Today Is A Holiday -- Or Is It?

@MALUSE (69413)
Germany
October 31, 2020 1:10pm CST
Lorries/trucks are not allowed to run on the motorways in Germany on Sundays and holidays. So? Where's the problem? A transport company can certainly keep this in mind and plan the tours of their lorry drivers accordingly (from now on I'm going to use the British term lorry because I learnt it and am used to it). Ha, if it were so easy! Germany is a federal republic consisting of 16 Länder = lands. The Länder can be compared to the different states in the USA althought they're not so independent. But what they can decide for themselves is which religious holidays should also be public holidays - meaning that public life is dead on these days. According to official statistics about 60% of the German population are nominally Christians, 56% are nearly equally divided between Catholics and Protestants. Roughly speaking, Catholics live mainly in the west and south of Germany, Protestants in the east and north. About 34% are unaffiliated with any religion. The remained 10% are divided between small religious groups. Christmas, Easter and Pentecost are celebrated in the whole country. Epiphany, however, only in three of the 16 Länder. (In case you've forgotten or have never known it: Epiphany celebrates the coming of the three Magi to baby Jesus bringing him the gifts of gold, frankinsense and myrrh.) The three Länder are Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria in the south and Sachsen-Anhalt in the east (one of the Länder of the former GDR=German Democratic Republic). Other religious holidays are celebrated in only one or up to five Länder. Why don't all Länder celebrate all religious holidays? Why don't Protestants celebrate, say, Epiphany? The answer is that most holidays are Catholic and that the predominantly Protestant Länder decided to follow the Protestand Work Ethics and rather work than celebrate. It was a political decision, not a religious one. The churches still celebrate the holidays but not with a free day. They've either moved the celebrations on the following Sunday or have the services in the evening of the day in question. What has all this to do with lorry drivers? Well, it can happen that they can drive through Germany from south to north or east to west without any interruption or that they have to stand still on a parking place and wait until the holiday is over depending if they're in a mainly Catholic or Protestant Land. It's possible that you've never wanted to know this. Yet, it may come handy should you ever have to drive a lorry through Germany. Today, for example, Protestants celebrate Reformation Day to remember the religious Reformation in Europe. It commemorates the day when German monk and theologian Martin Luther's proposals were nailed on the doors of a church in 1517 which was the founding act of the Protestant branch of the Christian denomination. It is celebrated in nine of the 16 German Länder - not in the one where I live now, though. Why make it easy if you can make it complicated? ----- The traffic sign means 'Truck ban'.
6 people like this
6 responses
@Tampa_girl7 (48958)
• United States
13 Nov 20
I enjoy learning things that are new to me.
1 person likes this
@Tampa_girl7 (48958)
• United States
13 Nov 20
@MALUSE you never fail to succeed.
@MALUSE (69413)
• Germany
13 Nov 20
@Tampa_girl7 Now I feel my belly tickled as the Germans say! :-)
@MALUSE (69413)
• Germany
13 Nov 20
I do my best to come up with interesting information! :-)
1 person likes this
@LindaOHio (156157)
• United States
1 Nov 20
How interesting that lorries cannot drive on certain holidays.
1 person likes this
@MALUSE (69413)
• Germany
1 Nov 20
You also have laws and rules which apply for only one or a group of states and not for the whole country, haven't you?
1 person likes this
@LindaOHio (156157)
• United States
1 Nov 20
@MALUSE Yes, we do.
@shaggin (71666)
• United States
1 Nov 20
Oh boy truckers would have to pay close attention to all the things considered holidays there.
@shaggin (71666)
• United States
1 Nov 20
@MALUSE definitely not a mistake they would make twice if they couldn’t come back through and had to sit there until the next day.
@MALUSE (69413)
• Germany
1 Nov 20
@shaggin As driving a truck all day long is a hard job, the truckers mostly sleep wherever they park their trucks and wait until they can continue their journey.
1 person likes this
@MALUSE (69413)
• Germany
1 Nov 20
Indeed. But the ones who cross Germany regularly know the rules.
1 person likes this
@xFiacre (12597)
• Ireland
31 Oct 20
@maluse I see you avoided referring to the Magi as wise men - there is nothing in the Bible that says they were men. Nor, however, does it say there were three of them, but we’ll not quibble about it. Your lorry system does seem quite untypical of German good sense.
1 person likes this
@MALUSE (69413)
• Germany
31 Oct 20
The federalistic system of Germany is stronger than good sense.
1 person likes this
@porwest (78761)
• United States
1 Nov 20
Yes. This seems very complicated and highly inefficient and costly for the trucking companies. But those are the rules, I guess they have to abide by them.
@ZedSmart (19753)
• Philippines
31 Oct 20
Here also. Not all holidays are celebrated and observed. Some special holidays are regional/local only.
1 person likes this