Christian Post
 
_Peter  Mattice_ 
(http://blogs.christianpost.com/the-pastors-eye/author/peter-mattice/) 

 
April 06th, 2012 
 
The origin of the Easter bunny
 
I gave you the origin of the Easter egg in an earlier post now I give you 
the  origin of the Easter bunny.

 
The Easter Bunny derives from an ancient association of hares, rabbits, and 
 eggs with the fertile season of spring. Since rabbits and hares are 
prolific  breeders that often produce large litters in the springtime, and 
birds 
lay their  eggs around the same time, both have served as symbols of 
fertility in Western  Europe since antiquity. The Easter Bunny combines these 
two 
events in the form  of an egg-laying rabbit that heralds the season of new 
growth and life after the  barren winter. 
The Easter Bunny seems to have started in Germany, where it is discussed in 
 writing as early as the 16th century. German folklorist Jakob Grimm also 
wrote  about German Easter customs in the 19th century, linking them to an 
ancient  holiday known as Ostara, possibly also the name of a pagan goddess. 
In Western  Europe, the Easter Bunny is a hare, called the Osterhase in 
German. Dutch  settlers brought this tradition to the United States in the 18th 
century. 
In Dutch Pennsylvania, the Oschter Haws was a figure that brought holiday  
gifts to children, much like Christ-Kindel, later to become Santa Claus, 
during  Christmas. Children would build nests in their hats or bonnets for the 
hare to  lay her colored eggs in, and only good children would receive a 
visit. This  tradition of nest building eventually gave way to the modern 
tradition of the  Easter basket, which often includes paper or plastic "grass." 
Today, some  families instruct their children to leave carrots for the Easter 
Bunny on Easter  eve, much as milk and cookies are often left out for Santa 
Claus. 
The Easter Bunny is believed to lay colored eggs, and egg coloring is also 
an  ancient springtime practice steeped in symbolism. In Greece, eggs are 
dyed red,  the color of blood and of life in many Eastern cultures, symbolic 
of the new  life in spring and associated in Christian times with the blood 
of Christ shed  during the Easter season. Green is another popular color, 
referencing the  abundance of new plant life and growth in the spring. 
Nowadays, the Easter Bunny  gives eggs in all different colors, possibly 
symbolic of 
the rainbow, another  sign of hope and new life, especially in the 
Judeo-Christian faith. 
Happy Easter ! 
 


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