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THE
WORD ON HALLOWS EVE In Old English, Hallow means sanctify. In the past on November 1st, Catholics honored all saints while Romans prayed for the dead and honored saints. Halloween, the night before this, has many different
customs and origins attached to its history. This was celebrated by the Celts (people who now live in Great Britain and Northern France), in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. It meant the closing of a harvest and the beginning of winter. After the Romans conquered most of that territory, they combined two of their own festivals with the traditional Celtic ritual of Samhain. The first Roman festival was called Feralia. This was a day in late October set aside to commemorate the passing of the dead. The
second Roman festival was to honor Pomona, the Roman goddess of the
harvest or fruit and trees. Her symbol was the apple, which could be the
reason we bob for apples on Halloween. One is from the 19th century custom called souling. This means Christians would walk from town to town on Halloween night, begging for soul cakes. The soul cakes were actually square pieces of bread made with currants. The more soul cakes people received, the more prayers they had to say for the dead family members of the donors. During this time, people believed the dead remained in
limbo for a while after death. They also thought that prayer, even by
strangers, could speed up a soul’s passage to heaven. The church encouraged this as a way to replace the
practice of leaving food and wine on doorsteps for roaming spirits. The Celts also believed that on Halloween, the disembodied spirits of everyone who had died that past year, would come back to search for bodies to possess.
So the people put
out all their fires and disguised themselves with masks and costumes and
marched around town trying to ward off the spirits. Although annual autumnal festivals were common, the very first American Halloween celebrations were called ‘play parties.’ At these public events people celebrated the harvest, shared stories of the dead, told each other’s fortunes, danced, sang, and told ghost stories. During the second half of the 19th century, a new flood of millions of immigrants fleeing the Ireland potato famine of 1846 came to America. This created the meshing of Irish and English Halloween traditions, and people began dressing up in costumes and going house to house for visits. In the 1800’s there was a push to make Halloween more of a community-based event, and anything scary and gross was forbidden. In the 20th century, because of the 1950’s baby boom, there were a lot
of children. Vandalism increased during the celebration of Halloween. The name Jack most likely comes from a story of ‘Jack the Irish Villain.’ It was about a man rejected by good and evil, who wandered the world forever looking for a place to rest. His only warmth came from a small candle in a rotten potato. With the Irish potato famine from 1845-50, almost 700,000 people immigrated to the Americas. They brought
with them the Jack-O-Lantern tradition but turnips were scarce. The
pumpkin became a good replacement because there were a lot of them
around. |
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CREATED © October, 2004 WWW.WITTICISMSINK.COM |
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