Ivan Shmelev on Christmas: Poetry of Childlike Faith and Lost World
Introduction: Christmas as the Essence of "Holy Russia"
For Ivan Sergeyevich Shmelev (1873–1950), Christmas was not just a religious holiday but a central event of the cosmos, the heart of the national and personal cosmos. As one of the deepest Orthodox writers of the Russian emigration, Shmelev created an idealized but piercingly authentic image of pre-revolutionary Russia in his prose, where Christmas served as the main act of annual renewal of the world, a connecting thread between God, nature, family, and people. His descriptions of the holiday are not an ethnographic sketch but a theological and artistic study of the essence of Orthodoxy through the lens of childlike perception.
Origins: Autobiographical Myth in "The Year of Our Lord"
The canonical depiction of Christmas by Shmelev is given in the peak of his creativity — the novel-chronicle "The Year of Our Lord" (1927–1948). The book is structured as a cycle, where the annual cycle of Orthodox holidays is understood through the memories of a little boy, Vanya. The key part is dedicated to "Festivals." Here, Shmelev realized his main creative principle: to show how faith organizes the entire way of life, permeates everyday life, transforming it into being.
Structure of the Christmas myth in Shmelev: from fasting to the EpiphanyShmelev describes not a single day but an entire liturgical and everyday cycle, where spiritual and material are indivisible.
Christmas fasting (Philip's Fast): This is not a time of deprivation but a period of joyful anticipation, "a bright hunger." Domestic activities (meat and fish preparation, baking) are sanctified by the goal of meeting Christmas worthy. Even strict food restrictions are perceived by a child as part of the general, meaningful preparation.
The Eve of Christmas: The culmination of anticipation. Shmelev masterfully conveys the feeling of growing sanctity. The whole day is special: no work, cleaning, p ...
Read more