Easter

I still need to buy a couple of planks for my outside shower. Although it’s sealed up there are a few ‘peeping’ holes. I seriously doubt anyone can see in there but it’s the whole psychological aspect that through these holes I can see out. That fact was presented to me this morning when I was taking my shower and I heard someone in a yard next to mine coughing. Or coughed. Regardless being half deaf if I could hear it it was fairly close. It’s a moment like that that I became very aware that I was standing nude outside. So it’s off to the depot this weekend for more supplies.

A while back I read a book by Neil Gaiman by the name of ‘American Gods’. I was vastly pleased with the book considering it was the fact it was the first time I had read this guy’s work. One of the characters in the book was Easter a pagan god who was still in ‘existence’ because Christians adopted and worshipped a pagan goddess or more specifically her holiday. Thinking about this on the way to work this morning I peeked at wikipedia to see if there was any truth to that.

The answer is ‘maybe’. Eostre was an Anglo-Saxon (specifically German) goddess of fertility. (Why does it always seem most ancient gods were fertility. If people were not so worried about breeding perhaps we would not have the population problem we have today.) The existence of this Goddess was recorded by a monk named Bede around 600-700 AD. Bede wrote pretty much the first recorded history of the Anglo-Saxons and he notes in his book that her worship had pretty much died out by time he wrote it down.

The next time any mention of this goddess does not show up until the late 1700’s when Jacob Grimm of the fairytale fame wrote down a number of old Germanic oral traditions that included several stories that contained Eostre references. Modern day Wiccans and pagan offshoots like to incorporate Eostre as part of their celebration of the spring equinox. Since modern wicca is a mish-mash of old gods that look cool cobbled together much of their Eostre rituals and references come not from the monk Bede but from Jacob Grimm. Bede never mentioned anything about the spring equinox in association to this goddess. So like many other parts of their religion Wiccans and pagans belief system is literally based on fairy tales.

Christendom then overwashed the Anglo-Saxons and the Germans hiked up their lederhosen and kicked out the old goddess. Like many Christian holidays they took the day the people were already celebrating and tacked a new name to it. There has been some speculation that the bunnies and eggs that are associated with Easter are actually left-overs from the fertility goddess. Because bunnies hump a lot and make lots of little bunnies they are considered a fertility good luck charm.

This made wonder if that was the origins of the rabbit-foot lucky charm. However upon looking that up the rabbit foot was actually from Voodoo. And for it to be lucky it had to be the left foot and you had to shoot it in a graveyard as well. With a silver bullet to boot. No wonder the rabbit foot I got at South of the Border never brought me any luck.



Have a happy Easter everyone.






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