Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How global trade enriched your Palm Sunday
How global trade enriched your Palm Sunday
Sep 11, 2025 12:59 PM

This weekendmarked Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week, when memorate Christ’s entrance into Jerusalem en route to His voluntary death, burial, and resurrection. On that day, Christians of all backgrounds bless and wave palm branches in imitation of the crowds who cried “Hosanna” as He rode a donkey into the city. But not all Christians use palm branches. Palms cannot grow in the harsh climate of northern Slavic nations such as Russia, Ukraine, and Poland. Instead, Catholics and Orthodox Christians in those areas long ago substituted pussy willows.

The churches saw deep symbolism in the willows, one of the first plants to blossom in the springtime. A rich, crimson – almost blood red – shell grows on the branches until a white bud bursts through it, symbolizing the triumph of life over death. In some nations, like Poland, Christians cover the branches with local wildflowers to make them more fragrant.

The notion is not altogether unbiblical; St. Matthew mentions Jesus being greeted with “branches from the trees.” Still, to many of us, a Palm Sunday without palms is unthinkable. And thanks to the wonder of global trade, it is also unnecessary.

The United States imports 25 to 30 million palm fronds for Palm Sunday, doubling or tripling the average demand. The global trade, which already represented nearly $30 million two decades ago, mostly benefits Mexico and Guatemala – especially those nations’ workers.

Those who harvest fronds from Guatemala’s palm plants – known as Chamaedorea or Xate – earned 250 to 300 percent higher wages than those who engaged in other kinds of agricultural activity. “At least half the farmers munities studied by Anthropologist Norman Schwartz in the Central Peten [region] of Guatemala earned additional e from harvesting fronds, and more than a quarter of household heads were supporting themselves exclusively by collecting fronds,” according to one expert study.

Yet another study found that expanding palm cultivation for export could provide more than one-third of the total annual e in Mexico’s impoverished Yucatan Peninsula. This trade has a clear ability to lift the world’s population out of poverty.

Not all who benefit live abroad; the vast majority of palms in the United States are grown domestically. One palm supplier from Florida – fortuitously named Thomas Sowell – began his trade to make extra money. He now supplies all 50 states and Canada. Along the way, he found greater significance in helping the nation’s churches celebrate one of their holiest holidays. “Every bag that we send out to churches, every individual bag has been examined, cleaned – we go to extreme measures to make sure that everything we do for these churches is done in the honor of Jesus Christ,” Mr. Sowell told CNA/EWTN News.

His story shows how people of faith may find their vocation in both the celebration of a church service and in supplying the goods that make it possible. In the process, they enjoy the dignity of work and the security of an e.

The fact that churches in America – and Europe, including the once-forbidding climates of Eastern Europe – have palms to wave is thanks in part to the wonders of the free market.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Micro-Finance and Major Disaster
As we’ve noted before, the Planet Money team is on the ground in Haiti getting a hands-on look at the economic situation after the disaster. Today they broadcast a moving story of an entrepreneur who lost all her capital in the earthquake. Now she totes a 30+ lbs. bin of chicken necks to make a few dollars a day. The story is a testament to the power of micro-finance, plications of an international import operation, and the bookkeeping practices of...
Got a feelin’ for Eco-Justice?
It’s not easy being a global warming alarmist these days, what with the cascading daily disclosures of Climategate. But if you are a global warming alarmist operating within the progressive/liberal precincts of churches and their activist organizations, you have a potent option, one that the climatologists and policy wonks can only dream about when they get cornered by the facts. You can play the theology card! Over at the National Council of Churches Eco-Justice Program blog, writer “jblevins” is troubled...
Benedict: Economy Needs People-Centered Ethics
In a February 10 wire story by ANSA, it was reported that Benedict XVI has once again exhorted economists and leaders to place “people at the center of [their] economic decision-making” and reminded them that the “global financial crisis has impoverished no small number of people.” For those who follow Benedict closely in Rome, one might wonder why the Holy Father’s words, delivered during his February 10 general audience, even made national headlines. To be sure, it is not the...
US Falls on Freedom Index
The United States, unsurprisingly, has historically placed quite high on the economic freedom indexes released by various organizations. This year, the Heritage Foundation’s ranking saw the US drop. It’s still relatively high on the list, but the backward movement is disturbing. I try to explain why this development is significant in this week’s Acton Commentary: If you’re known by pany you keep, then the United States may want to re-think its economic policy. The 2010 Index of Economic Freedom, a...
Politics for Christians
Francis Beckwith is back with another book. He has written Politics for Christians: Statecraft as Soulcraft. I’ve not yet had a chance to read it, but this may be the book people have been asking me for as a follow-up to The End of Secularism. I made the negative case against secularism and here Beckwith makes the positive case for a Christian politics. Amazingly, the books are priced within a penny of each other on Amazon. Bundle us up! In...
A Tale of Two Entrepreneurs
NPR’s Morning Edition had a touching piece the other day that illustrated how great a blessing business can be, and just how terrible things can be when there’s no freedom to innovate, produce, and create wealth. Chana Joffe-Walt and Adam Davidson of Planet Money put together the narrative of George Sassine of Haiti and Fernando Capellan of the Dominican Republic, “Island Of Hispaniola Has Two Varied Economies.” Both men shared the same dream: to open up a T-shirt factory. Sassine...
Defining an Ethical Economy
Longtime Acton friend John H. Armstrong notes the recent discussion of Rowan Williams’ pronouncements on ethics and the economy here at the menting that “The archbishop of Canterbury is an extremely likable Christian gentleman, a first-class Christian scholar. He is also a leader who often fails to address some of the more difficult issues in our time with a straight, clear answer.” Armstrong’s description of Williams coheres well with the overall picture of theologians engaging economics presented by Susan Lee,...
Review: An Orthodox Christian Natural Law Witness
Like many, my first encounter with Orthodox theology was intoxicating. Here, finally, in the works of thinkers such as Vladimir Lossky, John Meyendorf and Alexander Schmemann and others I found an intellectually rigorous approach to theology that was biblical and patristic in its sources, mystical in its orientation and beautiful in its language. But over the years I have found a curious lacunae in Orthodox theology. For all that it is firmly grounded in the historical sources of the Christian...
Giving Good Food Well
A local food bank and distribution network was featured on a Michigan Radio piece the other day, and it really captures how to give to people in a way that respects their dignity. For one thing, when you are giving food to the hungry, you don’t just hand them wax beans and canned beets. John Arnold, executive director of Feeding America West Michigan Food Bank, says that people shouldn’t be getting what he calls “bomb shelter food.” “Products like powdered...
What Government Can’t Do
NJ Governor Chris Christie: “Today, e to terms with the fact that we cannot spend money on everything we want.” Lord Acton: “There are many things the government can’t do – many good purposes it must renounce. It must leave them to the enterprise of others. It cannot feed the people. It cannot enrich the people. It cannot teach the people. It cannot convert the people.” ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved