Find below a thorough investigation of the Easter
celebration, with explanations of some Easter
symbols and their origin and evolution in mythology
and in people's common life.
LUNAR ASPECT
Easter is not really a solar festival, but
rather one of the moon. The name Easter comes to us from
the Saxon Eostre (synonymous with the phoenician Astarte),
goddess of the moon. From the most ancient times, this goddess
was the measurer of time. Her name as we know it (moon)
comes from the Sanskrit masófrom ma, to measureó
and was masculine (as it was in all the Teutonic languages).
Although this seems to suggest some confusion
of sex, we can assume from the earliest mythologies that
the deities were androgynous and sex depended upon the relationship
to causes, whether active or passive. Since the measurement
of time was an active process, the full moon was considered
masculine.
According to an ancient document, the moon
as measurer of our days was chosen over the sun, since it
seemed most natural to adopt a system that harmonized both
the cosmos and humanity. The most likely choice was manifest
in the cycle of the moon and the physiological phenomenon
of mother and child. The lunar month of 28 days (four weeks
of seven days each) gave 13 periods in 364 days, equivalent
to the solar year of 52 weeks; thus the method of measuring
by lunar terms. (And here we can make a connection between
the female estrus and the goddesses Eostre and Astarte.)
How, though, do these revelations about our
lunar measurer relate to the Easter
bunny?
A clue to the answer is found within the
paintings and fables of artists and storytellers of the
Far East. These artists often painted the moon with rabbits
racing across its face. The Chinese, in particular, have
represented the moon as a rabbit pounding rice in a mortar.
The rabbit's association with the moon is
partly explained by two stories. In one Buddha places him
there as payment for a favor in which Rabbit voluntarily
gave himself as food for one of Buddha's hungry friends.
In another, a rabbit, with nothing else to offer a hungry,
weary Indra, jumps into a fire, cooking himself for the
deity (a timeless example of humankind's self-serving fables).
Out of gratitude, Indra placed the rabbit in the moon.
If we consider the phases of the moon in
its waxing (masculine) and waning (feminine), and accept
the notion that the moon at full intensity is the Destroyer
of Darkness or, as Hillard says, "sign of new life
and the messenger of immortality," we can appreciate
the honored position to which the rabbit has ascended.
A number of explanations account for this
hare/moon symbiosis. One is that the hare is nocturnal and
feeds by night; another is that the hare's gestation period
is one month long. And, it was believed that a rabbit could
change its sex like the moon. Other stories in Sanskrit
and Hindu connect the rabbit to the spots on the moon (related
to the story above); to stories of hares dwelling upon the
shores of the moon; and as mortal enemy of the lion (sun).
EGYPTIAN EYE OPENER
A more important connection can be found
exclusively within the hare, who unlike the rabbit is born
with his eyes open. The Egyptians called the hare Un, which
meant open, to open, the opener. Un also meant period. Thus
the rabbit became a symbol for periodicity in both the lunar
and human sense of the word. The hare as "opener"
symbolized the new year at Easter; and fertility and the
beginning of new life within the young.
Now that we've made the connection of the
Easter Hare to the moon and procreation symbolism we can
see his connection to the Easter
egg, which also has ancient but more obvious symbolic
roots. However, the fairly recent pairing of the hare and
egg is largely a product of artistic license and image appropriation,
introduced to this country just before the turn of the century
by European confectioners. Adhering to common older customs
they used the celebrated Easter
eggs to make cakes in the image of hares and gave them
to the children.
LOSS OF MYTH
Today, there is little, if any, cultural
awareness as to the origins of popular myths such as the
Easter bunny. This lack
is due to the proliferation of imagery, caused by the mechanization
of the image making processes and to the marketplace use
of popular imagery to sell products.
Based on The
Easter Hare by Katharine Hillard
The Atlantic Monthly, May, 1890