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Librarian shares Ukrainian egg decorating experience with children

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  • Librarian shares Ukrainian egg decorating experience with children

    Noblesville Daily Times

    Saturday
    March 19, 2005

    Librarian shares Ukrainian egg decorating experience with children

    By Beth Shively | Staff writer

    Posted: 03/19/05 - 01:53:18 pm EST

    The sticky-fingered girls gathered around a library table working on an
    Easter craft had one caution for others who might like to try the modified
    Ukrainian egg decorating project.

    Dipping egg-shaped Styrofoam in sweetened condensed milk and then rolling it
    in green, gold and multi-colored glitter is a fun project, they said, but
    just a little bit messy.

    "It's pretty neat," said Lauren Smith. "But it's sticky."

    The project was inspired by Gwen Tetrick, a school media specialist who also
    works in the Hamilton East Public Library youth rooms in Fishers in
    Noblesville. Tetrick got the idea for the project while visiting in Ukraine
    last summer, where her daughter was stationed as a Peace Corps volunteer.


    "They're just everywhere in Ukraine, just everywhere," Tetrick said about
    the elaborately decorated Pysanky eggs.

    The country even has an egg-shaped museum to house the decorations, which
    are made each year to celebrate spring, and are especially prevalent at
    Easter. In addition to the Pysanky eggs made by Ukranians with hollowed
    shells, hot wax and dyes, the museum houses jeweled Faberge eggs.

    Tetrick was so inspired by the ornate objects and the warm and welcoming
    people she met in Ukraine that she wanted to create a craft to do with
    children who visit the Hamilton East Public Library. In addition to the
    glittered eggs, the kids also colored wooden eggs using traditional Pysanky
    colors and symbols to represent different emotions and objects.

    Roses, for example, symbolize love and caring, ladders mean prosperity or
    prayer, and a fish represents Christianity. But while the decoration of eggs
    is closely associated with Easter, the craft was not invented for the
    holiday.




    According to the Easter Traditions Web site, painting eggs with bright
    colors to celebrate spring is a practice that predates the advent of
    Christianity. But because eggs symbolize new life, they are a logical symbol
    for the celebration of Easter.

    In addition to Ukrainian customs, cultures around the world have taken the
    symbol and each added their own touches, the Web site said. Greeks dye their
    Easter eggs red to symbolize and honor the blood of Christ, while Germans
    and Austrians traditionally give green eggs on Maundy (or Holy) Thursday -
    the day commemorating Christ's Last Supper.

    In Slavic countries, decorating eggs in special patterns of gold and silver
    adds luster to the shell and to the sharing. The Armenian tradition is to
    decorate hollowed-out eggshells with religious images significant to the
    holiday.

    But no matter the color or pattern used, Tetrick said in Ukraine there is
    one element consistent with all egg decorating.

    "It's a very family-oriented project," she said.

    Know More

    When decorating Pysanky eggs, Ukrainians use these colors to represent the
    following:


    White n purity or wisdom


    Yellow n harvest, spirituality, spring, rebirth


    Green n wealth, youth, growth, happiness


    Blue n good health, clear skies


    Orange n power, endurance, ambition


    Red n happiness, hope, passion, nobility, bravery, enthusiasm, love


    Brown n enrichment, good harvest, happiness


    Purple n faith, trust, power


    Pink n success


    Black n remembrance

    To learn more about Pysanky egg decorating, visit www.learnpaysanky.com. For
    more information about Easter Traditions, visit www.easter-traditions.com.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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