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the first day of the Iranian new year, occurring on the vernal equinox (usually March 20 or 21).“Iranian expats arranged a night of traditional music, food, and celebration to count down to Nowruz”
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a period of celebration marking the start of the Iranian new year and typically lasting for thirteen days.“on the last day of Nowruz, people try to spend the day out of the house”
The main items are:
1. Somagh (sumac) : symbolizes the color of sunrise
2. Serkeh (vinegar): symbolizes age and patience
3. Senjed (dried fruit from lotus tree): symbolizes love
4. Samanoo (sweet pudding): symbolizes affluence
5. Sabzeh (sprouts): symbolizes rebirth
6. Sib (apple): symbolizes health and beauty
7. Sir (garlic): symbolizes medicineAdditional items that begin with the letter “s” that are commonly seen on the Sofreh are:
Sekkeh (coin): symbolizes wealth and prosperity
Sonbol (hyacinth): a spring flowerOther items included are:
Mahi (fish): symbolizes life
Tokhmeh Morgh (egg): symbolizes fertility
Sham (candle): symbolizes enlightenment
Shirini (sweets): symbolizes spreading the sweetness
A book of poetry or prayerThe Persian New Year, Norouz coincides with the Spring Equinox. I love this aspect of our culture because when the new year begins, it really feels like a beginning as the transition from winter into spring is seen in natures and felt in the air. Norouz is very much so of a cultural celebration in Iran and has been celebrated for centuries. It is customary for families to gather around the Haft Seen at the moment of the Spring Equinox and celebrate the transition from winter into spring together. The elders present family members with Eidee, which is a small monetary present for Norouz.
What is the significance of the 7 items on the “Haft Sin” table for the Persian celebration of Nowruz?
- sabzeh – wheat, barley or lentil sprouts growing in a dish
- samanu – a sweet pudding made from wheat germ
- senjed – the dried fruit of the oleaster tree
- sîr – garlic
- sîb – apples
- somaq – sumac berries
- serkeh – vinegar
- sonbol – the fragrant hyacinth flower
- sekkeh – coins
- sohan – brittles made of granulated sugar and honey enriched with saffron
- sabzi – a dishful of fresh herbs
- sangak – a very hard pea-like grain
- siyah dana – fennel
- sepand – esfand or Syrian Rue
- sorma – collyrium
So, what is the real story? And why is the haft sin associated with Spring and the celebration of renewal that is core to the symbolism of the Persian New Year (Nowruz)?
I continued to wonder about this, at least once a year, until I started going to a Iranian Mystic Poetry class (focused on the works of Rumi, Ferdowsi and Hafez) taught by a very learned teacher. As we learned about the philosophy and symbolism of these poets, Spring came around, and in a discussion about Nowruz, our teacher covered the mystic symbolism of the haft sin, in a way that finally made sense:
The haft sin is composed of “haft” (or seven) essential symbols, and “sin” which may have been shortened from “sini” (or trays), which held these essential symbols.
The symbols break down into three from the material world (or “donyaheh mahdoodiat”), three from the immaterial world (or “donayeh maanah”) — this is the world of meaning and ideas — and one symbol that sits between and ties these two worlds together.
Symbols of the Material world:
- sang – stone – a symbol of matter, the lowest form of the material world
- sabzeh – grass – wheat, barley or lentil sprouts growing in a dish – symbol of the vegetable world and of re-birth
- tokhmeh morgh – egg – decorated with designs – the symbol of the animal kingdom and of fertility
Symbols of the Immaterial world:
- sham – candle – a symbol of the light of being, energy or the creative force
- ayehneh – mirror – a symbol of allowance and the field of possibilities where the creative force reflects and makes everything possible
- mahee – fish in water – symbol of life without limits, the infinite (water) and life within it (fish)
The symbol that ties the two together:
- sharab – wine – a symbol of the human, with the jug or glass as the body (material) and the wine as the spirit (conceptual)
Taken as a group these symbols show a progression from the material to the spiritual, with stone (matter) at the lowest end, and candle (energy) at the highest, and the wine (human) in the middle connecting these two worlds together. So, this is the point of the haft sin, to remind us of our purpose as humans in this world; the idea that we are here to not only experience limitation and the material world but also to experience transcendence and higher consciousness in the spiritual or conceptual realm.
How does one do that? Well, that’s where the whole thing ties into the celebration of Nowruz, which is all about renewal and the start of Spring. The haft sin is a symbolic reminder of the constant renewal (or rebirth) that can happen when one transcends and balances the material (mind), with the immaterial (spirit), by letting life flow through oneself in a perpetual state of allowance, amazement and appreciation of each moment as it happens.
We are matter and spirit, always becoming, aware of both aspects of ourselves in the present where everything happens. I call this the wow of now, where joy or “zogh” (as we Persians call it), lives.
Interestingly, and probably why this came up in our poetry class in the first place, such symbolism is foundational to much of the classical Iranian poetry and philosophy.
Whether we’re talking about Rumi or Hafez and their numerous odes to the dance between the material and spiritual worlds, or Ferdowsi and his epic masterpiece the Shahnameh (Letter to a King), which begins with a symbolic king, Kiumars, (whose description is that of Light) and ends with actual rulers and people of his day (the real and tangible), or even the dance of the Sufi whirling dervishes who always have one hand to the ground and one hand to the sky, spinning in order to negate space and time by facing all directions at once — a near-perfect symbol of the striving towards unity of the material (or finite) and the spiritual / conceptual (or infinite) — Iranian culture always seems to revolve around and return to this symbolism.
So, what more fitting celebration, than the start of Spring, where the earth has turned about itself and is coming back to life, for us to remind ourselves of the continuous renewal that happens when we balance our material part (our mind/ego) with our spiritual part (our consciousness) and transcend the boundaries of space and time into that perpetual state of renewal that is the moment, or the now.
At the end of the day, this is what being alive is about, and that is why I find the above explanation of the meaning of the essential symbols on the haft sin of the Persian New Year (Nowruz) so beautiful, clear and interesting.
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Appendix / Additional Questions:
1) So what about the other symbols on the table, like a Koran or a book by Hafez, or Ferdowsi?
The story goes as follows… These seven sacred symbols have descended from pagan rituals that prevailed at or around the time of Zoroaster. There is a long-standing tradition in many pagan cults to speak in a hidden or symbolic language that is not readily discernible to the untrained ear of the uninitiated. Also, Iran has a long history of embracing invaders and their culture and traditions without abandoning its own foundations, beliefs or roots.The above facts together with the Arab invasion of Iran which brought with it Islam about a thousand years ago, meant that the first thing that the “pagan” Persians did in order to preserve their tradition was to add a Koran in the middle of the haft sin. This meant that their sacred table would be sacred to Muslims too, and so their tradition could live on. Then over the course of time as some segments of society became more secular, some people started replacing the “holy book” of the Koran with one that they felt better represented their sense of spirituality, like the Divan of Hafez, or the Shahnameh of Ferdowsi.
2) What about two missing symbols that you claim are essential: sang (stone) and sharab (wine)? How come I have never seen these on a Haft sin?
This is a point that again ties to the last question regarding “hidden language”… Your eyes are deceiving you, for they are both on every haft sin table you have seen. Sang (stone) has, in our increasingly materialistic society, became sekkeh (coins, usually made of gold, most precious of materials, but “stone” nonetheless). And, with the Islamic existential threat to this originally pagan tradition, sharab (wine), which is not allowed by Islam, was replaced with serkeh (vinegar), so that it could be left on the spread without drawing too much fuss. So, these two essential symbols still exist on the haft sin; they’ve just been transformed to accommodate the prevailing socially acceptable norms of what is good, proper and acceptable.3) And what of all the other “sin” symbols above? After all, they are all written about in the Encyclopedia Iranica and Wikipedia!
I cannot say for sure how they got onto the table. Maybe it was as a distraction for the untrained viewer, or maybe for some pedantic commercial reason — could they be an early form of product placement? I would imagine any merchant would be very excited to manage to get their wares passed off as “essential symbols” (come on it’s just one more “sin”) on the traditional haft-sin spread that hundreds of millions of people make each year. Regardless, I can say that the haphazard explanation of what all those “sins” symbolize, doesn’t leave me very excited. All are rather prosaic, mostly cliche and superstitious explanations, that sometimes even contradict themselves: like apple is for health, garlic is to ward off evil, or is it esfand that wards off evil, and garlic is medicine/health? Which would make apple for sweetness, but wasn’t that samanu? or sohan? Or both? Or neither? Blah…)Anyway, in closing, I can say that whatever the reason for all those other items, they most certainly don’t distract me from the symbolic coherence of what the seven essential pagan symbols — stone (coins), grass, eggs, wine (vinegar), fish in water, mirror, and fire — on the haft sin represent. Nor, how these seven symbols have finally allowed me to appreciate this wonderful tradition of Spring in a way that makes complete sense to me and makes my heart jump for joy at the prospect of a life lived as a perpetual celebration of being in the moment or Nowruz!
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Nowruz ( New day) Iranian New Year March 20-21 (Spring Equinox)
Nowruz
/ˌnōˈro͞oz/
noun
http://www.iranicaonline.org/
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