
Pfingstmontag: Why is Monday June 9th a public holiday in Germany?
Workers in Germany will no doubt be happy that Pfingstmontag (Whit Monday) is a public holiday in Germany, which falls this year on Monday June 9th.
But its religious significance is less clear than other religious
Feiertage
(public holidays) like Christmas or Easter.
Pentecost, which takes place 49 days after Easter Sunday (this year on June 8th), commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles while they were in Jerusalem.
Whit Monday originates from the Octave of Pentecost. This was ended by the liturgical reform of the Second Vatican Council in 1969. An octave refers to the eight days following a Christian festival.
Like other religious holidays such as – Easter Monday and Boxing Day – Whit Monday extends the feast day, emphasising how important it is to the Church. It is primarily a Catholic holiday but is observed nationwide.
But Whit Monday is not without controversy. Lacking as much significance as other religious holidays, it has been abolished in Italy, Sweden, the UK, and Ireland, though France reinstated it after briefly using it as an unpaid workday.
Advertisement
In 2005, a push by German business associations to scrap the holiday failed.
Today, it remains a
Feiertag
in every federal state, though most people enjoy the day off without celebrating its religious aspects.
Still, Pentecost is observed with distinctive customs in some areas.
In Frankfurt, the Wäldchestag fair takes place on the Tuesday after Pentecost.
In Marwede, a straw figure called the Pfingstkarl is burned and then doused with beer.
And in some places, the night from Sunday to Monday is known as an 'unrest night,' traditionally associated with pranks.
Which public holidays are coming up in Germany in 2025?
June 9th (nationwide): Whit Monday
June 19th (Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland; parts of Saxony and Thuringia*): Corpus Christi
Predictably Byzantine rules determine which parts of these state celebrate the holidays, including, incredibly, that you are entitled to celebrate Corpus Christi in Saxony if your place of work, not your home, is located in a municipality which observes the holiday. The
Deutsche Gewerkschaftsbund
has a comprehensive list of concerned areas.
August 15th (Saarland, parts of Bavaria*): Assumption Day
September 20th (Thuringia): World Children's Day
October 3rd (nationwide): German Unity Day
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Local Germany
3 days ago
- Local Germany
Pfingstmontag: Why is Monday June 9th a public holiday in Germany?
Workers in Germany will no doubt be happy that Pfingstmontag (Whit Monday) is a public holiday in Germany, which falls this year on Monday June 9th. But its religious significance is less clear than other religious Feiertage (public holidays) like Christmas or Easter. Pentecost, which takes place 49 days after Easter Sunday (this year on June 8th), commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles while they were in Jerusalem. Whit Monday originates from the Octave of Pentecost. This was ended by the liturgical reform of the Second Vatican Council in 1969. An octave refers to the eight days following a Christian festival. Like other religious holidays such as – Easter Monday and Boxing Day – Whit Monday extends the feast day, emphasising how important it is to the Church. It is primarily a Catholic holiday but is observed nationwide. But Whit Monday is not without controversy. Lacking as much significance as other religious holidays, it has been abolished in Italy, Sweden, the UK, and Ireland, though France reinstated it after briefly using it as an unpaid workday. Advertisement In 2005, a push by German business associations to scrap the holiday failed. Today, it remains a Feiertag in every federal state, though most people enjoy the day off without celebrating its religious aspects. Still, Pentecost is observed with distinctive customs in some areas. In Frankfurt, the Wäldchestag fair takes place on the Tuesday after Pentecost. In Marwede, a straw figure called the Pfingstkarl is burned and then doused with beer. And in some places, the night from Sunday to Monday is known as an 'unrest night,' traditionally associated with pranks. Which public holidays are coming up in Germany in 2025? June 9th (nationwide): Whit Monday June 19th (Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland; parts of Saxony and Thuringia*): Corpus Christi Predictably Byzantine rules determine which parts of these state celebrate the holidays, including, incredibly, that you are entitled to celebrate Corpus Christi in Saxony if your place of work, not your home, is located in a municipality which observes the holiday. The Deutsche Gewerkschaftsbund has a comprehensive list of concerned areas. August 15th (Saarland, parts of Bavaria*): Assumption Day September 20th (Thuringia): World Children's Day October 3rd (nationwide): German Unity Day


Int'l Business Times
22-05-2025
- Int'l Business Times
Pope's Call To Tame AI Sets Tone For Christian Leaders
Pope Leo XIV singled out the challenges of artificial intelligence as he took office this month, underscoring religious leaders' hopes to influence a technology freighted with both vast hopes and apocalyptic fears. The pope was cited by Protestant American Evangelical leaders who launched an open letter to President Donald Trump published Wednesday, calling for an "AI revolution accelerating responsibly" while warning of "potential peril". Leo XIV told cardinals on May 10 that he had taken his papal name in honour of Leo XIII (1878-1903). He had "addressed the social question in the context of the first great industrial revolution", said the pope. Today, "the Church offers to everyone the treasury of her social teaching in response to another industrial revolution and to developments in the field of artificial intelligence," he added. Wednesday's letter from the Evangelicals called for the development of "powerful AI tools that help cure diseases and solve practical problems". But it also warned of "autonomous smarter-than-human machines that nobody knows how to control" -- echoing the language of Silicon Valley's so-called "AI doomers". Leo's highlighting of AI follows years of interventions at different levels of the Catholic Church, said Paolo Benanti, 51, a priest with a PhD in engineering. Benanti has advised both the Vatican and the Italian government on technology. The late pope, Francis, wove his thinking about technology and AI into wider reflections on climate change and society. In a January speech, he cited "concerns about intellectual property rights, the job security of millions of people, the need to respect privacy and protect the environment" as well as misinformation. Such 21st-Century challenges animated Francis's 2015 remark that "we are not living an epoch of change so much as an epochal change", Benanti told AFP. And he was at pains to say that the Vatican was not looking to hold back progress. "Look at the huge improvement that AI can produce" in cases like assisting medical diagnosis in regions without enough doctors, he said. "AI could be a wonderful tool but could be weaponised... this is something that could happen with every kind of technology, from the hammer... up to nuclear power," Benanti added. Francis called for crafting a new "algor-ethics" (a portmanteau of "algorithm" and "ethics") to govern emerging artificial intelligence. One key moral concept in Church documents about technology is upholding "human dignity". This means avoiding "some kind of system that simply cannot recognise the uniqueness of the human being and respect it," Benanti said. He gave the hypothetical example of an automated process for deciding on asylum applications "based on correlation with other data and not with your own and unique story". Such technology would recall the Holocaust, "the darkest page of the last century" when "one piece of data" on whether a person was Jewish or not could condemn them, Benanti said. In the world of work, the friar hopes to see "human-compatible AI innovation", with people "putting something unique inside the process". Humans should "remain in a position to produce value" rather than being relegated to filling in the gaps around machine capabilities, he urged. Francis said in January last year that "highly sophisticated machines that act as a support for thinking... can be abused by the primordial temptation to become like God without God". "It's very perilous when individuals assume for themselves godlike powers, to make decisions for the rest of us," agreed Reverend Johnnie Moore, President of the US-based Congress of Christian Leaders and a lead signatory of Wednesday's open letter. Rather than allowing tech bosses and scientists to set the terms of the future, leaders should "go to the well" of religious thought's "compounding wisdom over the centuries" to help chart the course, he told AFP by phone from Washington. Where Pope Leo highlighted "new challenges for the defence of human dignity, justice and labour" from artificial intelligence, the Evangelical leaders went further. They quoted OpenAI chief Sam Altman's 2015 remark that "AI will most likely lead to the end of the world -- but in the meantime, there'll be great companies". "The current risk equation is just way too high to be tolerable," Moore said. "We have to reduce the risk to human beings in this process."


Int'l Business Times
18-05-2025
- Int'l Business Times
First US Pope Leo XIV Takes To Popemobile Ahead Of Inaugural Mass
Pope Leo XIV, the first US pontiff, made his debut tour of St Peter's Square on Sunday in a popemobile, greeting tens of thousands of pilgrims and well-wishers ahead of his inauguration mass. Chicago-born Robert Francis Prevost, who became head of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics on May 8, stood in the white vehicle as it drove through cheering crowds, smiling, waving and making the sign of the cross. US Vice President JD Vance is among the hundreds of dignitaries due to attend the inauguration mass that begins at 10:00 am (0800 GMT). Leo will preside over the ceremony rich in rites and symbols, where he will receive his special papal ring before giving a homily that will set the tone for his papacy. After spending two decades as a missionary in Peru, the 69-year-old is unknown to many Catholics, but during the past week he has offered glimpses of the kind of leader he will be. In meetings with journalists, clergy and diplomats, he repeatedly called for peace in a world full of conflicts and defended social justice. He also emphasised traditional Catholic values, including the importance of a family built around a "stable union of a man and a woman", and defended the rights of the unborn. Inacia Lisboa, 71, originally from Cape Verde but who lives in Rome, said she got up early to get a good spot to see a man she said had already "entered my heart". Asked what she wanted to hear from him, she told AFP: "The first thing is that he prays for us all, for peace in the world -- we need it so much." Leo's elevation has sparked huge enthusiasm in the United States, which is being represented on Sunday by Vance, who converted to Catholicism in 2019, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, also a Catholic. Before becoming pope, the new pontiff on his personal X account reposted criticism of President Donald Trump's administration over its approach to migration and also pilloried Vance, but the account is no longer accessible. Vance was the last world leader to meet with Pope Francis, the day before the Argentine died on April 21 after 12 years as pontiff. Other notable guests expected include Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky -- who memorably met Trump in St Peter's Basilica at Francis's funeral -- and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. Peruvian President Dina Boluarte is also on the list provided by the Vatican, along with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Israeli President Isaac Herzog, Colombia's Gustavo Petro and a host of European royals. Italian authorities have deployed thousands of security officers for the event, alongside snipers on rooftops and anti-drone operations. Leo XIV was elected the 267th pope on May 8 after a secret conclave vote of cardinals that lasted less than 24 hours. Succeeding the charismatic but impulsive Francis, he takes over a Church still battling the fallout of the clerical child abuse scandal, and trying to adapt to the modern world. Modernity is not the concern on Sunday, however. Although no pope has been crowned during an inauguration mass since Paul VI in 1963, the event is still a grand affair steeped in tradition. Leo will begin by visiting the tomb of Saint Peter -- who in the Christian tradition was one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus Christ, and the first pope -- located under the altar of the basilica that bears his name. Leo will then receive the pontifical emblems -- the pallium, a strip of cloth worn over the chasuble, his robe and the fisherman's ring, which is forged anew for each pope and which he will wear on his finger until he dies, when it will be destroyed. With other cardinals and clergy, the pope will walk in procession into St Peter's Square, where large screens will display the proceedings to the crowds. At the end of the ceremony, the pope will greet the delegations of heads of state, though it is not clear if any of them will also be accorded a one-to-one private audience. US Vice President JD Vance, who is attending Leo's inauguration, was the last world leader to meet Pope Francis AFP Pope Leo XIV is the first American in the role but he has spent much of his life in Peru AFP Pope Leo XIV greets the crowd from the popemobile before a Holy mass for the beginning of his pontificate AFP