Halloween
I.
Introduction
Halloween, holiday observed on the evening of October 31
in most areas of North America and in some areas of Western
Europe. The holiday is symbolically associated with death
and the supernatural. Halloween falls on the eve of All
Saints' Day, also known as Allhallows or Hallowmas,
a holy day in the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches.
Originally a pagan festival of the dead, All Saints' Day
was established by the Catholic Church in the 9th century
to honor Christian saints.
All Souls' Day, a holy day established by the Catholic Church
in the 10th century, is also closely linked to Halloween.
All Souls' Day, on November 2, is observed to help purify
the spirits of the dead.
Halloween
is historically related to similar folk holidays celebrated
in other countries. The Day of the Dead, a Mexican
holiday that coincides with All Souls' Day, blends Roman
Catholic and Native American traditions about the souls
of the dead. On the Day of the Dead, Mexicans decorate their
homes with playful imagery of animated human skeletons,
leave offerings of food for wandering spirits, and tend
the graves of their deceased relatives. In England, Guy
Fawkes' Day, celebrated on November 5, has largely taken
the place of Halloween. On this patriotic holiday, children
light bonfires and burn effigies of Guy Fawkes, a conspirator
who tried to blow up the English Parliament building in
1605.
II.
Contemporary Customs
Most Halloween festivities are based on folk beliefs concerning
supernatural forces and spirits of the dead. Halloween decorations
typically feature imagery associated with supernatural beings
such as witches, werewolves,
vampires,
and ghosts. Images thought to symbolize bad omens—such as
black cats, bats,
and spiders—are also commonly featured in Halloween decorations.
The
most celebrated Halloween decoration is the jack-o'-lantern,
traditionally a hollowed-out pumpkin
carved to resemble a grotesque face and illuminated by a
candle placed inside. The jack-o'-lantern derives its name
from a character in British folktales. According to these
tales, the soul of a deceased person named Jack O'Lantern
was barred from both heaven and hell and was condemned to
wander the earth with his lantern. Orange and black, colors
associated with pumpkins and darkness respectively, figure
prominently in most Halloween decorations.
Dressing
in costume is one of the most popular Halloween customs,
especially among children. Traditional costumes usually
represent witches, ghosts, and other supernatural beings.
However, costumes inspired by contemporary popular culture,
such as politicians or movie characters, have become increasingly
common in recent years. Adults often favor costumes with
satirical or humorous overtones.
Trick-or-treating
is another Halloween tradition, in which costumed children
go from house to house soliciting candy or other treats
from their neighbors. According to this custom, children
greet each homeowner with the cry "Trick or Treat," suggesting
that some sort of prank will be played unless treats are
provided. Formerly, trick-or-treaters vandalized the house
if no treats were produced or if the treats met with their
disapproval. Since the early 20th century, however, the
threat of tricks has been largely ceremonial. Beginning
in the 1970s, the practice of trick-or-treating went into
a sharp decline after unsubstantiated rumors spread about
homeowners distributing poisoned Halloween candy to children.
Many parents also became concerned about their children
wandering through the neighborhood after dark. Today, many
parents accompany children when they go trick-or-treating.
In
some areas of the country, costume parties have replaced
trick-or-treating as the favored form of Halloween entertainment.
Hosts of these parties often hold contests to select the
best costume among the guests. Traditional Halloween diversions
have also enjoyed renewed popularity as party activities.
For example, many Halloween parties feature contests of
bobbing for apples, a centuries-old game in which contestants
try to retrieve apples floating in a tub of water using
only their mouth. While children's Halloween parties are
generally held in private homes, many bars and nightclubs
sponsor modified versions of such festivities for adults.
III.
Origins
Many of the ancient peoples of Europe marked the end of
the harvest season and the beginning of winter by celebrating
a holiday in late autumn. The most important of these holidays
to influence later Halloween customs was Samhain,
a holiday observed by the ancient Celts, a tribal people
who inhabited most of Western and Central Europe in the
first millennium BC. Among the Celts, Samhain marked the
end of one year and the beginning of the next. It was one
of four Celtic holidays linked to important transitions
in the annual cycle of seasons.
Samhain
began at sundown on October 31 and extended into the following
day. According to the Celtic
pagan religion, known as Druidism,
the spirits of those who had died in the preceding year
roamed the earth on Samhain evening. The Celts sought to
ward off these spirits with offerings of food and drink.
The Celts also built bonfires at sacred hilltop sites and
performed rituals, often involving human and animal sacrifices,
to honor Druid deities.
By
the end of the 1st century AD, the Roman Empire had conquered
most of the Celtic lands. In the process of incorporating
the Celts into their empire, the Romans adapted and absorbed
some Celtic traditions as part of their own pagan and Catholic
religious observances. In Britain, Romans blended local
Samhain customs with their own pagan harvest festival honoring
Pomona, goddess of fruit trees. Some scholars have suggested
that the game of bobbing for apples derives from this Roman
association of the holiday with fruit.
Pure
Celtic influences lingered longer on the western fringes
of Europe, especially in areas that were never brought firmly
under Roman control, such as Ireland, Scotland, and the
Brittany region of northwestern France. In these areas,
Samhain was abandoned only when the local people converted
to Christianity during the early Middle Ages, a period that
lasted from the 5th to the 15th century. The Roman Catholic
Church often incorporated modified versions of older religious
traditions in order to win converts. For example, Pope Gregory
IV sought to replace Samhain with All Saints' Day in 835.
All Souls' Day, closer in spirit to Samhain and modern Halloween,
was first instituted at a French monastery in 998 and quickly
spread throughout Europe. Folk observances linked to these
Christian holidays, including Halloween, thus preserved
many of the ancient Celtic customs associated with Samhain.
Halloween
traditions thought to be incompatible with Christianity
often became linked with Christian folk beliefs about evil
spirits. Although such superstitions varied a great deal
from place to place, many of the supernatural beings now
associated with Halloween became fixed in the popular imagination
during the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance (14th to
17th century). In British folklore, small magical beings
known as fairies became
associated with Halloween mischief. The jack-o'-lantern,
originally carved from a large turnip rather than a pumpkin,
originated in medieval Scotland. Various methods of predicting
the future, especially concerning matters of romance and
marriage, were also prominent features of Halloween throughout
the British Isles.
Between
the 15th and 17th centuries, Europe was seized by a hysterical
fear of witches, leading to the persecution of thousands
of innocent women. Witches were thought to ride flying brooms
and to assume the form of black cats. These images of witches
soon joined other European superstitions as symbols of Halloween.
IV.
In the United States
Attitudes toward Halloween varied widely among the various
European groups that settled in North America. New England
was initially settled by English Puritans, members of a
strict Protestant sect that rejected Halloween as a Catholic
and pagan holiday. However, other British colonists successfully
transplanted Halloween traditions in southern colonies such
as Virginia and Maryland. Irish immigrants helped popularize
Halloween traditions throughout the United States in the
mid-19th century. As belief in many of the old superstitions
waned during the late 19th century, Halloween was increasingly
regarded as a children's holiday.
In
the 19th and early 20th centuries, young people often observed
Halloween by perpetrating minor acts of vandalism, such
as overturning sheds or breaking windows. Beginning in the
1930s, Halloween mischief gradually transformed into the
modern ritual of trick-or-treating. Eventually, Halloween
treats were plentiful while tricks became rare. Nonetheless,
the tradition of Halloween pranks still survives. In some
areas, October 30 (one day before Halloween) is called Mischief
Night, and vandalism often reaches dangerous levels. In
Detroit, Michigan, Mischief Night—known there as Devil's
Night—provided the occasion for waves of arson that sometimes
destroyed whole city blocks during the 1970s and 1980s.
Since
the 1970s, Halloween celebrations have become increasingly
popular among adults. The Halloween parade in the Greenwich
Village neighborhood of New York City features elaborate
satirical costumes and drunken revelry. Especially popular
among the local gay population, the Greenwich Village parade
serves as a model for many other adult Halloween celebrations
around the country. Similarly boisterous public Halloween
festivities are celebrated in San Francisco, California;
New Orleans, Louisiana; and Key West, Florida.

Contributed
By: Brent Lanford, B.A., M.A. Freelance writer.
"Halloween,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
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