Mother’s Day got away from her
It’s all about mothers. As well it should be.
Fathers are nice, more or less, but mothers are essential. You
know it, I know it, everyone knows it. When is the last time you saw
some poor soul in a movie, who is delirious on his death bed, take
one last breath, reach out toward no one in particular and say, “Dad,
is that you?”
Never, that’s when. The line is “Mom, is that you?” always, every
time, no exceptions.
Mother’s Day ragers are not new. They date back to ancient Greece,
the earliest being a yearly tribute to Rhea, who was the mother of
all the gods, and boy was she tired.
The Roman festival of Hilaria, which must have been very funny,
dates back to 250 B.C. and honored the goddess Magna Mater, who was
Alma Mater’s cousin. (No she wasn’t. I made that up.) To honor Magna
Mater (“Great Mother” in Latin) a temple was built on Rome’s Palatine
Hill, where people would bring gifts to offer Maggie on the big day.
A holiday called “Mothering Sunday” popped up in England in the
1600s, celebrated on the fourth Sunday of Lent to honor England’s
mummys, which sound like Egypt’s mummies except they’re different.
But in this country, it all started with Anna M. Jarvis. Jarvis
was born in 1864, at the close of the Civil War, and died in 1948,
the year I was born. The idea that someone who was born during the
Civil War lived until the year I was born is neither lost on me nor
very amusing, I might add.
At any rate, Annie’s was a hard-knocks life. (Some of you got
that, some of you didn’t.) The daughter of a strict Methodist
minister, she graduated from the Female Seminary in Wheeling, W.Va.
and taught Sunday School in the Andrews Methodist Church in Grafton
for 20 years. She never married and was extremely attached to her
mother, Anna Reese Jarvis, who worked tirelessly for mothers who had
lost sons in the Civil War.
Mrs. Jarvis died in May 1905. With her father already gone, Anna
Jarvis was left alone to care for her blind sister, Elsinore.
This is depressing me, and I didn’t know the woman, other than
that she died in 1948, which I still resent. I was going to say
Elsinore’s last wish was to have her ashes scattered over a lake
somewhere in the west, but I’m not.
Anna Jarvis missed her mother something awful and started a
national letter-writing campaign in 1907 to make Mother’s Day a
holiday across the land. In 1914, President Woodrow Wilson actually
did something, to everyone’s surprise, when he signed a bill
proclaiming the second Sunday in May “Mother’s Day and You Better
Call Her” forever more.
But as the years passed, Anna Jarvis’ crusade took a strange turn.
She became more and more upset about the commercialization of
Mother’s Day. She got some more paper, refilled her pen and sent a
blizzard of letters to ministers, politicians and editors far and
wide.
She was particularly irked with florists.
“What will you do to rout charlatans, bandits, pirates,
racketeers, kidnappers and other termites,” she wrote, “that would
undermine with their greed one of the finest, noblest and truest
movements and celebrations?”
Two things, Annie -- no more caffeine, and how did termites get
involved in this?
In the 1930s, the Postal Service announced a Mother’s Day stamp
featuring Whistler’s Mother and a vase of white carnations, and Anna
Jarvis went postal. She campaigned day in and day out against the
stamp, and actually convinced President Roosevelt to remove the words
“Mother’s Day” from the stamp, although he wouldn’t budge on the
white carnations.
When Eleanor Roosevelt joined a group called American War Mothers,
which sold white carnations for Mother’s Day to raise funds -- Anna
Jarvis started going through two reams of paper a day. She crashed a
meeting of the American War Mothers, shouting about the desecration
of Mother’s Day. She had to be forcefully removed by the police.
According to the “Florists Review,” a floral industry trade
journal, “Miss Jarvis was completely squelched.”
But even though they sparred for years, the floral industry never
forgot their debt to Anna Jarvis for creating Mother’s Day. She spent
the last months of her life alone and penniless in a nursing home.
Unknown to her, a floral industry trade group paid all her medical
and nursing home expenses in full.
So there you have it, the strange saga of Anna Jarvis, Magna Mater
and Rhea and the Mummys, which was a rock group in the ‘70s, I think.
If you’re lucky enough to still have your mom, seize the day. Do
everything you can, in the biggest way possible.
Just don’t sing that song ... “M” is for the many things she gave
me. “O” means only that she’s growing old.” It’s just too sappy, even
for Mother’s Day.
I gotta go.
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