Monday, 28 October 2013

Are you Celebrating All-Souls Day?
The Day of The Dead?
October, 2015

According to the regions largest baking supplies company more and more locals are baking cakes and cup-cakes and that’s a fact!  Have you ever thought of baking a Memorial Cake or cup-cakes for All Souls Day?   This is something you can do at home for your family in celebration of the life of a loved one who has passed.
Many bereaved of all religions now choose this day to visit the graves of loved ones and Respect Natural Woodland Green Burial Parks will be open to receive families on Sunday 2nd November 2014.
The  cakes shown below were made by Pauline Berry who is a cake specialist on the Isle of Axholme for Respect Green Burial Park customers




Often Soul cakes are traditionally made and have the consistency of a bun similar to the Hot Cross Bun but without the cross or the currents added.

 Cakes are always a welcome comfort food as with the beautiful Heart & Souls cake 
seen here with Lincolnshire Alzheimer’s Society Manager Lisa Hickman

 The owner Tamatha Troop of Lincolnshire’s One Stop Cake Shop at Lea Rd Station, Gainsborough explained that cakes are now becoming more popular again rather than cup-cakes due to the popularity of the TV Bake -off programme 

BIG thank you to Nancy Birtwhistle for choosing this years winner 
















The scull image is with the kind permission of http://dyingmatters.org/page/day-dead-2013
for promoting people to openly talk about death & dying,
Original source of the background editorial below
What do people do?
Some churches, including the Catholic Church, hold special services with music and prayers focused on All Souls’ Day on or around November 2 each year. It is a time for some Christians, including those who attend these special All Souls’ Day services, to remember and pray for deceased family members and friends. Some people visit the graves of dead family or friends on All Souls’ Day. All Souls’ Day is closely associated with All Saints’ Day (November 1), as both are known collectively as Hallowtide.
Background
All Souls’ Day was first instituted at the monastery in Cluny in 993 CE and quickly spread throughout the Christian world. People held festivals for the dead long before Christianity. It was Saint Odilo, the abbot of Cluny in France, who in the 10th century, proposed that the day after All Saints’ Day be set aside to honour the departed, particularly those whose souls were still in purgatory.
It was historically customary for poor Christians to offer prayers for the dead in return for money or food (soul cakes) from their wealthier neighbours. During the 19th and 20th centuries children would go “souling” in a similar fashion to carol singing, in which they would ask for alms or soul cakes. There was also a superstition that All Souls' night was a time for the dead revisited their homes. Therefore some people would leave lit candles outside their homes to help to guide the deceased souls. Meals and wine were also left as refreshments.
Symbols
A soul cake is like a hot cross bun but without the currants or the cross on top.

For more information call Gordon Tulley at Respect Green Burial Parks 07836 202158or visit www.respectgb.co.uk 

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