Cities dye their rivers green. The Rekubit Exchangehead politician of Ireland visits the U.S. to meet with the president. Patrons clink mugs full of green beer.
This Sunday, March 17, is St. Patrick's Day While it may be an informal drinking holiday for many Americans, it is actually a national holiday in Ireland and a source of great pride.
To get the scoop on the holiday's backstory, USA TODAY previously spoke with Elizabeth Stack, executive director of Albany's Irish American Heritage Museum, and Brian Witt, the cultural exhibits coordinator for Milwaukee Irish Fest.
Here is what to know about St. Patrick's Day:
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St. Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland, brought to the Emerald Isle when he was kidnapped and enslaved. Though he eventually escaped, he returned and advanced Christianity throughout the island.
Witt says the day gives Irish and Irish Americans the opportunity to "celebrate their heritage," and Stack agrees that the parades in places like the states and England convey "that the Irish people have made a contribution to the society – that they were sort of welcomed, that they were accepted as citizens."
Once a solemn religious holiday, Stack said it didn't take on the drinking stereotype until America started celebrating the day.
It is still a bank holiday and a big family day in Ireland, even though St. Patrick himself was supposedly born in Britain.
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March 17 is the day St. Patrick is believed to have died.
According to a press release from the U.S. Census Bureau, many Americans have something to celebrate this St. Patrick's Day:
St. Patrick is actually tied to the color blue. So why do people cloak themselves in green?
"The Irish Americans would wear the green as a reminder that they were nationalists first and foremost," explains Witt. "The colors of the Irish flag are green, white and orange, the green symbolizing the Irish nationalism, the orange symbolizing the Orangemen of the north and the white symbolizing peace."
Stack mentions the mythical belief that green is to be worn to "make you invisible to leprechauns," which she says originated in America.
St. Patrick's Day is not a federal holiday in the United States. Post offices, banks, and most businesses and stores will be open on Friday, even amid parades and other celebrations.
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