Ostara – That Spring Thing

Ostara, by Johannes Gehrts, 1884. A black and white woodcut of a large Goddess in a flowing dress hovering over the land. They hold a long wand topped with flowers and greens. Birds, cherubs, and flowers swirl in the air around them. There is also a stork and a rabbit in the sky. Far below, tiny people dance in a ring in a beam of sunlight. Wheel of the Year
Ostara, by Johannes Gehrts, 1884

Did you feel that? The shift in the temperature? The shift in the energy? Spring is here!

Notice the daffodils, the forsythia, the tulips popping up? Spring is coming, and for many people in the Northern Hemisphere, Ostara season marks the Earth’s return to life. This year, perhaps more so than in that last century, humans in the North Hemisphere are ready for Spring! We are are eager to push out into the world and open our buds! This urge is expressed in hundreds of deities and archetypes, back from the land of death’s underworld and wintry sleep.

March 21 (more or less) marks the 1st day of Spring, the Vernal Equinox, the moment when the sun passes north over the celestial equator for folks in the Northern Hemisphere. From this point until the Autumn Equinox (Mabon) in September, the days will be longer than the nights. As the sun rises higher in the sky each day, the Northern Hemisphere is showered in sunlight, and all of nature seems to come back to life.

For many Witches, Pagans, and other Heathens, the day and season are called Ostara or Eostre, named for the Anglo-Saxon Teutonic goddess Eoster, who is the dawn.

Various Pagan groups disputed this attribution until recently, but thanks to several advances in linguistic reconstruction, we now know the names of the goddesses Austrō and AusÓs, and from them, we get Eoster and Ostara. They all may descend from Eos, the frisky Greek goddess of the dawn. The goddess/archetype may also be related to or have evolved from the Babylonian/Assyrian Goddesses Ishtar and Astarte. Various groups worshiped forms of her at least as far back as 2000 BCE, and surprise! Her symbols were often rabbits and dyed eggs.

For Hindus, this season marks Holi. This is an ancient festival which falls on the full moon before the equinox, and is quickly gaining popularity around the world. Dubbed “the festival of colors” and “the festival of love,” party people dress crazy, cover each other in bright-colored powders, and drink bhang, an intoxicating drink made with cannabis. Old hurts are forgiven, people make love under the full moon, and generally get loose celebrating the return of light.

Yoruba traditions celebrate Oduduwa, who is Santa Claire in Santeria. A powerful creator who is sometimes male, sometimes female, they were sent to earth to sow the seeds of life and found the religion. Oduduwa is fertile, virile, lusty, and loving.

For millions of Christians around the world, this season marks the resurrection of Jesus Christ after his crucifixion and death. Jesus shares the honor of the death-and-resurrection status with such luminous deities as Osiris, Baldr, Tammuz, Dionysus, Attis, and The Green Man.

For cultures that celebrate Spring Equinox, this was a return from the Underworld Journey of Winter.

This is where we face dark forces of all kinds. Spring marks the return to feeling the pulse and hope of life begin to flow back into the world. There is a profound emphasis on celebrating and witnessing the surging energy in the people and systems around us.

To quote the gay Greek poet Dinos Christianopoulos, “What didn’t you do to bury me/But you forgot that I was a seed.”

The time for dreaming is over. It is time to sprout. Burst forth. Choose which realities you are going to bring to life. Choose which aspirations you want to realize. What will you grow and grow into this year?

For more information and to watch the most recent Ostara class, head here.

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