Burning the effigy: a global ritual of purification, renewal, and carnival liberation Flames soaring into the night sky, the crackling of burning straw, the joyful cries of the crowd, and a figure slowly disappearing in the flames. The burning of an effigy is one of the oldest, most spectacular, and most significant rituals known to humanity. From European carnivals to Asian festivals, from Latin American squares to African villages, this ritual exists in various forms on all continents. Behind its seemingly simple appearance lies a complex web of meanings: purification from evil, expulsion of winter and death, the victory of good over evil, the carnivalesque mockery of power, and finally, the symbolic death of the old for the birth of the new. This is a universal language in which humanity speaks about the cyclical nature of existence, about the need to burn the past from time to time to make room for the future. Europe: from winter farewell to betrayal punishment In the European cultural tradition, the burning of an effigy has deep Pagan roots that were later reinterpreted by Christianity. The most famous and still living example is the Slavic Maslenitsa. The straw effigy, dressed in women's clothes, symbolizes winter, cold, and death. On the last day of the Maslenitsa week, on Forgiveness Sunday, it is burned on a huge fire to the general joy. This ritual is not just the farewell to winter, but a deep agrarian ritual. Our ancestors believed that along with the effigy, all sorrows and difficulties are burned, and the ash scattered over the fields should ensure a future harvest. The effigy personified the goddess Mara — the queen of cold and frost, and her \"death\" in the flames symbolized the rebirth of fertile powers of the earth. In essence, this was a symbolic sacrifice aimed at pleasing the gods and giving life to a new season. Similar rituals were widespread throughout Europe: in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Austria, they burned the straw effigy of \"wi ...
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