Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Easter in the World


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This year is the month of March for Easter! Religious celebrated as the resurrection of Jesus after the crucifixion, and secular, is celebrated with colored eggs, candy and stuffed bunnies. Easter holiday as a "mobile" because the civil calendar is unfixed in terms of and follows the lunar cycle. In the West, Easter always falls on a Sunday, at any time from 22 March to April 25th and the government since the Middle Ages Ages it was noted that Easter is the Sunday after the first moon full. In a way that celebrates the religious traditions of the church, or decorate the eggs and hide them throughout the home, families in the United States and other countries around the world celebrate the Easter holiday in one way or another.

o In Canada, eggs and other delicacies are distributed by the Easter Bunny. The belief that modern> Eostre eggs supplied by a rabbit known as the goddess Easter Bunny and the law. So many rabbits that I have a modest please the goddess laid the sacred eggs in her honor, gaily decorated and humble, he presented his. Was it the gift that he wanted all men to share their joy fulfilled. In honor of his wishes, the rabbit was distributed throughout the world and these little decorated gifts of life.

In the United Kingdom orFamilies in exchange for chocolate eggs on Easter Sunday. Guests can also enjoy a traditional Sunday roast dinner and eat foods like Simnel cake, fruit cake with marzipan balls representing the eleven faithful apostles eleven. Hot Cross Buns are eaten on the period of Holy Week and Easter. In the North of England and Ireland, families gather together and roll decorated eggs steep hill.

and Norway has a tradition of Easter includes contemporarythe solution of detective stories that are broadcast on television and printed in local newspapers and magazines.

or protected in Finland, Sweden and Denmark, children as witches and collect candy and goodies door to door, in exchange for decorated pussy willows. This mixture comes from the Orthodox tradition, where the houses are blessed with willow branches, and the Scandinavian Easter witch tradition.

o The people of Germany and the Netherlands the light of EasterFire on Easter Sunday at sunset.

or Hungary or scented water sprayed perfume in exchange for an Easter egg.

No matter our religion, ethnicity or culture, we can expand our horizons and add some new experiences to our family traditions. What we try some new foods for the hills roll our Easter eggs for dinner, the steepest in our neighborhood, or read a mystery story aloud as a family and experimenting with differentonly things together can lead to some precious family memories.

Related : Easter Product Store