
Easter's more of a church-going event than a party one, but an Easter party is a good way to introduce students to an important holiday that few of them have ever heard of. Even if they don't know the Christmas story, they at least know
about Christmas. Easter, on the other hand, is almost totally unknown.
The first big question the 7 of us on VTF faced was, "How can we do an Easter party for
all of our

students?" We've got a total of almost 30 classes this semester with most class sizes hovering around 30. Nine hundred students?!
But, at this point in the year, we kind of know which students we've been able to build relationships with and who may be the best ones to invite. So we decided that we would each invite 3 students. Seventeen showed up.
A few of the teachers hid eggs in the garden on campus. Nancy and Melia stood guard while the rest of us met the students

out front. (While we were waiting, a little girl discovered a couple of the eggs and was about to start smashing them till our "guards" intervened!)
The plastic eggs contained strips of paper with parts of the Easter story written on them. The rest of them were hard-boiled. After they were all found, we headed to our house where Josh and Melia helped half the group dye eggs while Deena told the other half the story and then had them put the strips in order. Then we switched groups and repeated the process.

No Vietnamese student party is complete without singing so, after singing "He Lives!" in both languages (and an assortment of other songs that have nothing to do with Easter), we all called it a night. It couldn't have gone smoother and it was great to have a house full of students again.
That is a really cool idea with the eggs. I may give it to Wendy for the students here.
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