is celebrated: costumes, trick-or-treating, etc.
"Eid il-Burbara or Saint Barbara's Day, is celebrated on December 4 by [Christians] in Lebanon. Children dress up in costume and masks remembering Saint Barbara who disguised herself in many different characters to elude her father and the Romans who were looking for her. The traditional food made on this feast is Burbara, a bowl of boiled wheat grains, pomegranate seeds, raisins, anise and sugar. It is offered to children who go from one house to another in costumes." https://www.olol.org.au/saints/68-st-barbara Burbura is very similar to Koliva, the traditional food made to remember the dead, which is part of the reason it is served. For this tea towel, the deep red is for St Barbara's martyrdom at the hands of pagans in the 3rd Century A.D. The patterns and colors on this tea towel were inspired by an icon of St Barbara.