Ishtartv.com - shafaq.com
2026-04-05
Iraqi Christians marked Easter
Sunday with traditional egg-dyeing rituals symbolizing renewal and the
resurrection of Jesus Christ, as families gathered across Baghdad and Nineveh
to observe long-standing customs.
Rita Emmanuel, a young Christian
from the Hamdaniya district in the Nineveh Plains, told Shafaq News that
families dye 33 eggs to represent the age of Jesus Christ at the time of his
resurrection. She explained that the egg itself symbolizes new life, with its
hard shell representing the tomb and its interior signifying life emerging from
within.
“In the past, natural materials
such as onion peels, beetroot, tea, coffee, and turmeric were used,” she said,
noting that ready-made dyes are more common today.
Different colors carry symbolic
meanings, she added, with red representing the blood of Christ, green
symbolizing life and hope, yellow reflecting light and the sun, and blue
representing the sky and peace.
A local church figure in the
Nineveh Plains said such traditions remain central to preserving Christian
identity and community ties, particularly among younger generations.
Iraq, a multiethnic country with
a Muslim majority, was once home to a large Christian population estimated at
1.2 to 1.5 million before 2003, including Chaldean Catholics, Assyrians, and
Syriac Orthodox communities. Over the past two decades, their numbers have
declined to fewer than 250,000, after ISIS seized large parts of northern Iraq
in 2014, forcing thousands of Christian families to flee their homes.
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