How families celebrated a rare unified Easter

·

For the first time in eight years, all branches of Christianity—Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox—celebrated Easter on the same weekend, bringing together diverse traditions in Australian households with mixed cultural and religious backgrounds.

In Sydney, Eugenie Pepper’s kitchen was bustling with preparations for one of her family’s most cherished events: Greek Orthodox Easter.

On Sunday, 40 relatives spanning three generations gathered at her uncle’s house to celebrate with midnight mass, red eggs, and a feast featuring avgolemono soup, lamb, and traditional sweets like baklava.

“The pressure is always on,” Pepper told ABC. “These Greek aunties are like, ‘make sure that you do enough food, it’s got to be the biggest pumpkin you can find’.”

Pepper, who follows Greek Orthodox traditions, shares the holiday with her husband Shane, who was raised Irish Catholic.

“The kids had the benefit of two different cultures, which I think is really wonderful,” she said. “They would get double the amount of Easter eggs.”

Also in Sydney, Ali Cavill celebrated with her extended family blending Catholic and Greek Orthodox customs.

“My family were brought up Catholic and my brother’s wife is Greek,” she said. The weekend included a Good Friday Stations of the Cross, a Sunday morning Easter egg exchange, and a Greek lunch where guests brought food to share.

“If anything, it means more yummy dishes and more people… It only happens once every few years, so it tends to be a more exciting time of year,” she said.

Ethiopian Orthodox Christians also marked Fasika—Easter—on the same weekend. After 55 days of fasting, Tesfaye Yigzawe, president of the Ethiopian Community Association of Victoria, celebrated with family and traditional dishes like Doro Wat and injera.

As Australia’s Christian communities continue to evolve, this rare alignment of Easter dates provided a unique opportunity for families to unite across traditions—through faith, food, and celebration.

Source: ABC.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Cyprus Community of NSW dancers prepare to shine at Food and Wine Festival

The Cyprus Community of NSW Dance School will take centre stage as the headline cultural attraction at the Cyprus Food and Wine Festival.

From Print to Pixel: The Greek Herald in the Digital Age

Social media, video journalism and digital publishing now sit beside the physical newspaper at The Greek Herald.

Cultural Infusion CEO Peter Mousaferiadis responds to Pauline Hanson’s recent address

Peter Mousaferiadis has urged Australia to address housing and cost-of-living pressures without blaming migrants.

St George Saints men show fighting spirit despite tough Central Coast challenge

The St George Men's basketball team may have come away without the result they were chasing, but they earned plenty of respect.

Greek Centre seminar to uncover story behind the Haidari 200 photographs

The seminar will examine the recently discovered photographs documenting the final moments of the Haidari 200.

You May Also Like

Feast day of the Virgin Mary’s birth celebrated at Panagia Kamariani in Victoria

The feast day of the Nativity of the Theotokos took place at the Holy Monastery of Panagia Kamariani, in Red Hill, Victoria.

Victorian futsal referee Maria Patrikis recognised at Vic Sport Awards

Football Victoria has announced Maria Patrikis has been named the Sports Accounting Australia Official of the Year at the Vic Sport Awards.

Applications closing for Greek-Australian Society’s 2024 mentoring program

2024 marks the fourth successive year of the Greek-Australian Society Inc (GAS)’s flagship Mentoring Program, which continues to grow across Sydney, Melbourne, Wollongong, and...