2013-10-01 12:20:43
By Mark Bosworth Helsinki
The only Finnish word to make it into everyday English is "sauna". But what it
is, and how much it means to Finns, is often misunderstood - and it's
definitely not about flirtation or sex.
In a dimly lit wood panelled room, naked men sit in silence, sweating. One
beats himself repeatedly with birch branches. Another stands, takes a ladle of
water and carefully pours it over the heated stones of the stove in the corner.
There is a hissing noise.
Within seconds a wave of moist heat creeps up around your ankles and over your
legs before enveloping your whole body. Your pores open up and sweat covers you
from head to toe.
This bathing ritual has been performed across Finland for thousands of years,
ever since the first settlers dug a ditch in the ground and heated a pile of
stones. Water was thrown on the hot stones to give off a vapour known as loyly.
Each sauna is considered to have its own character and its own distinctive
loyly. The better the loyly, the more enjoyable the sauna.
Family in a sauna, 1955
Sauna, noun (rhymes with downer)
"An invigorating bath originating in Finland in which the bather is subjected
to hot steam, usually followed by a cold plunge or by being lightly beaten with
birch twigs" - Collins Dictionary
The OED dates its first use in English to 1881 in travel writer Paul Belloni Du
Chaillu's The Land of the Midnight Sun: "One of the most characteristic
institutions of the country is the Sauna."
For those working in the fields in harsh conditions, the sauna provided welcome
relief to wash and soothe aching muscles.
These warm wooden rooms could be used at lower temperatures too, and were at
the heart of the major events of a Finn's life.
Women gave birth in them because the walls of traditional smoke saunas were
lined with naturally bacteria-resistant soot, making them the cleanest room in
the house.
Saunas were also the place for purification rituals before marriage, and the
bodies of the dead were washed and prepared for burial on the wooden benches.
For many Finns the sauna was the holiest room in the house and the one most
closely associated with their wellbeing.
"Finns say the sauna is a poor man's pharmacy," says Pekka Niemi, a 54-year-old
from Helsinki, who spends about three hours a day in the sauna, six days a
week. "If a sick person is not cured by tar, spirits or sauna, then they will
die," he adds, quoting a Finnish proverb. ("Spirits" here means strong alcohol,
while tar was historically used as an antiseptic.)
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Jarmo Lehtola
Sauna helps you to calm down in a modern society where it is never quiet
Jarmo Lehtola
Today, Finland is a nation of 5.3 million people and 3.3 million saunas, found
in homes, offices, factories, sports centres, hotels, ships and deep below the
ground in mines.
While Pekka Niemi's sauna habit may be exceptional, 99% of Finns take at least
one a week, and much more when they visit their summer cottage in the
countryside. Here the pattern of life tends to revolve around the sauna, and a
nearby lake used for cooling off.
Don't imagine, though, that the sauna is purely a place for fun and games. It
certainly would not have been in times gone by.
"Children were taught to behave in a sauna as if they were in church," says
Jarmo Lehtola approvingly. He is from Saunaseura, the Finnish Sauna Society, an
organisation dedicated to upholding and preserving traditional sauna culture.
Founded in 1937, this private club of 4,200 members is based on an island a
15-minute bus ride from central Helsinki. Surrounded by a silver birch forest,
it overlooks the tranquil Baltic Sea.
A sign on the front door instructs you to switch off your mobile phone.
Two men outside Saunaseura At Saunaseura's private sauna near Helsinki
"Sauna is for your mind. It really helps you to calm down in a modern society
where it is never quiet," says Lehtola. "You enter this meditative place. It's
dark and it's usually so hot that you don't want to speak."
Types of sauna in Finland
Smoke sauna (savusauna), 80-160C (176-320F): Known as the original sauna and
mainly found in rural areas. Smoke fills the room as wood is burned in a large
stove. Once up to heat, the fire is allowed to die and smoke is vented via a
hole in the ceiling.
Wood-heated sauna 70-130C (158-266F): Most common type in the countryside.
Stones are placed on a metal stove fired by well-dried birch wood - preferred
for its good smell and long-lasting burn.
Electric sauna 80-105C (176-221F): Most common type as it's the safest and
easiest to heat in homes. An electric stove is activated at the press of a
button. Some apartment blocks have basement saunas that can be booked for
private sessions.
There are some basic rules. No eating or drinking is allowed in the sauna and
if you speak you should not discuss your job, title or religion. Members can
choose between an electric sauna, two wood-burning saunas and three smoke
saunas - all varying in heat and intensity.
Most Finns consider traditional smoke saunas to be the best because of the very
soft loyly they produce. They take about five hours to heat and produce soot
which covers the wooden walls in a thick black layer. The benches are scrubbed
clean but bathers are advised not to lean against the wall, unless they want to
get a sooty back.
Unlike wood-burning saunas, the smoke saunas use a stove without a chimney. The
smoke clears through a small hole in the ceiling before you enter. You can
still smell it - a pleasant sensation which transports your mind to the forest
- but you do not see it or feel it in your eyes.
No clothes or swimsuits are allowed, for the same reason that you would not
wear anything in the bath or shower. Every part of the body needs to be
properly cleaned.
Men and women visit the sauna separately, unless they are members of the same
family. Parents go with their children, and everyone is comfortable with that -
at least until the children become teenagers, when they tend to use the sauna
alone, or with friends.
Men clustered outside a Soho sauna and massage parlour, 1973 The word carried
sexual connotations in 1970s Soho
There is one widespread misconception that Lehtola is very keen to dispel.
"It's nothing to do with sex in Finland," he says emphatically.
Finnish sauna sayings
In the sauna one must conduct himself as one would in church
The sauna is a poor man's pharmacy
If a sick person is not cured by tar, spirits [alcohol] or sauna, then they
will die
A woman looks her most beautiful after the sauna
All men are created equal; but nowhere more so than in a sauna
A house without a sauna is not a home
A sauna without a birch whisk is like food without salt
"But in places like Germany in the 1970s and 80s it was all to do with sex."
Lehtola insists he has never enjoyed a sauna beyond Finland's borders, despite
trying them in many countries.
Truth to tell, he would not be happy with some of Helsinki's public saunas
either. Two - Kotiharju and Arla - date from the 1920s and can be found in
Kallio, a traditionally working class district.
Factory workers who lived in homes without bathing facilities used to visit
these saunas to relax, socialise and be scrubbed clean by washerwomen. Now the
area's new inhabitants - students, artists and adventurous tourists - come to
sweat and drink cold beer.
At Arla, the mood contrasts sharply with Saunaseura's contemplative atmosphere.
The famed Finnish reserve is nowhere to be seen. People seem to enjoy talking
to complete strangers in the nude, as long as it's painfully hot.
And there is alcohol too. Outside in a courtyard people wrapped in towels open
bottles of beer, as steam rises from their bodies.
Watching ice hockey from a sauna box in Hartwall Arena Watching ice hockey from
the warmth of a stadium sauna box in Helsinki
There used to be more than 100 public saunas in Helsinki, with one on almost
every street corner. But the number began to decline in the 1950s when people
began to buy their own homes, complete with private sauna.
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It's very healthy to see different types of breasts and bums
Minna Kurjenluoma
The capital now has just four public saunas. One is the brand new
Kulttuurisauna, or Culture Sauna - the first to have been built in the city for
half a century.
Despite the heat, which can reach up to 160C (320F), Finns insist saunas cool
down tense situations.
The Finnish parliament has its own sauna chamber for MPs to debate in, and all
Finnish diplomatic and consular missions around the world have their own sauna.
Former president and Nobel peace prize laureate Martti Ahtisaari used sauna
diplomacy - diplomatic meetings in the sauna - to move forward negotiations
from Tanzania to Indonesia. During the Cold War, Urho Kekkonen - who served as
president for 26 years - negotiated with Soviet diplomats in the sauna at his
official residence.
Urho Kekkonen's sauna diplomacy
Finnish president Urho Kekkonen with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in 1963
Finland's president from 1956 to 1982 - pictured above left with the USSR's
Nikita Khrushchev - believed in the diplomatic healing powers of the sauna.
When world leaders came to his official residence, Tamminiemi, he would hold
negotiations in the sauna where new and more constructive ideas arose. Kekkonen
believed all were equal in the sauna, and politics could not be hidden up a
sleeve when no sleeves were worn.
Finland trod a diplomatic tightrope during the Cold War. Its neutrality between
East and West was constantly challenged by its giant neighbour, the USSR.
In 1960, Khrushchev attended Kekkonen's 60th birthday. The story goes that
Kekkonen kept Khrushchev in the sauna until 5am, throwing more water on the hot
stones. Soon after, the Soviet government issued a communique expressing
support for Finland's intention to co-operate with the West. It led to Finland
joining the European Free Trade Association in 1971.
Khrushchev was criticised at home. His countrymen said a communist should not
have gone naked into a sauna with a capitalist and non-socialist.
Tamminiemi is now a museum dedicated to Kekkonen. Visitors can even bathe in
his private wooden sauna - for a mere 8,000 euros ( 6,700, $10,800).
All Finns have a favourite sauna.
For 35-year-old Minna Kurjenluoma it is the one her grandfather built for the
family in the 1940s on the shore of a lake next to a forest in north-east
Finland.
Language of the sauna
kiuas - sauna stove
kiuaskivet - stones in/on the sauna stove
loyly - steam, heat, humidity and temperature created by throwing water on hot
stones
kiulu - water bucket, usually made of wood
loylykauha - ladle for throwing water on the stove
vihta/vasta - whisk made of fresh birch branches for beating the body to aid
circulation.
laude - elevated platform to sit on
laudeliina - special towel or disposable paper for sitting on
lakeinen - opening in the ceiling of a smoke sauna where the smoke escapes
during heating
saunatonttu - sauna elf who, if you behave badly in the sauna, will become
angry and burn it down
"It's very traditional and basic. There's no electricity and it's always very
dim so you need to have a couple of candles," she says. "The loyly is the best
because it's very soft, and moist enough because all of the wooden parts of the
sauna are very old and soft."
For Kurjenluoma, the sauna played a significant part in growing up.
"To share a sauna with your grandmother, you've seen the body of an older
female without clothes and I think that is great because you don't see that
often. It's very healthy to see different types of breasts and bums that aren't
shown in the magazines."
After cooling off in the Baltic Sea at Saunaseura, I ask Jarmo Lehtola what
life would be like without saunas.
"There wouldn't be a Finland without the sauna. It's in our DNA," he says.
"If somebody wants to understand what it is to be a Finn then they have to
understand what a sauna is. If you do not experience sauna then you do not
experience Finland."