"Reality is not only stranger than we suppose but stranger than we can suppose" ... J. B. S. Haldane
Ostara - Easter?
Well it is Easter weekend, one of the most complicated holidays, from a historical…tradition…religious celebration point-of-view. For a more complete history of how this pagan festival and the hunt for eggs & rabbits was integrated into a major Chrisitan holiday, check out ‘Changing Places‘, this is where I took the image from. The following info on the Norse goddess Ostara is from ‘Norse Mythology‘.
OSTARA: Spring Goddess of Fertility. She has her own festival on 21 March, the Spring Equinox, in which bouncing springy behaviour is encouraged.

OSTARA was very popular with the Anglo-Saxon pagan brigade who worshipped her under the name EOSTRE — and kicked off the whole Easter business without a JESUS in sight. If you ever wondered what eggs and bunnies have to do with crucifixion and resurrection, the answer is: absolutely nothing.
OSTARA’s sacred animal is a cute wittle wabbit — an obvious symbol of fertility — and the egg is her symbol of fertile purity. So Easter Egg hunts are actually packed with symbolic meanings of rebirth and renewal. And Elmer Fudd is obviously just a high priest of the Great Easter Bunny.
In case you think we’re being flippant, recent research suggests that OSTARA herself was actually invented during a mischievous moment by the Venerable Bede. This well-known monk mentioned her in connection with the pagan festival Eosturmonath in a book written in 750 A.D. — but extensive research has failed to find a trace of her prior to that. Could he possibly have been fibbing?
Rabbits and hares are ubiquitous in mythology. Every culture seems to have a Rabbit God — and they’re nearly always trickster spirits. This, we feel, explains a lot. We also have a terrific theory explaining why stage magicians love doing tricks with eggs and rabbits. Was OSTARA pulled out of a hat?
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