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Date: March 28th, 2010

Easter

  • The first Easter baskets were made to imitate bird’s nests
  • The custom of giving eggs at Easter time has been traced back to Egyptians where the egg was a symbol of life
  • Each year witnesses the making of nearly 90 million chocolate bunnies
  • In medieval times a festival of egg-throwing was held in church, during which the priest would throw a hard-boiled egg to one of the choir boys. It was then tossed from one choir boy to the next and whoever held the egg when the clock struck 12 was the winner and retained the egg
  • Painting eggs is called Pysanka
  • Americans celebrate Easter with a large Easter egg hunt on the White House Lawn
  • 76% of people prefer to eat the ears off the easter bunny chocolate first
  • The myth of the Easter Bunny, as he is currently portrayed today, actually dates back to an old German tale about a woman who used to decorate eggs and leave them for her children to find. This story was based in a time when a famine was plaguing the land; therefore the eggs were considered a valuable and surprising gift. It is reported that as her children found the eggs they saw a bunny rabbit hopping away. Naturally, the children thought the bunny had left the eggs for them
  • According to Bede, the English monastic historian, the English word Easter comes from the Anglo-Saxon name for the month of April, which was known as “Eostremonath” in the AngloSaxon tongue and since Pascha was most often celebrated in Eostremonath, the English Christians began calling it “Easter”. Bede also notes that the month was named after the Anglo-Saxon goddess Esostre. Rituals related to the goddess Eostre focus on new beginnings, symbolized by the Easter egg, and fertility, which is symbolized by the hare (or Easter bunny)