not only is it independence day in finland, but it's st nicholas day too O: we don't celebrate that in norway, but czech people do - so we have a tradition of gathering the czech community in trondheim to do it every year. except the czech community seems to grow bigger for every year - and not all the people are czech, most of the people who moved here have, like my mom, married a norwegian person. there are also some slovakians and uh, a german person? and there are so many small kids, too... there was a wall of noise so i spent most of my time hiding in an empty room to play pokemon. I guess the half-czech kids my age have stopped coming to Mikuláš.
ANYWAY, we celebrate Mikuláš by having st nicholas himself appear, along with an angel and a devil. He carries a book that says all the good and bad deeds of children. JUDGEMENT DAY. the kids hear from him what they've done well and what they need to improve, and if they sing a song they get candy. If they're really bad, the devil will take them in his sack and carry them off to hell. Of course, all the children get candy, but most also get a potato or a piece of coal in their stocking as well. The children are very young and they are usually absolutely
terrified of the devil ahaha ha. the devil is usually dressed in black wooly things and is covered in soot and has a rattly chain. I was asked to be the angel (being the devil is way more fun) so my job was to try to make the kids less terrified. not sure if it worked very well^^" I'm probably gonna post pics of angel haiz sometime later
there was also all this delicious food. pizza rolls! mikuláš-shaped ginger breads!! CAKE!! also some pink goop with a finnish name that was pretty okay.
i also spent at least half an hour petting sheep skins because some of our czech friends have a sheep farm and they sell printed skins and they are Soft and Beautiful
Spoiler: sheep skins show