Welcome fellow Wild Rose Press author, Cherie Le Claire!


So happy to welcome back Cherie Le Clare to my website, fabulous author, wonderful lady and best of all, it's Cherie's birthday today!

Many happy returns!!!

Why do we celebrate Easter?

It’s my birthday today, which set me thinking about annual traditions.

Easter has been and gone for another year, but unless you had a Christian upbringing, or attend a Christian church, you may well be wondering why we celebrate Easter. Maybe it’s merely a good excuse to munch on chocolate eggs and hot cross buns, and have a long weekend(in New Zealand, where I live, we have two public holidays – Good Friday and Easter Monday).

Easter actually began as a pagan tradition, with the celebration of Eastre, the Anglo-Saxon goddess of early Spring. The hare and the egg were Goddess Eastre’s symbols of fertility and new life, as in the hare’s ability to breed, and as in the chick bursting from the shell as representation of new life.

This pagan festival of Spring was transferred, when pagans converted to Christianity, to the observance of Jesus’ death (Good Friday) and celebration of his resurrection (Easter Sunday).

By the 19th century, the White Easter Hare had transformed into the Easter Rabbit, and then became the Easter Bunny, which we know it as today.

Did you know that Germany, back in the 1800s, was the first country to make an edible Easter Bunny? These treats were made out of pastry and sugar. It’s amazing how a good idea spreads throughout the world, isn’t it?

My mother’s tradition every Easter was to toast Hot Cross Buns for us as a special Good Friday breakfast – mmmm, dripping with melted butter – yum! And then we’d have to wait till Sunday morning for the Chocolate Easter Eggs – which we’d quickly gobble up before heading out to Sunday School and church. My favourites have always been the chocolate marshmallow eggs (unique to New Zealand?)Hollow chocolate bunnies and eggs are yummy, too.

But, to return to my opening paragraph, what significance is the Easter holiday in an increasingly secular society? It doesn’t even make sense as a pagan tradition of the passing of Winter, on this side of the world – New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific Islands – because, at this time of the year, we are in Autumn, not Spring!

Importing other cultural festivities doesn’t seem logical sometimes – the American tradition of Halloween is a perfect example on this side of the globe. October, for us, means Springtime, not Autumn/Fall and the arrival of Winter. But, of course, the kids get excited about Trick and Treating even if it is virtually meaningless to them.


I’ll leave you with a tale to ponder – a supreme example of someone blindly following tradition without stopping to question why. “Ann’s mother always slices a corner off the pot roast before cooking it. Why do you do that? Ann asks. Because that’s what your grandmother does. But why? Ann asks. I don’t know, replies her mother. We’ll ask Granny. And Granny says, Because my pot is too small to fit the whole roast in, so I chop a corner off the meat to make it fit.”

And the moral of the story is? I’ll leave that for you to work out…


Copyright. Cherie Le Clare. 2011

Win free books throughout April and May, to celebrate my new release KIWI KISS, on my blog at www.cherieleclare.com

Purchase KIWI KISS at www.thewildrosepress.com

Interesting post, Cherie... and even though I have told you this privately, I am insanely jealous over your cover, it is GORGEOUS!!

Anyway, back to your post. For me the moral of the story is, think for yourself and not to blindly follow other 'just because'. I can guarantee all the great visionaries and successes of the world, past and present, took action on their own thoughts and beliefs rather than others. What do you think?

Looking forward to reading your thoughts!


8 comments

  1. Very interesting, Cherie, and a good story to end it on - we need to follow our own heart and convictions. I agree with Rachel about that lovely cover!

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  2. Thank you Rosemary and Rachel. It is a nice cover, I agree. Am hoping it brings a nice bunch of sales, too!
    Glad you enjoyed the article - it takes a brave person to defy tradition sometimes - such as Chinese footbinding which went on for centuries before anyone protested; and sadly, the modern equivalent in some parts of the world: female circumcision.

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  3. LOL, loved the story. That would be something that I would do. I did not know that Easter started out as a Pagan holiday and I ALWAYS wondered how the egg and the bunny came into play. Thanks so much for posting, I had a really good time reading this blog post. I hope you had a very happy Easter.

    Val

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  4. Hope you had a happy Easter too, Val. Thanks for your comment. And all best with your studies!

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  5. PS: Val, I see that you also review books. Any chance of you reviewing mine? I'd like that.

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  6. Hi Cherie and Rachel,

    Great post! And I get to say happy birthday again to you as its still your birthday overseas - Yay! : )

    Don't you love the fact that as writers, we often think outside the square anyway and tend to do things our own way rather than follow the crowd. That can make us either very difficult to live with or a lot of fun!

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  7. Happy late birthday, Cherie! Good story about the pot roast - I'm sure I carry over a lot of cooking habits just because "Mum used to do it that way."

    It is hard to make sense of some of the traditional holidays. Kids so often seem to think Christmas is about presents and Easter's about chocolate. Trouble is, I like presents and chocolate too so the balancing act can get tricky! (My profile is calling me 'Welcome' instead of Leigh D'Ansey. Curious).

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  8. Hello LaVerne and "Welcome" - you sound like a welcoming sort of lady, Leigh, so that works ok - weird though, huh?
    Thanks for your comments, fellow kiwis:)
    One more sleep till the Royal Wedding...I'm looking forward to it but I see that some Britons are questioning the validity of the tradition of Royalty. Change is always difficult - we truly are creatures of habit.

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