Easter

WhiteWolves64

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I do not know where to put "Easter" in new thread.... And one thing that caught my eyes about Germany!!! ROFLMAO!!!! :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

New Vision Online : Easter Around the World

Easter Around the World
Friday, 6th April, 2007 E-mail article Print article

By Jackie Nake and
George Laghu

EASTER consists of an entire season of festivities summarising the ministry of Jesus Christ. It is celebrated differently in many regions of the world.

The United States Easter is celebrated with sunrise services, bunnies, eggs and baskets. Many Christians wear new clothes, to imitate first-century Christians who dressed in new white gowns after baptism, which generally took place once a year, at Easter.

Among the youth, a new tradition is emerging, where the Jesus menu is the main meal of the season. The meal consists of fish, bread and wine.

The United Kingdom According to a book It’s Time for Easter, by Elizabeth Hough Sechrist and Janette Woolsey, in Suffolk, 12 old women were chosen to play ball on Easter Monday — no one seems to know why.

Another old custom called “lifting” occurred two days after Easter. On Easter Monday, men lifted their wives and women friends in chairs covered with white fabric, decorated with colourful ribbons. The following day, the ladies lifted the gentlemen in the same way. The custom was said to be a memorial of Christ being raised from the grave.

The king or queen washed the feet of the poor on Holy Thursday.The Welsh decorated the graves of family members and friends on Saturday. This was a reminder of the promise of Christ’s resurrection and that Christians will also one day be raised from the dead.

In England, hot cross buns are eaten during the Easter season. The buns have a cross iced on top of them.

France
The church bells are silent from Good Friday to Easter morning. Legend has it that the bells do not ring because they go to Rome and come back bringing gifts. When the bells ring on Easter, children go outside to collect Easter eggs and candy that have “fallen from the sky.”

On Easter Sunday, people dress in their best attire and throng the streets, exchanging greetings.

Celebrations are also marked with the Mardi Gras (fat Tuesday) carnival on the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday. Fat cows are exhibited to emphasise the meaning of carnevarium — a Latin word which means the removal of meat.

Germany
Some Germans think it is good luck to eat green food on Holy Thursday. At one time, some even believed that if they did not eat a green salad, they would turn into donkeys.

Children play a traditional game, rolling eggs on tracks made of sticks. On Easter night, huge festival fires are lit on hilltops.

Italy
In greater Rome, a visitor to the house never refuses the Easter eggs that have been blessed by the priest for this event.
Usually, the eggs are placed in the middle of a sweet bread that has been shaped into a chick, bunny, or doll. Baking this bread is a favourite family activity.

On Holy Saturday in Florence, two white oxen may be seen on the streets, drawing a cart filled with flowers and fireworks — a custom that dates back to the crusades.

The cart stops at the door of the great cathedral, where wires are strung from it to the altar. When it touches the cart, fireworks are ignited. A firebird dashes back to the church. If it returns to the altar before the explosion, all is well. If it does not return, people believe the crops will suffer the following year.

It is also common for people to eat mutton, as a symbol of Jesus’ death as a sacrificial lamb.

Eastern Europe
The practice of colouring and decorating eggs dates back to the Middle Ages in many countries.

In Poland, it became an art form.
Hungarians adorned their eggs with red flowers to symbolise the blood of Jesus.

Egg decorators in Yugoslavia used the letters XV, which stood for christos valkrese of “Christ is risen.”

The Polish also take their food to the priest on Saturday for a blessing. They arrange food on green leaves in a large basket.

Russians celebrate Shrovetide (the week before Easter) with pancakes called blini.

Sweden and Norway
It is customary to bring budding branches from flowering trees into the house. The heat causes the buds to burst open just in time for Easter. Sometimes the branches are made into Easter trees and hung with coloured eggs or feathers. On the night before Easter, children go around in costumes delivering holiday letters and cards. They also set off fireworks.

Greece
People carry lighted candles to midnight services on Easter Eve. The worshippers leave the church with their candles lit. Many believe it is good luck to keep them burning until they reach home.
On Easter Sunday, a special bread called the Bread of Christ, is eaten.

A Greek cross representing the crucifixion is marked on its top crust and the loaf is decorated with Easter eggs.
On Easter Monday, traditional folk dances are performed.

South America
Lent is preceded by a great frolic known as carnival on Shrove Tuesday and is celebrated with parades, band music and dancing.

On Flower Sunday (Palm Sunday), people place palm branches from church behind their doors. They believe this will bring good luck and peace throughout the coming year.

On Holy Thursday, a Last Supper is re-enacted in the church. On Good Friday at 3:00pm, the priest removes the image of Christ from the cross. It is placed in a sepulcher (tomb) and is visited by worshipers until evening.

Uganda
Apart from the church tradition and culture, Ugandans are also developing a culture by including African practices of vigil.

At the Moyo Catholic Church, Christians gather around a bon fire and tell stories about Jesus, as they would about a dead kin.

The archivist of the Archdiocese of Kampala, Rev Fr Joseph Ssali said the symbols of Easter, however, still remain the crucifix (a cross with Jesus on it) or a cross without Jesus.

Rev. John Donkon of the Lutheran church in Uganda said as part of Easter feasts, Lutherans carry a cross on which there is no image of Jesus. “We believe that Jesus has risen and is no longer on the cross,” he said.

Generally, Easter is seen as a time of soul-searching, repentance and mending of relationships.


 
Interesting facts! Thanks for sharing!

Easter in America is on March 23. A bit early but oh well! I got few stuff for my son. :)
 
Interesting facts! Thanks for sharing!

Easter in America is on March 23. A bit early but oh well! I got few stuff for my son. :)

You are very welcome LT... Maybe we all should send Calvin to Germany and if he does not eat a green salad and will turn him into a Donkey??? :giggle: :giggle: J/k hahahahaha
 
Interesting.. Thanks for sharing that with me and everyone else.. :)
 
Interesting facts! Thanks for sharing!

Easter in America is on March 23. A bit early but oh well! I got few stuff for my son. :)
Easter is what we would call a "moveable holiday".

A movable holiday is a holiday that does not repeat annually on the same date or day.

These are not movable holidays. Thanksgiving is always on the last Thursday of November... Christmas Eve/Day is always on December 24th/25th... etc.

Easter falls on a Sunday following 14th day of the first full moon of the northern Spring. However, it's not astronomically correct since it is based on a rule passed many years ago. So, we actually follow a table that was created many years ago.

Code:
Year   Western   Eastern
2000    Apr23     Apr30
2001     - - Apr15 - -
2002    Mar31     May 5
2003    Apr20     Apr27
2004     - - Apr11 - -
2005    Mar27     May 1
2006    Apr16     Apr23
2007     - - Apr 8 - -
2008    Mar23     Apr27
2009    Apr12     Apr19
2010     - - Apr 4 - -
2011     - - Apr24 - -
2012    Apr 8     Apr15
2013    Mar31     May 5
2014     - - Apr20 - -
2015    Apr 5     Apr12
2016    Mar27     May 1
2017     - - Apr16 - -
2018    Apr 1     Apr 8
2019    Apr21     Apr28
2020    Apr12     Apr19
 
very interested about easter around the world

and i notice that germany montion donkey hahah that is funny remain me of Calvin heh
 
Interesting. Thanks for sharing. :)

"Jesus menu"? I never heard of that custom before.
 
Whitewolves, Do you know? that Germany have 2 days Happy eastern (easternsunday and easternmonday), but here have one day. I am not habitat from here, but i will learn for my habitat from different country in US. :)
 
Whitewolves, Do you know? that Germany have 2 days Happy eastern (easternsunday and easternmonday), but here have one day. I am not habitat from here, but i will learn for my habitat from different country in US. :)

Oh I didn't know that... Very interesting tho... Thanks for bring it up that subject... Sunshinelady! :D
 
that so interest story,whitewolves64

but its so traditional Easter every years on April but changes to March makes me so stranges for me!

my boyfriend lives in London,England he have plans with his family for Easter but im not sure have Easter same day or different days makes me think!
 
Whitewolves, Do you know? that Germany have 2 days Happy eastern (easternsunday and easternmonday), but here have one day. I am not habitat from here, but i will learn for my habitat from different country in US. :)

awww :hug:

You forget something is Good Friday... ;)

We will have public holiday for Good Friday on 21st March and Easter Monday on 24th March.

Yes, Germans celebrate Easter Sunday and Monday.
 
Have a look at my thread over German Easter decoration. I made almost all of eggs with color and napkin papers.

http://www.alldeaf.com/pictures-videos/27042-easter-decoration.html


Around the world
http://www.easterbunnys.net/easteraroundtheworld.htm

Germany
Some Germans think it is good luck to eat green food on Holy Thursday. At one time, some even believed that if they did not eat a green salad, they would turn into donkeys.

:lol: This is old German Tradition. Most Germans don't but my hubby was raised to eat green spinach on Thursday before Good Friday. We accept and follow my hubby's way... We ate green spinach, potatoes and poach eggs on Thursdays before Good Friday. We don't eat meat on Good Friday but fish only. My hubby order forelle for his meal to serve with bavaria potato salad. :ugh3: My boys and I will have baked white fishes and then follow evening - wild salmon

I will bake German Easter bread/English Cross bun for Easter Sunday and Monday breakfast... It will be big breakfast bunch (for breakfast/lunch together) - boiled eggs, cheese, smoked ham, fresh pineapple, pain yoghurt/quark, jams, easter bread, cereal, milk... and homemade Easter cake for afternoon coffee... then evening - wild salmon, color eggs, cheese, tuna salad... different rolls...

 
yea.. i got easter stuff for me and my hubby.. i got treat for my cat LOL! oh well.. hehehe..
 
this year, I decorated very simple Easter in the dinner room. I will be in Dallas, Texas to spend time with my son and his girlfriend next weekend. My son has to work those days. We agree to not decoration anything this year.

I notice, I become lost motivation to decorate anything since my husband passed away. I try to go back again when I am ready. ;)
 
awww :hug:

You forget something is Good Friday... ;)

We will have public holiday for Good Friday on 21st March and Easter Monday on 24th March.

Yes, Germans celebrate Easter Sunday and Monday.

yeah, I knew, It should be Good Friday, but In America do have, too. that is why, I don't need explain Whitewolves about Good Friday. In the world know, which country do have Good Friday? :)
I hope everything ok with you. I miss you! :hug:
 
Easter Sunday is considered bigger than Christmas, which I just found out about that a few years ago. Ask a person when they attend church and chances are they will say Easter Sunday and Christmas.

Easter is my favorite Church holiday. :)
 
Spring is coming on Thursday…Yipee !!! Don’t tell anyone but the calendar told me…LOL

Good Friday also. :lol:

i am a bit old now for Easter eggs but i got one already:lol: i'm never too old for chocolate. I got a Galaxy one with a few bars. yummy! :lol: ;)

Happy Easter to eveyone on here! Hope you all have a gooood one! :D
 
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