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Comments on: Litha https://whynow.dumka.us/2010/06/21/litha-5/ On-line Opinion Magazine...OK, it's a blog Tue, 22 Jun 2010 22:13:52 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 By: Bryan https://whynow.dumka.us/2010/06/21/litha-5/comment-page-1/#comment-52641 Tue, 22 Jun 2010 22:13:52 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=14996#comment-52641 It sounds like it started as a Russian Deli which morphed into a cafe, and then added vegen. It makes sense for a port city.

As it changed hands, people would forget the reason for the name, but keep it for its “good will” value and local identity.

Baba Yaga is definitely tied to swamps, and would come to mind for a Slav.

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By: Steve Bates https://whynow.dumka.us/2010/06/21/litha-5/comment-page-1/#comment-52639 Tue, 22 Jun 2010 15:53:53 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=14996#comment-52639 Well, Bryan, one can reasonably argue that all of Houston is a swamp…

I’ve often wondered why this extremely pleasant establishment was named after a Slavic legend of a witch, but no one, including the current owner, has been able to tell me. The web site begins its About page with the sentence, “Our cozy cafe, named after a Slavic witch, has been a favorite in the Montrose area since 1975.” And it has. But there are no cutesy witch-related names, or Slavic names for that matter, on the menu. Very ordinary dishes… “veggie Reuben sandwich” … turn into something extraordinary there. Their veggie meatloaf reminds me so much of Mom’s real meatloaf I wonder why I ever ate real meat (mostly because Mom seldom cooked vegetarian fare). There’s a parking lot, but expect it to be full, and to have to park a block away on a side street… unless you have a handicapped hang-tag or plates.

Now I miss the food, and the Montrose, in which I grew up…

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By: Bryan https://whynow.dumka.us/2010/06/21/litha-5/comment-page-1/#comment-52637 Tue, 22 Jun 2010 02:48:04 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=14996#comment-52637 In reply to Steve Bates.

I assume it is not in a swamp with a fence topped with skulls around it 😉

In many ways she is the Slavic version of Granny Weatherwax.

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By: Steve Bates https://whynow.dumka.us/2010/06/21/litha-5/comment-page-1/#comment-52636 Tue, 22 Jun 2010 02:27:51 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=14996#comment-52636 I dine at the hut of Baba Yega [sic] from time to time, and it’s charming and quaint-looking, but I believe the only chicken legs are in the pans in the kitchen. Recommended if you pass through Houston. Go on a sunny but mild day and sit facing (or in) the back yard; the view is as pleasant as the meal.

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By: Bryan https://whynow.dumka.us/2010/06/21/litha-5/comment-page-1/#comment-52634 Tue, 22 Jun 2010 00:56:25 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=14996#comment-52634 In reply to Steve Bates.

Litha is actually the Celtic version of the solstice, while Kupala is the Slavic holiday that was highjacked by Christianity and called the feast day of John the Baptist.

We are a little short of traditional Celts around here, but there are a few brave people who identify as Wiccans. Hell, even though there are fair number of Russians in the area now, I seriously doubt if they know much about the old “mythology”.

I would really like to see something that connects witches with Kupala. The Vedma of the Slavic tradition was a wise woman. Baba Yaga is often cited as a Russian “witch”, but that’s not really the role she fulfills, since, unlike the European version of “witch”, Baba Yaga rewards virtue and punishes sins. Of course, a chicken-legged hut is pretty witchy, but Granny Yaga is only one who is ever mentioned in the tales, so it would be had to hold a big party of one on a mountatin.

Birches are flexible, so Berezovsky should be fine [Berez is birch].

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By: Steve Bates https://whynow.dumka.us/2010/06/21/litha-5/comment-page-1/#comment-52632 Mon, 21 Jun 2010 22:17:17 +0000 http://whynow.dumka.us/?p=14996#comment-52632 Don’t you know Berezovsky’s hands must have ached after this piano rendition of Night on Bald Mountain!

And everyone should be aware that Wicca is a 20th-century creation, and that the name was standardized only in about 1960. “Things are seldom what they seem….”

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