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Ash WednesdayIn the Western Christianity calendar, Ash Wednesday is the first day of Lent. (Eastern Christianity starts Great Lent on Clean Monday, which, due to differences in the calculation of Easter and the length of Great Lent, is often later in the year.) It occurs forty days before Easter not counting Sundays (which are not included in Lent); it occurs forty-four days before Good Friday ''counting'' Sundays. Its placement varies each year, according to the Computus. The date can vary from early February to as late as the second week in March. Ash Wednesday falls on the following dates in the following years: * 2004 - February 25 * 2005 - February 9 * 2006 - March 1 * 2007 - February 21 * 2008 - February 6 * 2009 - February 25 * 2010 - February 17 * 2011 - March 9 * 2012 - February 22 * 2013 - February 13 * 2014 - March 5 * 2015 - February 18 * 2016 - February 10 * 2017 - March 1 * 2018 - February 14 * 2019 - March 6 Some Christians treat Ash Wednesday as a day for remembering one's mortality. Eucharist are traditionally held on this day at which attendees are blessed with ashes by the priest ministering the ceremony. The Catholic minister marks the forehead of each celebrant with black ashes, traditionally in the shape of a Christian cross, leaving a mark that the worshipper traditionally leaves on his or her forehead until sundown, before washing it off. This symbolism recalls the ancient Middle East tradition of throwing ash over one's head signifying repentance before God (as related numerous times in the Bible). The minister says "Remember, man, that you are dust, and to dust you shall return." Often these Ash Wednesday ashes are made by burning Palm leaves from the previous year's Palm Sunday celebrations and mixing them with olive oil as a fixative. In Roman Catholicism Ash Wednesday is a day of fasting and abstinence, and the ashes are considered sacramentals. The penance psalms are read. As the first day of Lent, it comes the day after Shrove Tuesday or Mardi Gras, the last day of the Carnival season. In certain parts of the United Kingdom, Ash Wednesday similarly involves the ritual consumption of the food ''hash (food)''. In New Orleans, Louisiana it is sometimes jokingly referred to as "Trash Wednesday" due to the large amount of waste typically left in the streets by the previous day's New Orleans Mardi Gras. ---- In Australia, the Ash Wednesday fires occurred on February 16, 1983 across Victoria, Australia and South Australia. 75 lives were lost and over 2500 homes destroyed. See [http://www.cfa.vic.gov.au/sig_fires/about_ash_wednesday.html]. ---- ''Ash Wednesday'' is also the title of a poem by T. S. Eliot. == External links == * [http://www.kensmen.com/catholic/customslent2.html Catholic Ash Wednesday Traditions] *[http://www.liturgies.net/Lent/AshWednesday.htm Episcopal Ash Wednesday Service] Wednesday Christian festivals als:Aschermittwoch ga:Céadaoin an Luathraigh See other meanings of words starting from letter: AAB | AC | AD | AE | AF | AG | AH | AI | AJ | AK | AL | AM | AN | AO | AP | AR | AS | AT | AU | AW | AX | AY | AZ |Words begining with Ash_Wednesday: Ash-Wednesday Ash_Wednesday Ash_Wednesday_bushfires Ash_Wednesday_fires Ash_Wednesday_fires
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