Horns and sheepskin: Hungary marks end of winter with Bus'os festivities
This weekend the yearly masked end-of-winter carnival custom, the Bus'o festivities have kicked off in southern Hungary.
The Bus'o festival at Moh'acs in southern Hungary is a six-day carnival in late February to mark the end of winter, named after the bus'os, frightening-looking costumed people (traditionally men) wearing wooden masks and big woolly cloaks.
The festival is multifaceted, including a children's costume contest, a display of mask carvers' art, the arrival of more than 500 bus'os in rowboats on the Danube for a march through the city alongside horse-drawn or motorised fantasy vehicles, the burning of a coffin symbolizing winter on a bonfire in the central square, and feasts and music throughout the city.
The tradition originated with the Croatian minority in Moh'acs, but today the bus'o is a general emblem of the city and a commemoration of the great events of its history. More than a social event, the carnival is an expression of belonging to a city, a social group and a nation. It plays an important social role by offering a chance for self-expression in a communal setting. The arts underlying the festivities are preserved by self-organized groups of bus'os of all cultural backgrounds, many of whom pass on the techniques of mask carving and ritual celebration to younger generations.