Mar 162015
 

Urho is pronounced like “Errrrh-hoe” with a long trill of the R to represent his strength

Saint Urho is the Finnish Saint of the Grasshopper.

Here is the traditional story about Saint Urho:

Once upon a time, many many years ago in Finland they say (they being the geologists and such) there used to be wild grapes growing all over. How do they know this?  From studying the remains of bears found in that area.  

Well, one season a bunch of grasshoppers (i.e. locust)  with a voracious appetite for grapes happen to hop on into Finland.  What to do? 

Enter our great Finnish Hero, St. Urho!  Waving his pitchfork and chanting “Heinasirkka, heinasirkka, menetaalta hiiten” (which in English means “Grasshopper grasshopper skoot!”) he drove the grasshoppers out of the vineyards.

The Finnish grape framers (viners?) were very protective of their fields because they didn’t have much of a growing season.

Feeling so happy and grateful to Urho, they declared him a saint. He did this on March 16, the day before St. Patrick’s Day. 

Every year since then, the Finnish people celebrate St. Urho’s Day on March 16.  The official colors are purple to represent the grapes and green to represent the vines.

The St. Urho’s day ceremony begins at sunrise. Women and children go down to the lakeshore and chant “Heinasirkka, heinasirrkka, meine taatta hiiteen” just like St. Urho did thousands of years before or “Grasshopper, Grasshopper getta outta here” if you don’t speak Finnish. (After all it’s pretty easy to remember.)  The men dress in green and gather at the top of the hill and then start a procession down to the lake kicking and waving pitchforks to scare off the imaginary grasshoppers.

No one is exactly sure when or how, but along the way the men change into purple clothes.

The celebration also includes singing, dancing polkas and drinking wine, grape juice for those underage and having Mojakkaa (fish soup pronounced like “moy-yah-kah”) which is what St. Urho ate to give him his strength to fight grasshoppers.