Libmonster ID: ID-2461

May 1 in Russia: From Political Slogans to Quiet Barbecues

How the main Soviet workers' holiday turned into an excuse for the first trips to nature and four consecutive holidays
1890year of the first celebration
1917legalization
1992renaming
120+countries in the world

For most Russians, May 1 is primarily about long weekends, the first truly warm days, and the opportunity to go to the dacha or forest for barbecues. However, behind these peaceful scenes lies a history of over a century — from the bloody clashes in Chicago to mandatory demonstrations in the USSR and the complete transformation of the meaning of the holiday in modern Russia.

Origins: Events in Chicago and the Emergence of Labor Day

The date of May 1 is traced back to the events of 1886 in the American city of Chicago. Workers took to the streets demanding an eight-hour workday. The protest took on a massive scale, and the subsequent clashes with the police resulted in human casualties. In memory of the "Chicago Events" and in honor of the workers' struggle for their rights, the Paris Congress of the II International declared May 1 the Day of International Workers' Solidarity in 1889. The first celebration took place in 1890 in Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Germany, Denmark, Spain, Italy, the United States, France, Sweden, and some other countries.

The Russian Empire and the First May Celebrations

In the Russian Empire, May 1 was long under a ban. The first illegal May Day celebration took place in 1891 in Warsaw, and workers first gathered in Moscow in 1895. The holiday had a strongly political character: revolutionary slogans were heard, the "Marseillaise" was sung, and sometimes there were clashes with the police. Only after the February Revolution of 1917 was May 1 celebrated freely and openly. The Provisional Government even sent troops into the streets of Petrograd, and the columns of demonstrators stretched over 40 kilometers.

The Soviet Canon: The Main Workers' Holiday

In the Soviet Union, May 1 became one of the most significant ideological celebrations. The symbols of the holiday were red flags, portraits of Lenin and Marx, banners with slogans such as "Peace! Labor! May!" and "Long Live May 1!", "Workers of all countries, unite!". After the end of World War II, a military component was added: demonstrators carried portraits of fallen heroes and veterans. The holiday was not just a festive event — it demonstrated the unity of the party and the people, the power of the socialist system.

In Soviet times, a strict tradition of May Day demonstrations was established. In the morning, military vehicles paraded through the square, followed by columns of workers with flags and flowers. Leaders of the party and government stood on the tribunes. Many veterans remember how organizations competed to see who would better decorate their column, come up with a more vivid slogan, or stage a decoration.

The Break of the 1990s: The Disappearance of Ideology

After the collapse of the USSR, the meaning of the holiday began to fade quickly. In 1992, the Supreme Soviet of Russia renamed May 1 to "Spring and Labor Festival," removing the class solidarity and revolutionary undertones from the name. Mass parades became optional, and many factories and factories stopped gathering columns. Political parties — mainly communists and trade unions — continued to go to the streets, but for most citizens, the demonstration turned into an optional ritual that was quickly replaced by dacha affairs.

Modern Traditions: Barbecues and First Plantings

Today, for the vast majority of Russians, May 1 is primarily about rest. Thanks to the transfer of holiday days from May 1-3, a mini-vacation is often formed. People go to nature, barbecue, open the dacha season. In place of red flags have come lawnmowers, shovels, and seedlings. In some cities, there are still parades of trade unions and left-wing parties, but this has already become a marginal, not a mass tradition. At the same time, surveys show that the positive perception of the holiday remains: people appreciate the additional days off and the opportunity to spend time with their families.

Symbols and Attributes: Living Traditions

Despite the de-ideologization, some attributes of May 1 continue to live. Red balloons and the slogan "Peace! Labor! May!" can still be seen on advertising banners. In kindergartens and schools, cards with doves — symbols of peace, and the first spring flowers are still made. In some regions and enterprises, the practice of corporate volunteer days before the holiday is maintained, which echoes the Soviet slogan about labor as a social duty.

The tradition of holding May Day fairs and festivals is particularly noteworthy. In large cities, concerts of amateur groups, fairs of artisans and eco-products are organized. This brings a new, non-ideological component to the holiday.

May 1 in Other Countries

Interestingly, May 1 is celebrated in more than 120 countries in the world. In some places, it is a state holiday with parades (China, Cuba, North Korea), in others — a day of trade union demonstrations (France, Germany, Italy). In the United States, where it all started, Labor Day is moved to the first Monday in September, and May 1 is not a day off. So the Russian version — without rigid ideology, but with barbecues — is one of the most peaceful.


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May 1st in Russia // Dodoma: Tanzania (LIBRARY.TZ). Updated: 01.05.2026. URL: https://library.tz/m/articles/view/May-1st-in-Russia (date of access: 10.05.2026).

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