Halloween (also
spelled Hallowe'en) is an annual holiday celebrated on October 31. It
has roots in the Celtic festival of Samhain and the Christian holy
day of All Saints.
Originally
Halloween was a pagan festival, around the idea of linking the living
with the dead, when contact became possible between the spirits and
the physical world, and magical things were more likely to happen.
Like most pagan festivals, long ago it was absorbed into the
festivals of the expanding Christian church, and became associated
with All Hallows Day, or All Saints Day, which eventually fell on
November 1.
The celebration
of Halloween survived most strongly in Ireland. It was an end of
summer festival, and was often celebrated in each community with a
bonfire to ward off the evil spirits. Children would go from door to
door in disguise as creatures from the underworld to collect treats,
mainly fruit, nuts and the like for the festivities. These were used
for playing traditional games like eating an apple on a string or
bobbing for apples and other gifts in a basin of water, without using
your hands. Salt might be sprinkled on the visiting children to ward
off evil spirits. Carving turnips as ghoulish faces to hold candles
became a popular part of the festival, which has been adapted to
carving pumpkins in America.
The day is often
associated with the colours black and orange, and is strongly
associated with symbols like the jack-o'-lantern. Halloween
activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes and attending
costume parties, ghost tours, bonfires, visiting haunted attractions,
telling scary stories, and watching
horror films!!
Why do we make Jack-o-lanterns?
The
story of the Jack-O'-lantern comes in many variants and is similar to
the story of Will-o'-the-wisp retold in different forms
across Western Europe, with variations being present in the
folklore of Norway, Sweden, England, Ireland, Wales, Germany, Italy
and Spain. An
old Irish folk tale from the mid-19th Century tells of Stingy
Jack, a lazy yet shrewd farmer who uses a cross to
trap the Devil.
One story says that Jack tricked the Devil into climbing an
apple tree, and once he was up there Jack quickly placed crosses
around the trunk or carved a cross into the bark, so that the Devil
couldn't get down. Another tale says that Jack put a key in the
Devil's pocket while he was suspended upside-down.
Another
version of the story says that Jack was getting chased by some
villagers from whom he had stolen, when he met the Devil, who claimed
it was time for him to die. However, the thief stalled his death by
tempting the Devil with a chance to bedevil the church-going
villagers chasing him. Jack told the Devil to turn into a coin with
which he would pay for the stolen goods (the Devil could take on any
shape he wanted); later, when the coin/Devil disappeared, the
Christian villagers would fight over who had stolen it. The Devil
agreed to this plan. He turned himself into a silver coin and jumped
into Jack's wallet, only to find himself next to a cross Jack had
also picked up in the village. Jack had closed the wallet tight, and
the cross stripped the Devil of his powers; and so he was trapped.
In
both folktales, Jack only lets the Devil go when he agrees never to
take his soul. After a while the thief died, as all living things do.
Of course, his life had been too sinful for Jack to go to heaven;
however, the Devil had promised not to take his soul, and so he was
barred from hell as well. Jack now had nowhere to go. He asked how he
would see where to go, as he had no light, and the Devil mockingly
tossed him an ember from the flames of hell, that would never burn
out. Jack carved out one of his turnips (which were his favorite
food), put the ember inside it, and began endlessly wandering the
Earth for a resting place. He became known as "Jack of the
Lantern", or Jack-o'-lantern.
Jack-o-lanterns
were also a way of protecting your home against the Undead.
Superstitious people used them specifically to ward away vampires.
They thought this because it was said that the Jack-o-lantern's light
was a way of identifying vampires and, once their identity was known,
they would give up their hunt for you
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