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Mother’s Day in New York City and Around the World Started as a Celebration of Peace

Mother’s Day celebrates one of the most important people in your life. Our world is changing, but everyone still has a mom.

Mother's Day in New York City (David Castillo/Dreamstime)
Mother’s Day in New York City (David Castillo/Dreamstime)

The Latin way to celebrate is that everyone goes to Mom’s house or a kid’s house and we cook, eat, drink, talk, dance, laugh and that’s about it. We just have a house party.

To make Mom happy, see what’s going on the week before, on Mother’s Day, the week after.



Mother’s Day Around the World

The U.S. celebrates Mother’s Day on the second Sunday in May, but the day is celebrated in different ways around the world.

Traditions can be religious or secular. Some are very commercial. Roses are traditional in some cultures, carnations in others. Mother’s Day is the biggest church-going day after Easter and Christmas.

March Mother’s Day Celebrations

Many Eastern European and West Asian countries celebrate International Women’s Day on March 8 instead of Mother’s Day.

May Mother’s Day Celebrations

Spain, Portugal, Cape Verde, and Romania celebrate on the first Sunday in May.

Most countries celebrate Mother’s Day on the second Sunday in May.

  • North America ~ Canada, Honduras, United States
  • Caribbean ~ Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Grenada, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Tobago
  • South America ~ Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela
  • Africa ~ Botswana, Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe
  • Europe ~ Italy, Netherlands
  • Asia ~ China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan

Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador celebrate on May 10. “Las Mañanitas” is a traditional Mexican song for Mother’s Day.

Paraguay celebrates on May 15 to honor Paraguayan patriot Juana María de Lara.

The Dominican Republic and France celebrate on the last Sunday in May. In France, if the last Sunday is Pentecost, Mother’s Day is the first Sunday in June.

Bolivia celebrates on May 27 to commemorate the Battle of La Coronilla in Cochabamba when women fought in the Bolivian War of Independence in 1812.

Nicaragua celebrates on May 30. President Anastasio Somoza García set the date because it was the birthday of his mother-in-law.

August Mother’s Day Celebrations

Costa Rica celebrates on August 15 with the Assumption of Mary. October Mother’s Day Celebrations

Argentina celebrates on the third Sunday in October.

December Mother’s Day Celebrations

Panama celebrates with the Feast of the Immaculate Conception on December 8. The date was chosen by the wife of Panamanian President Florencio Harmodio Arosemena (1928-1931).



Mother’s Day Origins

Mother’s Day celebrations go back at least to the Greek spring festival of motherhood and fertility celebrating Rhea, the mother of the Olympian gods. There is some logic to this. The world is born again in spring, and a fertile spring sets the tone for the entire year. Many human traditions are aligned with agricultural cycles. In the northern hemisphere, babies conceived in spring will be born during the winter break from agricultural work. That gives mother and child more time to be together at an important moment in a child’s life.

Some Catholics celebrate the Feast of the Immaculate Conception as Mother’s Day on December 8. A European Christian tradition called “Mothering Sunday” on the fourth Sunday of Lent (usually in March) has become Mother’s Day in some countries. International Women’s Day has some elements of mother’s day.

An early attempt at Mother’s Day in the United States was American poet Julia Ward Howe’s call for a “Mother’s Day for Peace” in 1872. She wanted mothers to support disarmament. Mother’s Day as we know it in the United States was started by Anna Jarvis of West Virginia after her mother died in 1905. Her mother had been a peace activist who nursed soldiers of both sides in the American Civil War (1861-1865). Ms. Jarvis promoted Mother’s Day to honor her mother’s work.

In 1914, President Woodrow Wilson designated the second Sunday in May as a national holiday in the United States. However you celebrate, we love you, Mom!


Retrato de una Madre (Portrait of a Mother)

This is a popular Mother’s Day poem in the Spanish-speaking world.

By Ramon Angel Jara (Santiago, Chile, 1852-1917)

Hay una mujer que tiene algo de Dios por la inmensidad de su amor
y mucho de ángel por la incansable solicitud de sus cuidados.

Una mujer que siendo joven tiene la reflexión de una anciana
y en la vejez trabaja con el vigor de la juventud.

Una mujer que si es ignorante descubre los secretos de la vida con más acierto que un sabio
y si es instruida se acomoda a la simplicidad de los niños.

Una mujer que siendo pobre se satisface con la felicidad de los que ama
y siendo rica daría con gusto su tesoro por no sufrir en su corazón la herida de la ingratitud.

Una mujer que siendo vigorosa se estremece con el vagido de un niño
y siendo débil se reviste a veces con la bravura del león.

Una mujer que mientras vive no sabemos estimar porque a su lado todos los dolores se olvidan,
pero después de muerta daríamos todo lo que somos y todo lo que tenemos por mirarla de nuevo un solo instante,
por recibir de ella un solo abrazo, por escuchar un solo acento de sus labios.

De esa mujer no me exijáis el nombre si no queréis que empape con lágrimas vuestro album porque ya la vi pasar en mi camino.

Cuando crezcan vuestros hijos leedles esta página y ellos, cubriendo de besos vuestra frente,
os dirán que un humilde viajero, en pago del suntuoso hospedaje recibido,
ha dejado aquí para vos y para ellos un boceto del retrato de su Madre.


Published May 6, 2025 ~ Updated May 6, 2025.

Filed Under: Bahamian, Barbadian, Belizean, Brazilian, Chadian, Chilean, Chinese, Colombian, Congolese, Cuban, Ecuadorian, Equatoguinean, Ethiopian, FESTIVALS, Filipino, French Canadian, Ghanaian, Grenadian, Guyanese, Honduran, Indian, Italian, Ivorian, Jamaican, Kenyan, Peruvian, Puerto Rico, Saint Lucian, Saint Vincentian, South African, Taiwanese, Tanzanian, Trinidadian, Uruguayan, Venezuelan, Zimbabwean

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