It
is May Day on Sunday. For some it is a gay Spring fertility festival with ancient roots most famous for being
celebrated with May Pole Dances and
in some place little May Baskets left
anonymously on the stoops and porches of friends and neighbors.
The Catholics, as they
are wont to do, appropriated the pagan tradition and made it about the crowning of the Queen of the May, a flower filled celebration in which some lucky girl from a parish or school is selected to rule of the Marian month—the old Goddess
transformed into the Virgin
Mary. And, of course, May Day is the
real International Working People’s Day—about which you will be hearing
more on this blog.
Folks
in the Northwestern Boonies of Chicago or the entire Chicago area have two special events
that Day.
First
up! On Sunday, May 1, the Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist
Congregation, 5603 Bull Valley Road
in McHenry will present the Church of Rock at its regular 10:45 am
worship services featuring Everyday
Anarchy.
Everyday
Anarchy is a young, working Chicago area rock band
featuring Adam, Mike, John, and Bob who like to go by their first
names. “May Day is the perfect day to
explore the values of rock and roll—hard driving high energy, rebelliousness,
creativity, and an impatience for a better world,” according to Tree of Life Religious Education Director Sam Jones
who found the group of the service.
There
will be readings and commentary by the Rev. Sean Parker Dennison to complement the band’s musical performance.
This
is the fourth and in an innovative
worship service series that highlighted
various genres of music as spiritual
experiences. The Church of Jazz featuring the work of Duke Ellington, the Church of Folk with veteran singer/song writer Joe Jenks,
and the Church of Vivaldi with the string quartet Greenleaf Strings were
the earlier popular installments in
the series.
The
public is welcome to the service and
child care is available for infants and toddlers. There is no charge, but a free will collection will be taken.
Call 815
322-2464 for more information, e-mail office@treeoflifeuu.org, or
visit http://treeoflifeuu.org .
Ordinarily
I would be at this service with bells on,
dancing shoes, and an attitude.
But I will have to miss it because I will be heading to the western suburbs to be a presenter at our second featured event.
A May Day Meander through Forest Home Cemetery
will
be held from 1:30 to 3:30 at Forest Home Cemetery, 863 Des Plaines Avenue in Forest Park.
Forest
Home was one of Chicago’s first park-like
cemeteries and opened outside
the city limits on land once
occupied by a Native American Village and
then operated as farm and a picnic grove. Eventually
three adjacent cemeteries were built on the land. Two of them, Forest Home and the German Waldheim cemetery were merged
into one large property. Many of Chicago’s
wealthiest and most colorful families were buried there,
some in or under elaborate mausoleums,
others under simple but moving markers. Paula Brazill Wallrich, one of Chicago’s
leading cemetery mavens will lead
the group on a walking tour of the historic grounds providing
interesting glimpses into the city’s rich history and interesting
personalities.
Waldheim
Cemetery became the final resting place of the four labor leaders and anarchists
hung and the one who committed
suicide in his cell after the
1886 Haymarket Riot. Eventually all but one of the seven men
originally charged in the affair were
laid to rest there. In 1893 friend and
admirers of the martyrs erected a handsome monument with bronze sculpture in their
memories. Soon all sorts of unionists, anarchists, socialists, communists, and independent radical selected nearby plots for the final resting place for their ashes or bodies. An unexpected village sprang up, sometimes
called Radical Row. It has become a sort of outdoor Hall of Fame for the American Left.
Former Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) General Secretary Treasurer, editor,
organizer, amateur labor historian,
and proprietor of this blog, Patrick Murfin will relate the
story of the Haymarket, the origins of
International Labor Day, and introduce the inhabitants of this quiet village.
Guides Paula Brazill Wallrich and Patrick Murfin at the Haymarket Monument. |
The
weather now looks like it will cooperate with rain expected to move out of the area in the morning before the
tour. Temperatures, however, will still be cool and possibly blustery
Participants are encouraged to dress appropriately and wear comfortable walking shoes.
The
tour will meet kiddy-corner from the cemetery
office beginning at 1:15. The meeting point is marked with a 1 and the office is marked with a star in the accompanying map. It will be directly on your left as you enter and there is parking behind the
office. There may be traditional May Day
observances at the Monument or an informal gathering which you might want to come early to observe. Please be advised there are no public restroom facilities at the
cemetery.
Tour assembly point. |
The
Meander is free, but participants
are encouraged to donate $5 or so to defray expenses.
The
tour is being held in conjunction
with associated Facebook Groups, NECRography, The 1834 Book Bunch, CHICography,
ILLINography, and Chicago Bughouse (Washington) Square and
hosted by Chuck Edmonson.
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