The Celestial Origin of Easter

The
Saxon goddess Eostre.
Linguists have identified Eostre as a Germanic form
of the reconstructed Indo-European goddess of the
dawn,
Hausos or
Ausōs.
The name Eostre then derives from the proto-Germanic
word Austro and common Germanic goddess
Austrōn
and its root "aues," meaning "to shine." This, of
course, is then the etymological root for the country
Austria. As symbols of reproduction, putti (flying
babies), hares, storks and eggs were often depicted
with Eostre and Austron.
In the larger historical picture, Eostre is part of a
long line of dawn goddesses including the Greek Eos,
Roman Aurora and Indian Ushas who were derived from
the cosmological symbolism of the Sun and Venus
rising together from the eastern sea. The planet
Venus was thus the East Star, or "Easter," of the
sunrise.

"East
Rising" marker in St. Peter's Square, Vatican City.
Through
this connection, Eostre descends from a long line of
feminine fertility deities associated with the planet
Venus, including Ishtar, Isis, Astarte, Inanna,
Semiramis, Lilith, Asherah, Demeter, Hathor, Kali,
Ostara, Eastre, Aphrodite and the Roman Venus. There
is good evidence to believe that all of these
goddesses had a common origin in the ancient Vedic
fertility goddess named
Vena (root
"wenos" or Sanskrit "vanas") and her insemination by
the Sun god Indra (Greek Dionysus and Cronus). The
Romans, whose early Etruscan religion had roots in
Vedic beliefs, apparently understood this connection
very well when they renamed the Greek goddess
Aphrodite to Venus.
Within this larger historical context, the Christian
celebration of Easter can be seen as an adaptation of
a much more ancient fertility rite celebrating the
paired movement and conjunction of Venus with the
Sun. The transit of Venus across the Sun is described
in the Hindu Vedas as the Sun (Indra) swallowing
Venus (Shukra), spitting her out as a "bright" seed
or semen.* The feminine deity Vena would then compel
Shukra, who resided in her "variegated womb," to give
birth where the Sun's "membrane of light" touched the
waters of the Earth. In this way, Vena was the
Easter(n) goddess of the dawn -- resurrected every
morning, reborn each Spring and inseminated twice a
century in rare Venus Transits -- who once again
brought new life to Earth.
* The abduction and imprisonment of the dawn goddess,
and her liberation by a heroic god slaying the dragon
who imprisons her, is a central myth of Indo-European
religion and descends from Vedic cosmology and
hallucinogenic Soma rituals apparently connected to
the Venus Transit.

Vena's variegated womb - the Venus rose orbital pattern.

