I’m aware that the news hasn’t been brilliantly analytical lately and hopefully this will be remedied when school’s over and I have less on my plate. In the mean time:
The BBC’s got this new interactive-education-scroll-y thing called iWonder, and this one explains the history of passion plays, which range from thanks to God for having not got the Plague to everybody’s favourite musical (I’m wearing my JCS top and cross earrings today. Part of me wants to start a fashion blog based around dressing for holidays or in the spirit of fictional characters). Fun fact: John the Evangelist wrote that Jesus died on Passover because he saw Jesus as the passover lamb for all people/believers. Cool huh? Plus the town of Oberammergau, which apparently puts on a passion play a bit like how the Scots put on New Year, has NATO School.
A school. Which teaches all things NATO. Turns out uni isn’t the only option!
The iWonder thinggy also has a piece explaining why Easter is never on the same day… basically if Church officials can argue over something then they will.
I just realised that there will always be a Six O’Clock News on Good Friday. Bugger, I’ll have to find actual Easter-related news next year. Ukraine’s not got a lot in common with the holiday and neither do east Asian vehicle disasters. Other than the weather – it’ll rain, surprise! – and TV – there will be programmes, surprise! – there aren’t many Easter-specific bulletins. Which I guess is kind of a relief given that the festival is two thousand years old?
Here is my favourite Easter art:

Here is my second-favourite piece, which was painted for a monastery hospital. Jesus has the same illness as the one the hospital treated, ergotism, to make the patients feel better:

Happy Easter!
your confusion between Velazquez and Vasquez, and it’s potential impact upon exam/studies reminds me of my son doing a science test shortly after the finale of Sherlock season three …. the question was about evolution … he mistakenly put Lestrade instead of Lamarck. Thankfully it was only an end of topic test not a GCSE, and hopefully the teacher was a Sherlock fan and saw the funny side!!
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Haha! I once forgot to add the line to a line graph. It was an in-classroom exam and my teacher asked afterwards “Did you put that line on the graph?”
I stood there and went “Oh, I knew there was something missing!”
Oopsie.
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