the northern hemisphere It was introduced in Egypt by journalist Mustafa Amin 70 in his book Smiling America 1943 The idea was overlooked at the time Later Amin heard the story of a widowed mother who devoted her whole life to raising her son until he became a doctor The son then married and left without showing any gratitude to his mother Hearing this Amin became motivated to promote Mother s Day The idea was first ridiculed by president Gamal Abdel Nasser but he eventually accepted it and Mother s Day was first celebrated on 21 March 1956 The practice has since been copied by other Arab countries 87 When Mustafa Amin was arrested and imprisoned there were attempts to change the name of the holiday from Mother s Day to Family Day as the government wished to prevent the occasion from reminding people of its founder These attempts were unsuccessful and celebrations continued to be held on that day classic songs celebrating mothers remain famous to this day citation needed Ethiopia Mother s Day is celebrated for three days in Ethiopia after the end of the rainy season It comes in mid fall where people enjoy a three day feast called Antrosht 88 For the feast ingredients will be brought by the children for a traditional hash recipe The ingredients are divided along genders with girls bringing spices vegetables cheese and butter while the boys bring a lamb or bull The mother hands out to the family the hash 89 A celebration takes place after the meal The mothers and daughters anoint themselves using butter on their faces and chests While honoring their family and heroes men sing songs 90 Estonia In Estonia Mother s Day emadepaev in Estonian is celebrated on the second Sunday of May It is recognized nationally but is not a public holiday 91 Finland In Finland Mother s Day aitienpaiva in Finnish is celebrated on the second Sunday of May It is recognized nationally and is a public holiday It is usually celebrated at homes where children or grandchildren bring Mother s day cards that they have drawn to their mothers and grandmothers Usually some food coffee and cakes are served for guests Grown up children visit their parents homes and bring traditionally Mother s day roses or other flowers accompanied with a Mother s day card The president of Finland honors with medals every year some mothers who have done something exceptional and positive during the year 92 France In France amidst alarm at the low birth rate there were attempts in 1896 and 1904 to create a national celebration honoring the mothers of large families 93 In 1906 ten mothers who had nine children each were given an award recognising High Maternal Merit Haut merite maternel 94 American World War I soldiers fighting in France popularized the US Mother s Day holiday created by Anna Jarvis They sent so much mail back to their country for Mother s Day that the Union Franco Americaine created a postal card for that purpose 93 In 1918 also inspired by Jarvis the town of Lyon wanted to celebrate a journee des Meres but instead decided to celebrate a Journee Nationale des Meres de familles nombreuses The holiday was more inspired by anti depopulation efforts than by the US holiday with medals awarded to the mothers of large families 93 The French government made the day official in 1920 as a day for mothers of large families 95 Since then the French government awards the Medaille de la Famille francaise to mothers of large families 96 In 1941 by an initiative of Philippe Petain the wartime Vichy government used the celebration in support of their policy to encourage larger families but all mothers were now honored even mothers with smaller families 95 In 1950 after the war the celebration was reinstated The law of 24 May 1950 required in Article 1 that the Republic pay official homage to French Mothers Article 2 stated it should be celebrated on the last Sunday in May as the Fete des Meres except when Pentecost fell on that day in which case it was moved to the first Sunday in June Article 3 stated that all expenditure shall be covered from the budget of the Ministry of Public Health and Population 97 During the 1950s the celebration lost all its patriotic and natalist ideologies and became heavily commercialized 93 In 1956 the celebration was given a budget and integrated into the new Code de l action Sociale et des familles In 2004 responsibility for the holiday was transferred to the Minister responsible for families citation needed Georgia Georgia celebrates Mother s Day on 3 March It was declared by the first President of Georgia Zviad Gamsakhurdia in order to replace the International Women Day and it was officially approved by the Supreme Council in 1991 Nowadays Georgia celebrates both Mother s Day on 3 March and International Women s Day on 8 March 36 Germany nbsp Mother s Day cake in GermanyIn the 1920s Germany had the lowest birthrate in Europe and the declining trend was continuing This was attributed to women s participation in the labor market At the same time influential groups in society politicians of left and right churchwomen and feminists believed that mothers should be honored but could not agree on how to do so However all groups strongly agreed on the promotion of the values of motherhood In 1923 this resulted in the unanimous adoption of Muttertag the Mother s Day holiday as imported from America 98 The head of the Association of German Florists cited the inner conflict of our Volk and the loosening of the family as his reason for introducing the holiday He expected that the holiday would unite the divided country In 1925 the Mother s Day Committee joined the task force for the recovery of the volk and the holiday stopped depending on commercial interests and began emphasizing the need to increase the population in Germany by promoting motherhood 99 The holiday was then seen as a means to encourage women to bear more children which nationalists saw as a way to rejuvenate the nation The holiday did not celebrate individual women but an idealized standard of motherhood The progressive forces resisted the implementation of the holiday because it was backed by so many conservatives and because they saw it as a way to eliminate the rights of working women Die Frau the newspaper of the Federation of German Women s Associations refused to recognize the holiday Many local authorities adopted their own interpretation of the holiday it would be a day to support economically larger families or single mother families The guidelines for the subsidies had eugenics criteria but there is no indication that social workers ever implemented them in practice and subsidies were given preferentially to families in economic need rather than to families with more children or healthier children 99 With the Nazi party in power during 1933 1945 the situation changed radically The promotion of Mother s Day increased in many European countries including the UK and France From the position of the German Nazi government the role of mothers was to give healthy children to the German nation The Nazi party s intention was to create a pure Aryan race according to nazi eugenics Among other Mother s Day ideas the government promoted the death of a mother s sons in battle as the highest embodiment of patriotic motherhood 99 100 The Nazis quickly declared Mother s Day an official holiday and put it under the control of the NSV National Socialist People s Welfare Association and the NSF National Socialist Women Organization This created conflicts with other organizations that resented Nazi control of the holiday including Catholic and Protestant churches and local women s organizations Local authorities resisted the guidelines from the Nazi government and continued assigning resources to families who were in economic need much to the dismay of the Nazi officials 99 In 1938 the government began issuing an award called Mother s Cross Mutterkreuz according to categories that depended on the number of children a mother had The medal was awarded on Mother s Day and also on other holidays due to a large number of recipients The Cross was an effort to encourage women to have more children and recipients were required to have at least four 99 100 By country H M Hungary In Hungary Mother s Day is celebrated on the first Sunday of May 101 It was first celebrated in 1925 102 by the Hungarian Red Cross Youth 103 India The modern Mother s Day has been assimilated into Indian culture 104 and is celebrated every year on the second Sunday of May 105 106 Indians do not celebrate the occasion as a religious event its celebration is mostly restricted to urban areas where the occasion has been largely commercialized 107 Indonesia Indonesian Mother s Day Indonesian Hari Ibu is celebrated nationally on 22 December The date was made an official holiday by President Sukarno under Presidential Decree No 316 1953 on the 25th anniversary of the 1928 Indonesian Women Congress The day originally sought to celebrate the spirit of Indonesian women and to improve the condition of the nation Today the meaning of Mother s Day has changed and it is celebrated by expressing love and gratitude to mothers People present gifts to mothers such as flowers and hold surprise parties and competitions which include cooking and kebaya wearing People also allow mothers a day off from domestic chores 108 The holiday is celebrated on the anniversary of the opening day of the first Indonesian Women Congress Kongres Perempuan Indonesia which was held from 22 to 25 December 1928 57 109 The Congress took place in a building called Dalem Jayadipuran which now serves as the office of the Center of History and Traditional Values Preservation Balai Pelestarian Sejarah dan Nilai Tradisional in Brigjen Katamso Street Yogyakarta The Congress was attended by 30 feminist organizations from 12 cities in Java and Sumatra In Indonesia feminist organizations have existed since 1912 inspired by Indonesian heroines of the 19th century e g Kartini Martha Christina Tiahahu Cut Nyak Meutia Maria Walanda Maramis Dewi Sartika Nyai Ahmad Dahlan Rasuna Said etc 57 The Congress intended to improve women s rights in education and marriage 110 Indonesia also celebrates the Kartini Day Hari Kartini on 21 April in memory of activist Raden Ajeng Kartini This is a celebration of the emancipation of women 109 The observance was instituted at the 1938 Indonesian Women Congress 110 During President Suharto s New Order 1965 1998 government propaganda used Mother s Day and Kartini Day to inculcate into women the idea that they should be docile and stay at home 110 Iran nbsp Commemorative gold medal issued in the Pahlavi era on the occasion of Mother s Day dated 1975 Obv Bust of Empress Farah Pahlavi Rev Mother and children standing around a seated Farah Pahlavi holding open bookIn Iran Mother s Day is celebrated on 20 Jumada al thani This is the sixth month in the Islamic calendar a lunar calendar and every year the holiday falls on a different day of the Gregorian calendar This is the birthday anniversary of Fatimah the Islamic prophet Muhammad s only daughter according to Shia Islam 61 111 On this day banners reading Ya Fatemeah O Fatemeh are displayed on government buildings private buildings public streets and car windows 61 Mother s Day was originally observed on 16 December but the date was changed after the Iranian Revolution in 1979 The celebration is both Women s Day replacing International Women s Day and Mother s Day 61 112 In 1960 the Institute for Women Protection adopted the Western holiday and established it on 25 Azar 16 December the date the Institute was founded The Institute s action had the support of Empress Farah Pahlavi the wife of the last Shah of Persia who promoted the construction of maternity clinics in remote parts of the country to commemorate the day 113 Pahlavi regime used the holiday to promote gender ideologies of the regime 61 The Shah s government honored and gave awards to women who represented the idealized view of the regime including mothers who had many healthy children 113 According to Shahla Haeri the Islamic Republic government has used the holiday to control and channel women s movements and to promote role models for the traditional concept of family 114 Fatimah is seen by these critics as the chosen model of a woman completely dedicated to certain traditionally sanctioned feminine roles 115 However supporters of the choice contend that there is much more to her life story than simply such traditional roles 116 Ireland In Ireland Mother s Day is celebrated on the fourth Sunday of Lent as in the United Kingdom and has the same roots in Mothering Sunday The practice died out in Ireland around the late 18th century but was revived around the 1950s due to Americanisation 117 118 119 Israel The Jewish population of Israel used to celebrate Mother s Day on Shevat 30 of the Jewish calendar which falls between 30 January and 1 March The celebration was set as the same date that Henrietta Szold died 13 February 1945 Henrietta had no biological children but her organization Youth Aliyah rescued many Jewish children from Nazi Germany and provided for them She also championed children s rights Szold is considered the mother of all those children and that is why her annual remembrance day יום השנה was set as Mother s Day יו ם ה א ם yom ha em The holiday has evolved over time becoming a celebration of mutual love inside the family called Family Day יו ם ה מ ש פ ח ה yom hamishpacha This holiday is mainly celebrated in preschools with an activity to which parents are invited Mother s Day is mainly celebrated by children at kindergartens There are no longer mutual gifts among members of the family and there is no longer any commercialization of the celebration It is not an official holiday 58 Italy Mother s Day in Italy was celebrated for the first time on 24 December 1933 as the Day of the mother and the child Giornata della madre e del fanciullo It was instituted by the Opera nazionale maternita e infanzia in order to publicly reward the most prolific Italian women every year 120 After World War II Mother s Day was first celebrated on 12 May 1957 in Assisi at the initiative of Reverend Otello Migliosi the parish priest of the Tordibetto church 121 This celebration was so popular that in the following year Mother s Day was adopted throughout Italy On 18 December 1958 a proposal was presented to the Italian Senate to make the holiday official 122 Japan In Japan Mother s Day 母の日 Haha no Hi was initially commemorated during the Shōwa period as the birthday of Empress Kōjun mother of Emperor Akihito on 6 March This was established in 1931 when the Imperial Women s Union was organized In 1937 the first meeting of Praise Mothers was held on 8 May and in 1949 Japanese society adopted the second Sunday of May as the official date for Mother s Day in Japan Today people typically give their mothers gifts of flowers such as red carnations 123 and roses Giving carnations on Mother s Day is the most common in Japan citation needed Kyrgyzstan In Kyrgyzstan Mother s Day is celebrated on 19 May every year The holiday was first celebrated in 2012 124 Mothers are also honored on International Women s Day 125 Latvia Mother s Day in Latvia was celebrated for the first time in 1922 Since 1934 Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May 126 After the end of the Soviet occupation of Baltic states celebration was resumed in 1992 127 Mothers are also honored on International Women s Day 128 Lithuania Mother s Day in Lithuania was celebrated for the first time in 1928 In Lithuania Mother s Day is celebrated on the first Sunday of May Malawi In Malawi Mother s Day is a public holiday The day is observed on 15 October or the following workday It is celebrated on the UN s World Rural Women s Day Maldives In the Maldives Mother s Day is celebrated on 13 May The day is celebrated in different ways Children give gifts and spend time with their mothers Daughters give their mothers cards and handmade gifts and sons give their mothers gifts and flowers Maldivians love to celebrate Mother s day and they have it specially written on their calendar citation needed Malta The first mention of Mother s Day in Malta occurred during the Radio Children s Programmes run by Frans H Said in May 1961 Within a few years Mother s Day became one of the most popular dates in the Maltese calendar In Malta this day is commemorated on the second Sunday in May Mothers are invariably given gifts and invited for lunch usually at a good quality restaurant citation needed Mexico See also Public holidays in Mexico Festivities In Mexico the government of Alvaro Obregon imported the Mother s Day holiday from the US in 1922 and the newspaper Excelsior held a massive promotional campaign for the holiday that year 129 The conservative government tried to use the holiday to promote a more conservative role for mothers in families but that perspective was criticized by the socialists as promoting an unrealistic image of a woman who was not good for much more than breeding 129 In the mid 1930s the leftist government of Lazaro Cardenas promoted the holiday as a patriotic festival The Cardenas government tried to use the holiday as a vehicle for various efforts to stress the importance of families as the basis for national development to benefit from the loyalty that Mexicans felt towards their mothers to introduce new morals to Mexican women and to reduce the influence that the church and the Catholic right exerted over women 130 The government sponsored the holiday in the schools 130 However ignoring the strict guidelines from the government theatre plays were filled with religious icons and themes Consequently the national celebrations became religious fiestas despite the efforts of the government 130 Soledad Orozco Garcia the wife of President Manuel Avila Camacho promoted the holiday during the 1940s resulting in an important state sponsored celebration 131 The 1942 celebration lasted a full week and included an announcement that all women could reclaim their pawned sewing machines from the Monte de Piedad at no cost 131 Due to Orozco s promotion the Catholic National Synarchist Union UNS took heed of the holiday around 1941 132 Shop owner members of the Party of the Mexican Revolution now the Institutional Revolutionary Party observed a custom allowing women from humble classes to pick a free Mother s Day gift from a shop to bring home to their families The Synarchists worried that this promoted both materialism and the idleness of lower classes and in turn reinforced the systemic social problems of the country 133 Currently this holiday practice is viewed as very conservative but the 1940s UNS saw Mother s Day as part of the larger debate on the modernization that was happening at the time 134 This economic modernization was inspired by US models and was sponsored by the state The fact that the holiday was originally imported from the US was seen as evidence of an attempt at imposing capitalism and materialism in Mexican society 134 The UNS and the clergy of the city of Leon interpreted the government s actions as an effort to secularize the holiday and to promote a more active role for women in society They concluded that the government s long term goal was to cause women to abandon their traditional roles at home in order to spiritually weaken men 134 They also saw the holiday as an attempt to secularize the cult to the Virgin Mary inside a larger effort to dechristianize several holidays The government sought to counter these claims by organizing widespread masses and asking religious women to assist with the state sponsored events in order to depaganize them 135 The clergy preferred to promote 2 July celebration of the Santisima Virgen de la Luz the patron of Leon Guanajuato in replacement of Mother s Day 132 In 1942 at the same time as Soledad s greatest celebration of Mother s Day the clergy organized the 210th celebration of the Virgin Mary with a large parade in Leon 135 There is a consensus among scholars that the Mexican government abandoned its revolutionary initiatives during the 1940s including its efforts to influence Mother s Day 132 Today the Dia de las Madres is an unofficial holiday in Mexico held each year on 10 May 136 the day on which it was first celebrated in Mexico 137 In Mexico to show affection and appreciation to the mother it is traditional to start the celebration with the famous song Las Mananitas either a cappella with the help of a mariachi or a contracted trio Families usually gather to celebrate trying to spend as much time as possible with mothers to honor them They bring some dishes and eat together or visit a restaurant 138 Myanmar In Myanmar Mothers Day the plural form of mother is used as an official title 139 is celebrated on the full moon day of Pyatho the tenth month of the Myanmar calendar which usually falls in January 140 At the proposal and initiative of U Thukha who put a lot of effort into founding this day it was first celebrated in Mandalay on the full moon day of Pyatho in 1995 but it was officially added to the Myanmar calendar in 1997 two years after its first celebration 141 People who are away from home send postcards or phone their mothers to express love and gratitude and those who live with their mother give her personal service like bathing or shampooing and usually take her to pagodas 142 By country N S Nepal In Nepal there is a festival equivalent to Mother s Day called Mata Tirtha Aunsi Mother Pilgrimage New Moon or Mata Tirtha Puja Mother Pilgrimage Worship It is celebrated according to the lunar calendar It falls on the last day of the dark fortnight in the month of Baishakh which falls in April May in 2015 it will occur on 18 April The dark fortnight lasts for 15 days from the full moon to the new moon This festival is observed to commemorate and honor mothers and it is celebrated by giving gifts to mothers and remembering mothers who are no more citation needed To honor mothers who have died it is the tradition to go on a pilgrimage to the Mata Tirtha ponds located 6 km to the southwest of downtown Kathmandu The nearby Mata Tirtha village is named after these ponds Previously the tradition was observed primarily by the Newar community and other people living in the Kathmandu Valley Now this festival is widely celebrated across the country citation needed Many tragic folklore legends have been created suggesting different reasons why this pond became a pilgrimage site The most popular version says that in ancient times the mother of a shepherd died and he made offerings to a nearby pond There he saw the face of his mother in the water with her hand taking the offerings Since then many people have visited the pond hoping to see their deceased mother s face Pilgrims believe that they will bring peace to their mothers souls by visiting the sacred place There are two ponds The larger one is for ritual bathing The smaller one is used to look upon mother s face and is fenced by iron bars to prevent people from bathing in it citation needed Traditionally in the Kathmandu valley the South Western corner is reserved for women and women related rituals and the North Eastern is for men and men related rituals The worship place for Mata Tirtha Aunsi is located in Mata Tirtha in the South Western half of the valley while the worship place for Gokarna Aunsi the equivalent celebration for deceased fathers is located in Gokarna Nepal in the North Eastern half This division is reflected in many aspects of the life in Kathmandu valley 143 Mother s Day is known as Aama ko Mukh Herne Din in Nepali which literally means day to see mother s face In Nepal Bhasa the festival is known as Mam ya Khwa Swayegu which can be translated as to look upon mother s face citation needed Netherlands In the Netherlands Mother s Day was introduced as early as 1910 by the Dutch branch of the Salvation Army 144 The Royal Dutch Society for Horticulture and Botany a group protecting the interest of Dutch florists worked to promote the holiday they hoped to emulate the commercial success achieved by American florists 145 They were imitating the campaign already underway by florists in Germany and Austria but they were aware that the traditions had originated in the US 145 Florists launched a major promotional effort in 1925 This included the publication of a book of articles written by famous intellectuals radio broadcasts newspapers ads and the collaboration of priests and teachers who wanted to promote the celebration for their own reasons 145 In 1931 the second Sunday of May was adopted as the official celebration date In the mid 1930s the slogan Moederdag Bloemendag Mother s Day Flowers Day was coined and the phrase was popular for many years 146 In the 1930s and 1940s Mother s Day cakes were given as gifts in hospitals and to the Dutch Queen who is known as the mother of the country 146 Other trade groups tried to cash in on the holiday and to give new meaning to the holiday in order to promote their own wares as gifts 146 Roman Catholic priests complained that the holiday interfered with the honoring of the Virgin Mary the divine mother which took place during the whole month of May In 1926 Mother s Day was celebrated on 7 July in order to address these complaints 147 Catholic organizations and priests tried to Christianize the holiday but those attempts were rendered futile around the 1960s when the church lost influence and the holiday was completely secularized 147 In later years the initial resistance disappeared and even leftist newspapers stopped their criticism and endorsed Mother s Day 148 In the 1980s the American origin of the holiday was still not widely known so feminist groups who opposed the perpetuation of gender roles sometimes claimed that Mother s Day was invented by Nazis and celebrated on the birthday of Klara Hitler Hitler s mother 149 New Zealand In New Zealand Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday in May Mother s Day is not a public holiday The New Zealand tradition is to send or give cards and gifts and at home youngsters to attempt to serve mothers a variation on breakfast in bed 150 Nicaragua In Nicaragua the Dia de la Madre has been celebrated on 30 May since the early 1940s The date was chosen by President Anastasio Somoza Garcia because it was the birthday of Casimira Sacasa his wife s mother 52 North Korea Mother s Day is celebrated on 16 November as a public holiday in North Korea The date takes its significance from the First National Meeting of Mothers held in 1961 for which Kim Il Sung the leader of the country published a work called The Duty of Mothers in the Education of Children The date was designated as Mother s Day in May 2012 by the Presidium of the Supreme People s Assembly but only became a public holiday and appeared on the North Korean calendar starting in 2015 55 Norway Mother s Day was first celebrated on 9 February 1919 and was initially organized by religious institutions Later it has become a family day and the mother is often treated to breakfast in bed flowers and cake 151 better source needed It has gradually become a major commercial event with special pastries flowers and other presents offered by retailers Day cares and primary schools often encourage children to make cards and other gifts citation needed Pakistan In Pakistan Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May Media channels celebrate with special shows Individuals honor their mothers by giving gifts and commemorative articles Individuals who have lost their mothers pray and pay their respects to their loved ones lost Schools hold special programs in order to acknowledge the efforts of their mothers 152 Panama In Panama Mother s Day is celebrated on 8 December the same day as the Feast of the Immaculate Conception This date was suggested in 1930 by the wife of Panama s President Florencio Harmodio Arosemena 8 December was adopted as Mother s Day under Law 69 which was passed the same year 56 According to another account in 1924 the Rotary Club of Panama asked that Mother s Day be celebrated on 11 May Politician Anibal D Rios changed the proposal so that the celebration would be held on 8 December He then established Mother s Day as a national holiday on that date 153 Paraguay In Paraguay Mother s Day is celebrated on 15 May the same day as the Dia de la Patria which celebrates the independence of Paraguay 50 This date was chosen to honor the role played by Juana Maria de Lara in the events of 14 May 1811 that led to Paraguay s independence 154 In 2008 the Paraguayan Minister of Culture Bruno Barrios lamented this coincidence because in Paraguay Mother s Day is much more popular than independence day and the independence celebration goes unnoticed As a result Barrios asked that the celebration be moved to the end of the month 155 A group of young people attempted to gather 20 000 signatures to ask the Parliament to move Mother s Day 155 In 2008 the Comision de festejos Celebration Committee of the city of Asuncion asked that Mother s Day be moved to the second Sunday of May 156 Philippines In the Philippines Mother s Day is officially celebrated on the second Sunday of May but it is not a public holiday 157 Although not a traditional Filipino holiday the occasion owes its popularity to American Colonial Period influence According to a 2008 article by the Philippine News Agency in 1921 the Ilocos Norte Federation of Women s Clubs asked to declare the first Monday of December as Mother s Day to honor these fabulous women who brought forth God s children into this world In response Governor General Charles Yeater issued Circular No 33 declaring the celebration In 1937 President Manuel L Quezon issued Presidential Proclamation No 213 changing the name of the occasion from Mother s Day to Parent s Day to address the complaints that there wasn t a Father s Day In 1980 President Ferdinand Marcos issued Presidential Proclamation No 2037 proclaiming the date as both Mother s Day and Father s Day In 1988 President Corazon Aquino issued Presidential Proclamation No 266 changing Mother s Day to the second Sunday of May and Father s Day to the third Sunday of June discontinuing the traditional date 158 In 1998 President Joseph Estrada returned both celebrations to the first Monday of December 157 Portugal In Portugal the Dia da Mae Mother s Day is an unofficial holiday held each year on the first Sunday of May sometimes coinciding with Labour Day In the weeks leading up to this Sunday school children spend a few hours a day preparing a gift for their mothers aided by their school teachers In general mothers receive gifts from their family members and this day is meant to be celebrated with the whole family It used to be celebrated on 8 December the same date as the Conception of the Virgin celebration citation needed Romania In Romania Mother s Day has been celebrated on the first Sunday of May since 2010 Law 319 2009 made both Mother s Day and Father s Day official holidays in Romania The measure was passed thanks to campaign efforts from the Alliance Fighting Discrimination Against Fathers TATA 43 Previously Mother s Day was celebrated on 8 March as part of International Women s Day a tradition dating back to when Romania was part of the Eastern bloc Today Mother s Day and International Women s Day are two separate holidays with International Women s Day being held on its original date of 8 March citation needed Russia Main article International Women s Day Traditionally Russia had celebrated International Women s Day and Mother s Day on 8 March an inheritance from the Soviet Union and a public holiday 159 Women s Day was first celebrated on the last Sunday in February in 1913 in Russia 160 In 1917 demonstrations marking International Women s Day in Saint Petersburg on the last Sunday in February which fell on 8 March on the Gregorian calendar initiated the February Revolution Following the October Revolution later that year the Bolshevik Alexandra Kollontai persuaded Vladimir Lenin to make it an official holiday in the Soviet Union and it was established but was a working day until 1965 citation needed On 8 May 1965 by the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet International Women s Day was declared a non working day in the Soviet Union in commemoration of the outstanding merits of Soviet women in communistic construction in the defense of their Fatherland during the Great Patriotic War in their heroism and selflessness at the front and in the rear and also marking the great contribution of women to strengthening friendship between peoples and the struggle for peace But still women s day must be celebrated as are other holidays 161 Samoa In Samoa Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday in May and as a recognised national holiday on the Monday following Singapore In Singapore Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May It is not recognized as a holiday by the government Slovakia Czechoslovakia celebrated only Women s Day until the Velvet Revolution in 1989 After the country split in 1993 Slovakia started celebrating both Women s Day and Mother s Day The politicization of Women s Day has affected the official status of Mother s Day Center right parties want Mother s Day to replace Women s Day and social democrats want to make Women s Day an official holiday Currently both days are festive but they are not state holidays In the Slovak Republic Mother s Day is celebrated every second Sunday in May 47 South Africa In South Africa Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May It is not recognized as a holiday by the government The tradition is to give cards and gifts and to serve mothers breakfast in bed or to go out to lunch together as a family South Sudan In South Sudan Mother s Day is celebrated on the first Monday in July The president Salva Kiir Mayardit proclaimed Mother s Day as the first Monday in July after handing over from Sudan Children in South Sudan are presenting mothers with gifts and flowers The first Mother s Day was held in that country on 2 July 2012 citation needed Spain In Spain Mother s Day or Dia de la Madre is celebrated on the first Sunday of May The weeks leading up to this Sunday school children spend a few hours a day preparing a gift for their mothers aided by their school teachers In general mothers receive gifts from their family members amp this day is meant to be celebrated with the whole family It is also said to be celebrated in May as May is the month dedicated to the Virgin Mary mother of Jesus according to Catholicism The idea of a month dedicated specifically to Mary can be traced back to baroque times Although it wasn t always held during May Mary Month included thirty daily spiritual exercises honoring Mary 162 In 1925 the Valencian poet Julio Menendez Garcia published a Hymn to Mother in a pamphlet in which he proposed the celebration of Mother s Day in all Spanish speaking countries 163 The official declaration was never produced but at that time the initiative was adopted at a local level on different dates thus for example in Madrid Mother s Day was celebrated on 4 October 1926 164 In 1939 the Youth Front of FET y de las JONS party promoted the celebration of Mother s Day coinciding with the feast of the Immaculate Conception on 8 December In the early 1960s on the initiative of a chain of department stores Galerias Preciados which copied the custom established in Cuba Mother s Day was also celebrated on the first Sunday of May El Corte Ingles the great competitor of Galerias Preciados celebrated the holiday in December The two dates May and December coexisted until 1965 when the ecclesiastical authorities chose to celebrate the festival in May within the month consecrated to the Virgin to recover the authentic character of the Day of the Immaculate Conception 165 Sri Lanka In Sri Lanka Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May Sweden In Sweden Mother s Day was first celebrated in 1919 by an initiative of the author Cecilia Baath Holmberg It took several decades for the day to be widely recognized Swedes born in the early nineteen hundreds typically did not celebrate the day because of the common belief that the holiday was invented strictly for commercial purposes This was in contrast to Father s Day which has been widely celebrated in Sweden since the late 1970s Mother s Day in Sweden is celebrated on the last Sunday in May A later date was chosen to allow everyone to go outside and pick flowers citation needed Switzerland In Switzerland the regle de Pentecote law allows Mother s Day to be celebrated a week late if the holiday falls on the same day as Pentecost In 2008 merchants declined to move the date 166 By country T Z Taiwan In Taiwan Mother s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of the month of May coinciding with Buddha s birthday and the traditional ceremony of washing the Buddha In 1999 the Taiwanese government established the second Sunday of May as Buddha s birthday so they would be celebrated in the same day 167 168 Since 2006 169 the Tzu Chi the largest charity organization in Taiwan celebrates the Tzu Chi Day Mother s Day and Buddha s birthday all together as part of a unified celebration and religious observance 170 171 172 Thailand Mother s day in Thailand is celebrated on the birthday of the Queen Mother of Thailand Sirikit 12 August 173 174 The holiday was first celebrated around the 1980s as part of the campaign by the Prime Minister of Thailand Prem Tinsulanonda to promote Thailand s Royal family 175 Father s Day is celebrated on the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej s birthday 175 Ukraine Ukraine celebrates Mother s Day Ukrainian Den Materi on the second Sunday of May In Ukraine Mother s Day officially became a holiday in 1999 176 and has been celebrated since 2000 Ukrainian society also celebrates International Women s Day a holiday adopted under the Soviet Union that remained a tradition in Ukraine after its collapse citation needed United Kingdom nbsp Balloons outside in the week before Mother s Day 2008The United Kingdom celebrates Mother s Day on the Fourth Sunday in Lent 19 March 2023 177 In the United Kingdom the holiday has its roots in the religious Mothering Sunday celebration and was originally unrelated to the international Mother s Day holiday 31 Most historians believe that Mothering Sunday evolved from a medieval practice of visiting one s mother church annually on Laetare Sunday 178 United States Main article Mother s Day United States nbsp Prince Harry Michelle Obama and Jill Biden helping children create Mother s Day cards at the White House 9 May 2013 nbsp Handmade Mother s Day giftsThe United States celebrates Mother s Day on the second Sunday in May In 1872 Julia Ward Howe called for women to join in support of disarmament and asked for 2 June 1872 to be established as a Mother s Day for Peace Her 1870 Appeal to womanhood throughout the world is sometimes referred to as Mother s Day Proclamation But Howe s day was not for honouring mothers but for organizing pacifist mothers against war In the 1880s and 1890s there were several further attempts to establish an American Mother s Day but these did not succeed beyond the local level 179 In the United States Mother s Day remains one of the biggest days for sales of flowers greeting cards and the like Mother s Day is also the biggest holiday for long distance telephone calls 180 Moreover churchgoing is also popular on Mother s Day yielding the highest church attendance after Christmas Eve and Easter Many worshippers celebrate the day with carnations coloured if the mother is living and white if she is dead 13 181 Mother s Day continues to be one of the most commercially successful U S occasions 182 It is possible that the holiday would have withered over time without the support and continuous promotion of the florist industries and other commercial industries Other Protestant holidays from the same time such as Children s Day and Temperance Sunday do not have the same level of popularity 183 See also nbsp Holidays portalInternational Mother s Day Shrine International Women s Day Father s Day List of films set around Mother s Day May crowning Why Mom Deserves a Diamond contestNotesFootnotes Citations Enstam Elizabeth York The Dallas equal suffrage association political style and popular culture grassroots strategies of the Woman Suffrage Movement 1913 1919 Journal of Southern History 68 4 2002 817 Student Resources in Context Web 14 November 2014 References a b c d O Reilly Andrea 6 April 2010 Encyclopedia of Motherhood Sage Publications CA p 602 ISBN 978 1 4522 6629 9 She organized the first official Mother s Day service at Andrews Methodist Church in Grafton West Virginia on the morning of May 10 1908 That same afternoon 15 000 people attended a Mother s Day service at the Wanamaker Store Auditorium in Philadelphia which she also organized Jarvis chose the second Sunday in May for Mother s Day to mark the anniversary of her mother s death and selected her mother s favorite flower the white carnation as the day s official emblem L James Grold April 1968 Mother s Day American Journal of Psychiatry 124 10 1456 1458 doi 10 1176 ajp 124 10 1456 PMID 5643668 Mother s Day conceived by Anna Jarvis to honor unselfish mothers Although there is no direct lineal descent to our modern Mother s Day custom secular and religious motherhood have existed for thousands of years before 10 May 1908 the first church St Andrew s in Grafton West Virginia responded to her request for a Sunday service honoring mothers Cybele Tuleja Tad 1999 Curious Customs The Stories Behind 296 Popular American Rituals Galahad Books p 167 ISBN 978 1578660704 Although attempts have been made to link Mother s Day to ancient cults of the mother goddess especially the worship of Cybele the association is more conceptual than historic Mother s Day is a modern American invention Robert J Myers Hallmark Cards 1972 Celebrations the complete book of American holidays Doubleday p 143 ISBN 9780385076777 Our observance of Mother s Day is little more than half a century old this was written in 1972 yet the nature of the holiday makes it seem as if it had its roots in prehistoric times Many antiquarians holiday enthusiasts and students of folklore have claimed to find the source of Mother s Day in the ancient spring festivals dedicated to the mother goddess particularly the worship of Cybele Helsloot 2007 p 208 The American origin of the Day however was duly acknowledged The idea is imported America led the way Mothering Sunday BBC 5 July 2011 retrieved 8 May 2023 Mother s Day When is it celebrated and where did it come from BBC 19 March 2023 retrieved 8 May 2023 Mothering Sunday what are its origins in the Church Church of England 26 March 2019 retrieved 8 May 2023 a b Mother s Day 2016 Which countries celebrate it on 8 May and why The Independent 8 May 2016 Mother s Day 2017 The Daily Telegraph Trammell Kendall Mother s Day founder later came to regret it CNN Retrieved 13 May 2018 a b Dunning Andrew 26 March 2017 The medieval origins of Mothering Sunday Medieval manuscripts blog The British Library a b Kaag John Cleary Skye C 10 May 2018 Nietzsche Wishes You an Ambivalent Mother s Day The Paris Review Retrieved 13 May 2018 Matthew 8 May 2015 History of Mother s Day as a Day of Peace Julia Ward Howe The Peace Alliance Retrieved 10 May 2020 Engaging Families U S Department of Education www2 ed gov 14 December 2017 Panati Charles 2016 Panati s Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things Book Sales p 59 ISBN 978 0785834373 Antolini Katharine Lane 2010 Jarvis Anna Encyclopedia of Motherhood Sage p 602 ISBN 978 1412968461 Connie Park Rice Marie Tedesco 2015 Women of the Mountain South Identity Work and Activism Ohio University Press pp 29 ISBN 978 0 8214 4522 8 a b c Lois M Collins 6 May 2014 Mother s Day 100 year history a colorful tale of love anger and civic unrest Deseret News Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 7 May 2014 a b Hallmark celebrates 100th year of Mother s Day started by a woman who grew to despise it kansas com Archived from the original on 5 July 2014 Retrieved 7 May 2014 Diller Harriett 1990 Celebrations That Matter A Year Round Guide to Making Holidays Meaningful Augsburg p 35 ISBN 978 0 8066 2498 3 In England Mothering Sunday is a day to honor both your mother church and your own mother In the past young people working away from home visited their mothers and the churches where they were baptized on Mothering Sunday Pearson Sharon Ely Szoke Robyn 2009 The Prayer Book Guide to Christian Education Third Edition Church Publishing p 49 ISBN 978 0 8192 2337 1 Mothering Sunday In England children away from home at school or work were permitted to go home to visit their mothers and or to visit their cathedral or mother church on this fourth Sunday of Lent Today many cathedrals and mother churches invite all who had been baptized there to return home to worship a b Smith C Penswick 1921 The Revival of Mothering Sunday London SPCK Smith Constance Penswick 1926 A short history of Mothering Sunday mid Lent 3 ed Nottingham a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Moyse Cordelia Smith Constance Adelaide pseud C Penswick Smith Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 103415 Subscription or UK public library membership required Compare footnote 51 in LaRossa Ralph 1997 The Modernization of Fatherhood A Social and Political History University of Chicago Press p 272 ISBN 978 0226469041 Retrieved 28 April 2016 Technically at least Mother s Day was owned by Jarvis She managed not only to incorporate the Mother s Day International Association but also to register Second Sunday in May Mother s Day Anna Jarvis Founder as the organization s trademark Louisa Taylor Canwest News Service 11 May 2008 Mother s Day creator likely spinning in her grave The Vancouver Sun Canada Archived from the original on 14 May 2008 Retrieved 7 July 2008 House Vote No 274 7 May 2008 H Res 1113 Celebrating the role of mothers in the United States and supporting the goals and ideals of Mother s Day Vote On Passage House Vote No 275 7 May 2008 Table Motion to Reconsider H RES 1113 Celebrating the role of mothers in the United States and supporting the goals and ideals of Mother s Day Presidential proclamations from The American Presidency Project 71 Proclamation 2083 Mother s Day Proclamation Franklin D Roosevelt 3 May 1934 Proclamation 3535 Mother s Day 1963 John F Kennedy 26 April 1963 Proclamation 3583 Mother s Day 1964 Lyndon B Johnson 23 April 1964 Proclamation 4437 Mother s Day 1976 Gerald Ford 5 May 1976 Proclamation 5801 Mother s Day 1988 Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Ronald Reagan 26 April 1988 Proclamation 6133 Mother s Day 1990 George Bush 10 May 1990 Proclamation 6559 Mother s Day 1993 Bill Clinton 7 May 1993 Proclamation 8253 Mother s Day 2008 George W Bush 8 May 2008 a b c Mothering Sunday BBC retrieved 4 March 2010 Ebaugh Helen Rose Chafetz Janet Saltzman 2000 Religion amp the New Immigrants Continuities amp Adaptations in Immigrant Congregations AltaMira Press p 357 ISBN 0742503909 Retrieved 9 July 2019 a b c Sources for Bolivia 27 de mayo madres que inspiran valentia Los Tiempos in Spanish 27 May 2009 Archived from the original on 11 June 2009 El Dia de la Madre se nutre con la Virgen La Razon La Paz in Spanish 27 May 2006 archived from the original on 5 November 2008 Robert A Saunders Vlad Strukov 2010 Historical Dictionary of the Russian Federation Historical Dictionaries of Europe Historical dictionaries of French history vol 78 illustrated ed Scarecrow Press p 246 ISBN 978 0810854758 About International Women s Day International Women s Day a b Bidzina Ivanishvili Congratulates Mothers on Mother s Day News Agency InterPressNews IPN 3 March 2013 Archived from the original on 22 September 2020 a b Ngo Dong 25 June 2009 Latest U S export to Vietnam Mother s Day CNET Retrieved 7 May 2016 a b Allen Emily Macphail Cameron 6 March 2016 Mother s Day 2016 Everything you need to know about Mothering Sunday 2016 The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 6 March 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l Sawwan Ameenah A 23 March 2016 A Special Note to Syrian Mothers on Mother s Day News Deeply Archived from the original on 3 June 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2016 John MacIntyre 2005 The amazing mom book real facts tender tales and thoughts from the heart about the most important person on Earth Sourcebooks p 7 ISBN 978 1402203558 Lebanon in the first day of Spring a b Lamis Story International Women s Day 2015 Medical Aid for Palestinians 21 March 2015 Archived from the original on 17 September 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2016 El Hamid Ashraf Abd 22 March 2018 Why the Arab world celebrates Mother s Day on March 21 english alarabiya net Retrieved 9 July 2019 a b Romania Celebrates Fathers Day On Second Sunday Of May Mediafax Bucharest 4 May 2010 Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Dias Nacionales en Chile 8 March 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2013 Xinhua from China Daily 16 May 2006 It s Mother s Day SCUEC online Archived from the original on 5 March 2009 Principales efemerides Mes Mayo Union de Periodistas de Cuba Archived from the original on 9 June 2008 Retrieved 7 June 2008 a b c d e f g h Mixed emotions on Women s Day in Eastern Europe euractiv com 9 March 2010 archived from the original on 11 March 2010 Calendario Civico Escolar Direccion Regional de Educacion de Lima Metropolitana Archived from the original on 9 September 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2008 Kabita Maharana 9 May 2014 Mother s Day 2014 to be Celebrated in US and other Countries Best Quotes to Say Thank You to Mum International Business Times Retrieved 11 May 2014 a b Ministerio de Educacion y Cultura de Paraguay Dia de la Madre in Spanish archived from the original on 7 July 2012 retrieved 10 March 2010 Sources Haiti Main Holidays discoverhaiti com Archived from the original on 14 October 2008 Retrieved 8 July 2008 6310 Fetes et Jours Feries en Haiti in French Archived from the original on 1 April 2008 Retrieved 8 July 2008 a b Lic Pedro Rafael Diaz Figueroa 27 May 1999 El origen del Dia de la Madre El Nuevo Diario archived from the original on 14 May 2010 a b The Council of Ministers of the Republic of Belarus 14 October 2009 Support for mothers remains the key priority of Belarus social policy archived from the original on 30 March 2014 retrieved 7 June 2013 a b Padre Fabian Castro 3 October 2010 El dia de la madre en el mundo y en la Argentina in Spanish padrefabian com ar Retrieved 13 May 2013 La cuestion tiene que ver con el calendario liturgico que la Iglesia Catolica utilizaba antes de la reforma producto del Concilio Vaticano II Alli el 11 de octubre era la festividad de la Maternidad de la Virgen Maria Actualmente se celebra el 1 de enero Con este motivo era costumbre argentina pasar la celebracion liturgica al domingo anterior o siguiente al 11 Con el lento correr de los anos la tradicion popular fue fijando como el tercer domingo de octubre la celebracion de la Madre y las madres a b Lee Sang Yong 16 December 2014 North Korea s Official 2015 Calendar Revealed Daily NK Retrieved 13 January 2017 a b editorial 8 December 2001 Bendita Madre Critica in Spanish archived from the original on 27 September 2011 a b c seenthing 21 December 2010 Sejarah Perayaan Nasional Hari Ibu 22 Desembe archived from the original on 22 December 2015 retrieved 8 May 2011 a b Sources for Israel http www ynet co il articles 0 7340 L 4801172 00 html Zhai Yun Tan 7 May 2016 Celebrating Mother s Day Make Sure You Have The Date Right NPR Retrieved 7 May 2016 Mata Tirtha Aunsi today Republica Kathmandu Nepal Republic Media 6 May 2016 Archived from the original on 7 May 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2016 a b c d e Wendy S DeBano 2009 Singing against Silence Celebrating Women and Music and the Fourth Jasmine Festival in Laudan Nooshin ed Music and the Play of Power in the Middle East North Africa and Central Asia Soas Musicology Series illustrated ed Ashgate Publishing p 234 footnote 18 ISBN 978 0754634577 In 2002 Fatemeh s birthday celebration observed according to the hejri calendar fell on Thursday 29 August 20 Jamadi 1423 Fatemeh s birth date is also currently used to mark Mother s Day in Iran ritually recollecting emphasising and reinscribing her role as a loyal mother wife and daughter Prior to the revolution Mother s Day was used to promote the gender ideologies of the Pahlavi regime Cordelia Candelaria Peter J Garcia 2004 Encyclopedia of Latino popular culture illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group p 375 ISBN 978 0313332104 The Lutheran Standard Volume 27 Augsburg Publishing House 1987 p 23 Kennedy Jon Schroedel Jenny Schroedel John 2011 Jesus and Mary East Bridgewater MA Adams Media p 397 ISBN 978 1572157491 permanent dead link Orthodox Tradition and Mary University of Dayton Ohio udayton edu Retrieved 8 May 2021 Islams Women Status of Mothers in Islam islamswomen com Archived from the original on 26 March 2016 Retrieved 25 March 2016 Bennett James W 28 April 2014 The Story of Nepali Mother s Day The Transglobalist Retrieved 12 May 2019 Teiser Stephen F 1988 The Ghost Festival in Medieval China Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 691 02677 0 When is Mother s Day in Albania What day is Mother s Day in Albania researchmaniacs com Retrieved 7 May 2022 a b Jehl Douglas 16 April 1997 Mustafa Amin Liberal Editor Jailed by Nasser Dies at 83 The New York Times Retrieved 10 March 2013 Mother s Day in the Arab World Baby Professor 2017 A Special Day for Mommies Origin of Mother s Day Holiday Book for Kids Speedy Publishing LLC p 34 ISBN 978 1541910553 Retrieved 8 July 2019 MOTHERS DAY 1910 June 20 Leader Orange NSW 1899 1945 p 2 http nla gov au nla news article252410359 MOTHERS DAY 1910 June 14 The Daily Telegraph Sydney NSW 1883 1930 p 5 http nla gov au nla news article239408160 Where Women s Interests Meet 1924 May 1 The Sun Sydney NSW 1910 1954 p 13 FINAL EXTRA http nla gov au nla news article223394162 Traditional Mother s Day flower in Australia April 2021 https www giftsaustralia com au mothers day Belarus celebrates Mother s Day for 15th time The President congratulated the Belarusian mothers Belteleradio 14 October 2010 archived from the original on 29 September 2014 Bhutan celebrates Mother s Day for 5th time Bhutanbroadcastingserviceradio 8 May 2010 Taes Sofie 11 May 2019 the roots and guises of Mother s Day Europeana CC By SA Retrieved 13 May 2019 Dia das Maes shoppings tem promocoes especiais 11 May 2012 Archived from the original on 6 June 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2012 Gullion Katherine 8 May 2019 Opinion Mother s amp Father s Day are exclusionary CBC ca Retrieved 8 July 2019 Mother s Day Celebrations Around the World DadShop Retrieved 6 March 2022 a b c Mother s Day Popular in China People s Daily 14 May 2001 people com cn sina com cn 17 June 2008 Researchers and Experts Propose a Chinese Mother s Day All China Women s Federation Archived from the original on 5 March 2009 a b Do we need our own Mother s Day China Daily 16 May 2007 Le Karen 6 May 2020 Is There Mother s Day in China Dumpling Connection Retrieved 7 May 2022 Meky Shounaz 21 March 2017 How Egypt introduced Mother s Day to the Arab world english alarabiya net Retrieved 8 July 2019 Mother s Day Holidays History com Retrieved 13 April 2016 Happy Mother s Day Birtukan HuffPost 17 May 2010 Retrieved 13 April 2016 Mothers Day History The Complete History of Mother s Day Mothers Day Central Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 13 April 2016 Puhade ja tahtpaevade seadus Retrieved 3 March 2012 Aitienpaiva 2020 Juhlapyhat fi 7 February 2011 a b c d Histoire de la fete des meres et celle de l Union fraternelle des peres de familles meritants d Artas Union des Familles en Europe archived from the original on 29 April 2011 retrieved 7 May 2011 Artas berceau de la Fete des meres mairie d Artas a b Luc Capdevila CRHISCO University of Rennes 2 Fabrice Virgili IHTP CNRS Guerre femmes et nation en France 1939 1945 Archived 28 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine in IRICE France honours parents who raise large families The Connexion 1 March 2016 Retrieved 9 July 2019 Loi no 50 577 du 24 mai 1950 relative a la Fete des meres Law No 50 577 of 24 May 1950 relating to Mother s Day in French JORF Retrieved 30 December 2017 Weindling Paul 1993 Health Race amp German Politics Between National Unification amp Nazism Cambridge University Press p 423 ISBN 052142397X Retrieved 9 July 2019 a b c d e Michelle Mouton 2007 From Mother s Day to Forced Sterilization From nurturing the Nation to Purifying the Volk Weimar and Nazi family policy 1918 1945 Publications of the German Historical Institute illustrated ed Cambridge University Press pp 107 152 ISBN 978 0 521 86184 7 a b Ann Taylor Allen February 1995 Reviewed work s Muttertag und Mutterkreuz Der Kult um die Deutsche Mutter im Nationalsozialismus by Irmgard Weyrather American Historical Review Frankfurt A m 100 1 186 187 doi 10 2307 2168063 JSTOR 2168063 The origins and traditions of Mother s Day Hungarian mothers run the world Daily New Hungary 5 May 2019 Retrieved 16 July 2022 Kolba Gergely 5 May 2019 The origins amp traditions of Mother s Day Hungarian mothers run the world dailynewshungary com Retrieved 9 July 2019 How to Celebrate Mother s Day in Hungary Archived from the original on 17 July 2020 Retrieved 14 July 2020 TTN 13 March 2004 Social change in India discussed The Times of India Archived from the original on 27 October 2012 Mother s Day 2019 Date When is mother s day in India 2019 The Indian Express 10 May 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2019 When is Mother s Day 2019 Date Significance History and Importance of Mother s Day The Times of India 10 May 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2019 Doctor Vikram 11 May 2019 Why retailers love mothers so much The Economic Times Retrieved 11 May 2019 Wardhani Lynda K 22 December 2010 In observance of Mother s Day The Jakarta Post permanent dead link a b Bulbeck Chilla 2009 Sex love and feminism in the Asia Pacific a cross cultural study of young people s attitudes ASAA women in Asia London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415470063 Preview a b c Kathryn Robinson 2009 Gender Islam and Democracy in Indonesia ASAA women in Asia Routledge pp 3 36 44 72 ISBN 9781134118830 Ahmadinejad highlights women s significant role in society Presidency of The Islamic Republic of Iran News Service 24 June 2008 Archived from the original on 16 May 2009 Retrieved 19 July 2008 the occasion of the Mother s Day marking the birthday anniversary of Hazrat Fatemeh Zahra SA the beloved daughter of Prophet Mohammad The day fell on 23 June 2008 Shahla Haeri 1993 Obedience versus Autonomy Women and Fundamentalism in Iran and Pakistan In Martin E Marty R Scott Appleby Helen Hardacre Everett Mendelsohn eds Fundamentalisms and Society Reclaiming the Sciences the Family and Education The Fundamentalism Project Vol 2 2 ed University of Chicago Press p 197 ISBN 978 0226508801 The more women try to engage the fundamentalists in their own discourse negotiating and bargaining over their rights Islamic or otherwise the more frequently has the Islamic regime emphasized the ideal the Fatimah model the quintessential obedient woman The fundamentalist regime in Iran has yet to resolve its central dilemma regarding the role of women and male female relationships should women emulate a Zainab autonomous and assertive or a Fatimah obedient and submissive Given the logic of an Islamic marriage and the worldview it implies the fundamentalist regime has shown a marked preference for the latter Thus Woman s Day and Mother s Day in Iran are celebrated on the occasion of Fatimah s birth a b Firoozeh Kashani Sabet 2011 Conceiving Citizens Women and the Politics of Motherhood in Iran illustrated ed Oxford University Press pp 201 206 ISBN 978 0195308860 Shahla Haeri 2009 Women Religion and Political Agency in Iran in Ali Gheissari ed Contemporary Iran Economy Society illustrated ed Oxford University Press p 137 ISBN 978 0195378481 Such feminist gatherings would not have been so remarkable had they not happened against the backdrop of the regime s ceaseless effort to discourage even harass women activists and their supporters Within the narrative of Islamization the state s argument has been all along that such gatherings are representative of the culture of imperialism and hence are subversive and against the public good and the moral order Above all the Islamic State has tried hard to co opt women by appropriating the terminology and language protecting women respect for women gender complementarity Accordingly in order to accommodate and yet control and channel women s movements and activities the state commemorates the birthday of Fatemeh the Prophet Muhammad s daughter as a national woman s mother s day Mahdi Ali Akbar 2003 Iranian Women Between Islamization and Globalization Iran Encountering Globalization Problems and Prospects Ali Mohammadi London and New York Routledge Curzon ISBN 978 0 415 30827 4 Archived from the original DOC on 1 September 2006 This Shia vision of family is based on a nostalgic and idealistic notion of Imam Ali s family in which Fatima Zahra the Prophet Mohammad s daughter dedicated herself to both her husband and Islamic cause Other role models for women often cited by the officials and ideologues of the IRI are Khadijah the prophet Mohammad s wife and Zaynab daughter of the first Shi i sic Imam Ali In fact the IRI Islamic Republic of Iran replaced the universal Mother s Day with Fatima Zahar s sic birthday The Shiite Interpretation of the Status of Women Institute for Advanced Study Retrieved 11 October 2017 How to have an Irish Mother s Day IrishCentral com 12 May 2019 When is Mother s Day 2020 in Ireland mothers day site Mother s Day in Ireland discoveringireland com de Ceglia F P Dibattista L 2013 Il bello della scienza Intersezioni tra storia scienza e arte in Italian Milan Angeli p 102 ISBN 978 8856849530 Anonymous 1 April 2010 La Festa DeLLa Mamma Italian America in Italian archived from the original on 12 May 2013 registration required Raul Zaccari together with Senators Bellisario Baldini Restagno Piasenti Benedetti and Zannini Senato della Repubblica 78ª Seduta Pubblica 18 dicembre 1958 Istituzione de la festa della Mamma Annunzio di presentazione di disegni di legge Bologna Caroline 9 May 2018 Mother s Day Traditions Around The World huffingtonpost ca Retrieved 9 July 2019 Svetlana Moiseeva 17 May 2013 Prezident pozdravil kyrgyzstancev s Dnem materi Vechernyj Bishkek 19 maya narod Kyrgyzstana otmechaet Den materi Eta pamyatnaya data ustanovlena tolko v proshlom godu no srazu stala dlya kyrgyzstancev odnoj iz lyubimyh About International Women s Day International Women s Day Retrieved 15 February 2017 Apollo lv 13 May 2012 Sodien sveicam Maminas Apollo lv India Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Mates dienu Latvija saka svinet 1922 gada bet ar 1934 gadu tika noteikts ka si diena svinama katra maija otraja svetdiena lidzigi ka citas Eiropas valstis 1938 gada pec prezidenta Karla Ulmana ierosinajuma Mates dienu saka devet par Gimenes dienu uzsverot mates lielo lomu gimenes pavarda veidosana un uzturesana Latvija atzime Mates dienu Archived 30 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine TVNET National Holidays Latvia eu 2015 Archived from the original on 4 September 2019 Retrieved 9 July 2019 a b Newcomer p 133 a b c Sherman p 44 a b Newcomer pp 133 134 a b c Newcomer p 134 Newcomer 134 135 a b c Newcomer 135 136 a b Newcomer 136 139 The History of Mother s Day from The Legacy Project a Legacy Center Canada website When Is Mother s Day Celebrated In Mexico 7 May 2016 Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2016 Thompson Jennifer Trainer 2008 The Joy of Family Traditions A Season by Season Companion to Celebrations Holidays amp Special Occasions Celestial Arts ISBN 978 1587611148 Retrieved 10 July 2019 ဘ ဘ စ 18 January 2011 မ န မ န င င မ အမ မ န က င ပ Mothers day is held in Myanmar BBC Myanmar in Burmese Retrieved 19 May 2020 Yee Mon 27 January 2016 Myanmar Mother s Day Review Yangon Life Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 18 May 2020 The New Light of Myanmar 5 January 2019 Yangon University confers Doctor of Letters on Reactor Sayadaw of International Theravada Buddhist Missionary University Sayagyi U Thukha Retrieved 18 May 2020 Because of his organization the Fullmoon Day of Pyatho has been observed as Mothers Day since 1997 မ ဒ တ တ င သ 5 January 2019 ပ သ လပ ည အမ မ န Mothers day the full moon of Pyatho Myanmar Digital News Archived from the original on 5 August 2020 Retrieved 18 May 2020 J C Heesterman Albert W Van den Hoek Dirk H A Kolff Marianne S Oort 1992 Ritual State and History in South Asia Essays in Honour of J C Heesterman Brill p 786 ISBN 978 90 04 09467 3 Helsloot 2007 p 206 a b c Helsloot 2007 p 208 a b c Helsloot 2007 p 209 a b Helsloot 2007 p 210 Helsloot 2007 p 213 Helsloot 2007 p 211 The history of mother s day 31 January 2009 Mother s Day in Norway 11 May 2010 Retrieved 26 May 2015 World marks Mother s Day with Utmost Love Respect ARY News 17 May 2016 Retrieved 12 June 2017 Penny de Henriquez 9 December 2005 Origins La celebracion del Dia de la Madre La Prensa in Spanish archived from the original on 5 May 2011 retrieved 4 March 2010 Session of the Honorable Camara de Senadores Senor Senador Diego Abente Brun in Spanish p 25 permanent dead link a b Buscan que se cambie fecha del dia de la madre Radio Viva 90 1 FM Paraguay 14 May 2008 permanent dead link Municipality of Asuncion 27 July 2008 Hoy miercoles 27 de agosto se inician las acciones de la Comision de Festejos por el Bicentenario con una retreta en la Plaza de los Heroes archived from the original on 10 May 2009 a b Proclamation No 58 s 1998 Official Gazette 11 December 1998 Retrieved 1 December 2014 Content Manager 03 1 December 2014 The First Monday of December is Mother s Day and Father s Day Malacanan Palace official residence of the President of the Philippines Archived from the original on 8 December 2014 Retrieved 3 December 2014 Postanovlenie CK VKP b 8 March 1966 K sovetskim zhenshinam obrashenie CK KPSS v svyazi s Mezhdunarodnym dnyom 8 Marta Sovetskoe iskusstvo in Russian p 4 Archived from the original DjVu on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2013 About International Women s Day International Women s Day Retrieved 8 November 2016 Balahovskaya L G 1969 1978 Mezhdunarodnyj zhenskij den 8 marta In Vvedenskij Boris ed Bolshaya sovetskaya enciklopediya BSE in Russian Moskva Sovetskaya enciklopediya Archived from the original on 20 July 2012 Why is May the Month of Mary National Catholic Register Retrieved 2 March 2018 Diario de Valencia 25 September 1925 La Opinion diario independiente de la manana 4 October 1926 Nueva Alcarria 5 December 1964 Fleurop Interflora Suisse 22 April 2008 La Fete des Meres 2008 ne sera pas reportee in French Camaron Kao 14 May 2012 Thousands of believers mark Buddha s birthday China Post archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Ko Shu Ling 9 May 2011 Sakyamuni Buddha birthday celebrated Taipei Times The legislature approved a proposal in 1999 to designate the birthday of Sakyamuni Buddha which falls on the eighth day of the fourth month of the lunar calendar a national holiday and to celebrate the special occasion concurrently with International Mother s Day which is celebrated on the second Sunday of May 300 000 Attend Buddha Day Ceremonies in 34 Countries Tzu Chi 15 May 2012 Archived from the original on 23 May 2012 Tzu Chi Foundation to stage Mother s Day event Taipei Times 4 May 2008 Caroline Hong 23 May 2004 Cultural center performs bathing Buddha ceremony Taipei Times unsigned 15 May 2006 Taiwan Quick Take Tzu Chi celebrates birthday Taipei Times p 3 Police chief returns earlier for Mother s Day MCOT news Thai News Agency 10 August 2012 Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 an audience with Her Majesty Queen Sirikit on Tuesday on the occasion of her birthday which is also observed as National Mother s Day Handwerk Brian 9 May 2014 Mother s Day Turns 100 Its Surprisingly Dark History National Geographic Retrieved 9 July 2019 a b Paul M Handley 2006 The King Never Smiles a biography of Thailand s Bhumibol Adulyadej Yale University Press p 288 ISBN 9780300106824 online version Ukraz Prezidenta Ukrayini Pro Den Materi in Ukrainian zakon2 rada gov ua Mother s Day When is it celebrated and where did it come from BBC 14 March 2021 Retrieved 10 April 2021 Higdon David Leon 1972 The Wife of Bath and Refreshment Sunday Papers on Language and Literature 8 2 199 201 Bernhard Virginia 2002 Mother s Day In Joseph M Hawes Elizabeth F Shores eds The family in America an encyclopedia 3 illustrated ed ABC CLIO p 714 ISBN 978 1576072325 Barbara Mikkelson We love you call collect Snopes com Retrieved 2010 03 08 J Ellsworth Kalas 2009 Preaching the Calendar Celebrating Holidays and Holy Days Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0664227142 Church attendance on this day is likely to be third only to Christmas Eve and Easter Some worshipers still celebrate with carnations colored if the mother is living and white if she is deceased Mother s Day Dining Fact Sheet National Restaurant Association 28 April 2006 Archived from the original on 27 June 2017 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Mother s Day is the most popular day of the year to dine out with 38 percent of consumers reporting doing so Leigh p 256 General Schmidt Leigh Eric 1997 Princeton University Press ed Consumer Rites The Buying and Selling of American Holidays reprint illustrated ed Princeton University Press pp 256 275 ISBN 978 0 691 01721 1 Larossa Ralph 1997 University of Chicago Press ed The Modernization of Fatherhood A Social and Political History illustrated ed University of Chicago Press pp 90 170 192 ISBN 978 0 226 46904 1 Ann Jarvis OR Anna Jarvis mother s day Helsloot John 2007 10 Vernacular Authenticity Negotiating Mother s Day and Father s Day in the Netherlands in Margry Peter Jan Roodenburg Herman eds Reframing Dutch Culture Between Otherness and Authenticity Progress in European Ethnology illustrated ed Ashgate Publishing pp 6 7 203 224 ISBN 978 0 7546 4705 8 Newcomer Daniel 2004 Reconciling Modernity Urban State Formation in 1940s Leon Mexico illustrated ed University of Nebraska Press pp 132 139 ISBN 978 0803233492 Sherman John W 1997 The Mexican Right The End of Revolutionary Reform 1929 1940 illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group p 44 ISBN 978 0275957360 External links nbsp Media related to Mother s Day at Wikimedia Commons Anna Jarvis The woman who regretted creating Mother s Day By Vibeke Venema BBC Stories 10 May 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mother 27s Day amp oldid 1180540786, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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