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- Mother’s Day is celebrated to honour motherhood and is observed in different parts of the world on different days/dates—but the most number of countries celebrate it on the 2nd Sunday of May.
- Celebrations of motherhood can be traced back to the ancient Greeks and Romans, but the modern Mother’s Day began in the US in the early 1900s.
- A woman named Anna Jarvis started a campaign for an official day honouring mothers in 1905, the year her mother died.
- Anna’s mother was one of the peace activists promoting Mother’s Peace Day since the 1870s.
- The promoters of Mother’s Peace Day (the 1870s) wanted to promote global unity after the horrors of the American Civil War and Europe’s Franco-Prussian War.
- They wanted mothers of all nationalities to come together and promote the peaceful settlement of international issues.
- Anna Jarvis wanted to honour the sacrifices made by the mothers.
- After three years of her campaign, a Philadelphia department store owner financed her, and Anna Jarvis organised a public memorial for her mother in her hometown in 1908.
- It was a huge success, and Anna Jarvis—who remained unmarried and childless her whole life—resolved to see Mother’s Day added to the national calendar.
- But the US Congress rejected a proposal to make Mother’s Day an official holiday, joking that they would also have to proclaim a “Mother-in-law’s Day”.
- Despite no official recognition, the popularity of the day continued to surge over the next few years—more and more states around the US started celebrating it.
- In 1914, President Woodrow Wilson signed a proclamation making Mother’s Day an official holiday, to take place the 2nd Sunday of May.
- When Anna was lobbying to make this day an official holiday, she had teamed up with florists, recommending a white carnationLater, the custom developed of wearing a red or pink carnation to represent a living mother or a white carnation for a mother who was deceased. as the symbolic flower of Mother’s Day.
- Soon, she realised florists, candy-makers and card-makers, and even charities were using Mother’s Day as a way to make extra money.
- She was very upset with this commercialisation and spent the last few years of her life organising boycotts of the Mother’s Day celebrations.
- She was once arrested for disturbing the peace when she misbehaved with vendors trying to sell carnations.
Image courtesy of GiftPundits through Pexels
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