A scene depicting the birth of Jesus with figurines, or a public childcare facility.
From French 'crèche' meaning manger or crib, ultimately from Germanic roots referring to a feeding trough, later applied to the nativity scene and then to daycare centers.
The word took an interesting journey from describing baby Jesus's manger to modern childcare centers—both are fundamentally about safe places to care for young ones!
Term for childcare facility historically managed by women, often undercompensated. Etymology from French crèche (manger), but modern usage reflects gendered labor: childcare work coded as feminine and lower-status.
Language is neutral; issue is labor equity. When discussing creches, acknowledge that childcare workers (predominantly women) deserve professional-level recognition and compensation.
Early childhood educators, mostly women, provide foundational development work; creche facilities depend on their skilled labor often inadequately valued in policy and wages.
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