Seriously- you have to read this:
Message 28588013
Even I know St Lucia is about a Christian saint. I even know her story (it's kind of gruesome). It's a very Christian holiday (which makes me wonder why it would be celebrated in a school, if it's a public school).
It's a freaking Saint's day for goodess sake.
en.wikipedia.org
Sometimes, just when I think they can't get any stupider, they do. Really, it's amazing. It really is.
But considering the fabulist tendency of some of these people, it's probably going on in a religious preschool- in which case, have at it. Lives of the Saints- all the gore of a good horror movie without the guilt.
The Very Religious Story of St Lucy:
St. Lucy/Lucia
Main article: SaAlthough sources for her life-story exist other than in hagiographies, St. Lucy is believed to have been a Sicilian saint who suffered a sad death in Syracuse, Sicily around AD 310. [5] The Guilte Legende, a widespread and influential compendium of saint's biographies compiled in the late Middle Ages, records her story thus: She was seeking help for her mother's long-term illness at the shrine of Saint Agnes, in her native Sicily, when an angel appeared to her in a dream beside the shrine. As a result of this, Lucy became a devout Christian, refused to compromise her virginity in marriage and was denounced to the Roman authorities by the man she would have wed. They threatened to drag her off to a brothel if she did not renounce her Christian beliefs, but were unable to move her, even with a thousand men and fifty oxen pulling. So they stacked materials for a fire around her instead and set light to it, but she would not stop speaking, insisting that her death would lessen the fear of it for other Christians and bring grief to non-believers. One of the soldiers stuck a spear through her throat to stop these denouncements, but to no effect. Soon afterwards, the Roman consulate in charge was hauled off to Rome on charges of theft from the state and beheaded. Saint Lucy was able to die only when she was given the Christian sacrament. [6] In another story, Saint Lucy was working to help Christians hiding in the catacombs during the terror under the Roman Emperor Diocletian, and in order to bring with her as many supplies as possible, she needed to have both hands free. She solved this problem by attaching candles to a wreath on her head.[ attribution needed] |