Easter 2026: 4 Countries That Celebrates Easter Differently



Easter is one of those holidays most of us celebrate on autopilot. Chocolate. Brunch. Maybe a group chat message. Done.

Empty tomb of Jesus Christ on Easter Sunday morning with folded burial linen, large rolled-away stone, and radiant sunrise casting golden light through the cave opening onto three crosses at Calvary — Christian resurrection and hope imagery

But when you look at how other countries mark the occasion, it makes you wonder if we’ve been thinking about it too small.

Here are four Easter Cultures from around the world you should learn from.


Italy — Scoppio del Carro: A 350-Year-Old Easter Fireworks Tradition

Milan Italy Easter celebration at the historic Arco della Pace arch with spectacular fireworks display, golden pyrotechnics, glowing light sculpture, and festive crowd — how Italians celebrate faith, community, and cultural traditions during the Easter holiday season

Every Easter Sunday in Florence, hundreds of people dress in 15th-century clothing and escort an antique cart through the streets to the city’s cathedral. During Mass, the archbishop lights a fuse and the whole cart erupts in fireworks.

They call it “Scoppio del Carro” (the Explosion of the Cart). It’s been happening for over 350 years. And locals believe the quality of the display predicts the year’s harvest.

For the people of Florence, Easter isn’t just a holiday. It’s a spectacle.

Germany — Osterbrunnen: Turning Water Fountains into Easter Art

Stunning Bavarian Osterbrunnen Easter fountain tradition in a German village town square featuring hundreds of hand-painted blue and white Easter eggs strung on evergreen garlands and arches with spring flowers, bronze statue, and historic church clock tower in the background — how Germany celebrates Easter with unique cultural customs and folk art

In small villages across Bavaria, communities come together before Easter to decorate their public water fountains. Hand-painted eggs. Fresh flowers. Greenery woven through iron frames.

They call them “Osterbrunnen”, Easter fountains. The tradition started because water was a symbol of survival after harsh winters. So instead of letting the moment pass quietly, they turned gratitude into something you could see.

Ordinary infrastructure, transformed into seasonal artwork. By a whole village. Together.

Ukraine — Pysanky: Easter Eggs as Fine Art

Ukrainian Easter celebration featuring women in traditional embroidered vyshyvanka folk costumes and handmade floral vinok crown wreaths dancing at an outdoor village festival beside a woven basket of vibrant hand-painted pysanky Easter eggs surrounded by fresh spring flowers — how Ukraine celebrates Easter with folk art, cultural traditions, and community gatherings

You’ve dyed eggs before. But not like this.

In Ukraine, “pysanky” are Easter eggs decorated with layered wax and dye to create incredibly intricate designs — geometric patterns, nature motifs, symbols passed down through generations. Each one takes hours.

They’re not eaten. They’re not hidden in the garden. They’re kept. Displayed. Gifted to people who matter.

A pysanka isn’t a snack. It’s a handmade piece of art, given with intention.

Ethiopia — Fasika: 55 Days of Preparation for One Sacred Moment

Colorful illustrated world flag map featuring every country filled with its national flag on a light blue background representing global cultural diversity — how Easter is celebrated around the world with unique traditions, folk art, community celebrations, and customs from Africa, Europe, South America, Asia, and beyond

Ethiopian Christians observe “Fasika” after 55 consecutive days of fasting. No meat. No dairy. Daily prayers.

When Easter Sunday finally arrives, families gather dressed in white traditional clothing. There’s singing. There’s feasting. And gifts are made  by hand for the children.

Fifty-five days.
That’s how seriously they take the idea that some moments deserve real preparation.

The common thread

Colorful illustrated world flag map featuring every country filled with its national flag on a light blue background representing global cultural diversity — how Easter is celebrated around the world with unique traditions, folk art, community celebrations, and customs from Africa, Europe, South America, Asia, and beyond

Four countries. Four completely different traditions. But one thing connects all of them:

Nobody’s rushing to the store for a last-minute gift card.

In Florence, they prepare a spectacle that takes weeks to build. In Bavaria, entire villages turn fountains into art. In Ukraine, someone sits for hours with wax and dye to make a single egg worth keeping. In Ethiopia, they fast for nearly two months before the celebration even begins.

The gifts and gestures that people actually remember aren’t the most expensive ones. They’re the ones that took time. Thought. Craft.

That’s what we do at ArtNativ.

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This Easter, Celebrate with something they’ll never take off the wall.

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