April 18th, 2025 - Good Friday
April 21st, 2025 - Easter
For all those who celebrate Happy Easter!
Easter is a Christian celebration, usually at the end of March or early April. It is the day when Christians believe that Jesus of Nazareth came back from the dead. Remembering the resurrection of Jesus is a way to renew daily hope that we have victory over sin. Easter follows a period of fasting called Lent, in which many churches set aside time for repentance and remembrance.
Easter, like Christmas, has accumulated many traditions, some have little to do with the religious aspect but derive from folk customs of the past. For many of us, the first image of Easter that comes to mind is the Easter Bunny and Easter eggs. So how did a rabbit distributing eggs become a part of Easter?
There are several reasons for the rabbit, or hare, to be associated with Easter, all of which come through pagan celebrations or beliefs. The most obvious is the hare’s fertility as rabbits usually give birth to a big litter of babies (called kittens), so they became a symbol of new life. Easter comes during spring and celebrates new life. The hare is also an ancient symbol for the moon. The date of Easter depends on the moon. This may have helped the hare to be absorbed into Easter celebrations.
In Southern Germany, the first pastry and candy Easter bunnies became popular at the beginning of the nineteenth century. This custom also crossed the Atlantic, and children (and adults) still eat candy rabbits – particularly chocolate ones – at Easter.
The easter egg hunt, seems to have multiple origins. For example, the New York Times 1899 article notes that in "In Scotland, it used to be the custom on Easter Sunday for young people to go out early in the morning to search for the eggs of various wild fowls for breakfast, it being though most lucky to find them."
Legend has it that the Easter Bunny lays, decorates and hides eggs as they are also a symbol of new life.
For all those who celebrate, Happy Easter!
Sources:
CBS News Story: Easter Bunny