Rituals are usually ceremonies involving a series of actions performed in a specific order. In most cases, rituals come from myths. In Athens, some people participated in a series of events called The Eleusinian Mysteries, hoping to earn wealthy and rich afterlife. From the 8th century BC to the Hellenistic era, the cult organization organized around the myth of a trip to Persephone's underworld, Eleusinian Mysteries. For ancient Greeks myths were basically supposed to explain the world around them.
Demeter and Persephone are also the center of Eleusinian Mysteries - a large secret concert every five years. These mysteries represent that Hades abducted Persephone at three stages. "Down" (failure), "search", "up" theme is "rising" of Persephone and reunion with mother. Her own mother, Metaneira, comforted Demeter with no Persephone. In fact, Demetery raised children from Metaneira. She loves this child and has diarrhea on him everyday. Demeter's attachment to a child shocked Metanela, and the two eventually appeared.
Persephone, the goddess of vegetation and its mother Demeter, are the core of Eleusinian's mystery, promising to create a more pleasant future after death. In some versions, Persephone is the mother of Zeus's son Dionysus, Ikchus or Zagres. The origin of her cult is uncertain, but it is based on a very old agricultural cult of the agricultural world. Persephone is usually praised by Demeter and there is the same mystery. Only in her there was a mystery to celebrate in Athens during the Anthesterion Moon. In Greek traditional art, Persephone is always portrayed as a robe. She may look like a mysterious god with a scepter and a small box, but she mainly shows the process taken away by Hades.
Many of these mysterious worship celebrate the cycle of death and regeneration. For example, the mystery of Eleusinian in the sanctuary of Eleusis near Athens reinterpretes the myth of the goddess Demeter and her daughter Persephone. Because the Persephone is so beautiful, the story tells us that Hades abducted her and took her to the Queen of Underworld. Demeter lamented for her daughter, so that everything he grew had disappeared. This frightened the other gods and ordered Hades to release Persephone to her mother. But Persephone came into the underground world and ate it a small amount of food when bound, so Hades could not legally do this. As a result of compromise, Persephone had to spend six months in the underground world and six months in the underground world. At a certain level, this is a story about the season and birth, but at another level it is a story about death and resurrection, or resurrection from the dead.