As if Theresa May didn’t have enough to deceive the British public
about at the moment, now she decides to wade into the Great Easter Egg Debate. This
is basically the Winterval, ’they’re cancelling Christmas’ non-story with added
chocolate.
Cadbury’s and the National Trust have been running a joint
egg hunt for 10 years. This year they’re calling it the Cadbury's Great British
Egg Hunt instead of the Easter Egg Trail.
According to May, dropping the Easter is ‘ridiculous’.
According to Archbishop Sentamu, this is ‘spitting on the grave’ of the company
founder, John Cadbury, who was a Quaker.
May said: "I think the stance they have taken is
absolutely ridiculous. I don't know what they are thinking about frankly.
Easter's very important... It's a very important festival for the Christian
faith for millions across the world." She also reminds us that she’s a
vicar’s daughter.
Firstly, Cadbury is not dropping Easter from its promotions.
As a spokesman point out: "A casual glance at our website will see dozens
of references to Easter throughout." A ten second look at their website
shows ‘Enjoy Easter fun at the National Trust’. Yes, the E Word is right there.
They
also have a section called Easter Products that says ‘Our eggstensive range is packed with perfect treats for the Easter
season!’. Yes, it’s a terrible pun, but, again, the E Word is right there.
The National Trust website says Join the Cadbury Egg Hunts this Easter. In fact, the page mentions the E Word
five times.
Secondly, dear Archbishop, stop being a drama queen for one
minute and you may remember that Quakers don’t even celebrate Easter because
they believe every day is holy.
Thirdly, both the Archbishop and the vicar’s daughter seem
to have forgotten that there is nothing in Christian doctrine about the mass
consumption of poor quality chocolate at Easter, whether it is shaped like an
egg or a rabbit. These are wholly pagan relics. I wrote about the pagan originsof Easter here .
Fourthly, calling it the Great British Egg Hunt should make
all the Brexiteers happy. We’ll have none of that Middle Eastern religion that
was imposed on traditional British beliefs around 1500 years ago. Keep Britain’s
Spring Festival British.
Fifthly, if Easter is as important as the two of them are
trying to make out, how come only about 2% of people bother going to Church to
celebrate what is the fundamental basis of Christianity? And that’s according the Church of England’s own statistics.
All of those armchair Christians really should stop their
advance towards diabetes for an hour and go to their nearest church – if they
even know where it is. They may be able
to sing some carols but how many Easter hymns do they know? How many gave
something up for Lent? It’s not as if Cadbury and the National Trust are
barricading church doors to keep people out.
Sixthly, the real story here is that Brexit could mean more
expensive or smaller chocolate bars. Cadbury’s have already reduced a pack of six
Creme Eggs to five with only a slight decrease in the price. A spokesman for thecompany has said that it may well have to pass on higher costs to customers by
raising prices or selling smaller products for the same price. And it’s not
even a British company any more, it’s owned by US company Mondelēz
International. I suspect the ghost of Mr Cadbury would be far more bothered
about that.
Cadbury’s are probably far less worried about what Theresa May
thinks than about the fact that six out of ten of our favourite chocolate
products are made by their rival Mars, including the top slot, which is taken
by Maltesers.
Finally, a vicar’s daughter and an Archbishop really should
know that it’s a sin to tell a lie. They won’t be getting any eggs this year
because the Easter Bunny knows if you’ve been naughty or nice. Santa sold the
Bunny his list – customer data sharing gets everywhere.
2018 UPDATE
It looks like Cadbury's and The National Trust are avoiding the wrath of May and the Archbish this year by plastering the word Easter all over their joint egg hunt site.
But this isn't enough for some people. Yes, the War on Easter brigade are back. The Sun has come up with the shock horror headline that nine in ten eggs won't have the word 'Easter' on them. One of the people they spoke to said 'Eggs signify Jesus is risen and help tell the story. Why not put Easter on the front of eggs?' Kind of missing the point there. Eggs, as we know, predate Christianity as part of Spring celebrations across many cultures.
If they don't like the eggs, perhaps they'd be happier with this:
It's so much easier to whine about eggs than to deal with the fact that so few people go to Church on Easter Sunday even though it is the core festival of this religion - not Christmas. Only 1.3 million attended in 2015 according to the Church of England's own data. That's only 2.3% of the population (of England - the Churches of Wales and Scotland have separate data). Too busy stuffing themselves with chocolate, probably.
I'm sticking to hot cross buns. After all, the best part of any religion is its carbs.
2018 UPDATE
It looks like Cadbury's and The National Trust are avoiding the wrath of May and the Archbish this year by plastering the word Easter all over their joint egg hunt site.
But this isn't enough for some people. Yes, the War on Easter brigade are back. The Sun has come up with the shock horror headline that nine in ten eggs won't have the word 'Easter' on them. One of the people they spoke to said 'Eggs signify Jesus is risen and help tell the story. Why not put Easter on the front of eggs?' Kind of missing the point there. Eggs, as we know, predate Christianity as part of Spring celebrations across many cultures.
If they don't like the eggs, perhaps they'd be happier with this:
It's so much easier to whine about eggs than to deal with the fact that so few people go to Church on Easter Sunday even though it is the core festival of this religion - not Christmas. Only 1.3 million attended in 2015 according to the Church of England's own data. That's only 2.3% of the population (of England - the Churches of Wales and Scotland have separate data). Too busy stuffing themselves with chocolate, probably.
I'm sticking to hot cross buns. After all, the best part of any religion is its carbs.
2021 Update: Here we go again. As if getting through the pandemic wasn't hard enough. The Express is braying: Political correctness gone mad! Words 'Easter, egg' dropped from seasonal chocolate treats.
It's not about spurning Jesus but, according to Allyson Stewart-Allen, chief exec of International Marketing Partners for Galaxy, "In the multi-cultural society that the UK now is it may be that the majority of target customers do not celebrate Easter and therefore being able to offer that product as a gift for non-Christians is a domestic opportunity for the manufacturers".
Nothing to do with political correctness and everything to do with money. Cadbury's are still using the E word on their packaging.
I'm disappointed the Express didn't talk about Cancel Culture although 'multi-cultural' probably had a fair few of its readership frothing at the mouth.
I'm thinking about having a Terry's Dark Chocolate Orange for a change this year because I'm that much of a rebel.
I'm thinking about having a Terry's Dark Chocolate Orange for a change this year because I'm that much of a rebel.
It is these great big Easter eggs with all those little eggs inside that bother me. I presume there is SOME connection with the crucifixion and resurrection, but what?
ReplyDeleteOh those ones are laid by aliens
DeleteMaybe make it really British and have the Easter Badger. Then at Easter tine all the boys and girlsd can take their Easter sticks out into fields across the country and beat the Easter Badgers to death. All Hail Money.
ReplyDeleteThe Easter eggs quite clearly don't have the word 'Easter' printed on the box and its called "Cadbury egg hunt". No mention of Easter there, just other numerous references to Easter throughout the ads. Is this a case of the 'Emperor's new clothes', or am I being an annoying mega-pedant? :-)
ReplyDeleteI went to Plas Newydd (National Trust Wales)over Easter and saw lots of annoying children with their even more annoying 'Tiger Mums'. I wasn't sure whether I was supposed to be annoyed at the loss of Easter references, or to be annoyed at my own confected pedantry. I decided to just live in the moment and eat cake, which is much nicer :-)
Good blog, as ever! :-D