Halloween is considered by most in the United States as a fun  holiday, mostly for children, but it has roots in ancient religions and  folklore, including paganism, ancient Roman religions, early Catholic  Christianity, Irish folklore, and even British politics!   Children and adults alike enjoy this holiday today, with funny  costumes, candy, and parties, while some countries observe this time as a  remembrance of departed loved ones and religious saints.
Here is a short history of this holiday:    History   Halloween is a holiday with ancient roots that had a much greater  meaning than the boisterous, costume-filled holiday that we know today.  Around 2,000 years ago, the Celts, who lived in what is now the United  Kingdom, Ireland, and northern France, had a festival commemorating the  end of the year. Their New Year was November 1, and this festival was  called Samhain, pronounced sow-en. The end of their year signaled the  end of summer, the end of the harvest season, and the beginning of a  long, hard winter that often caused many deaths of animals and people.  Weaker livestock were often killed and eaten during this holiday, since  most likely, they would not survive the winter anyway. Because of this,  and the cruel winter to come, this time of year signified death to the  Pagan Celtics. They believed the night before the New Year, that the  wall between the living and the dead was open, allowing spirits of the  dead, both good and bad, to mingle among the living. Some of these  spirits were thought to possess living people, cause trouble, ruin  crops, or to search for passage to the afterlife.
Samhain was considered a magical holiday, and there are many stories  about what the Celtics practiced and believed during this festival.  Some say the spirits that were unleashed were those that had died in  that year, and offerings of food and drink were left to aid the spirits,  or to ward them away. Other versions say the Celts dressed up in  outlandish costumes and roamed the neighborhoods making noise to scare  the spirits away. Many thought they could predict the future and  communicate with spirits as well during this time. Some think the  heavily structured life of the Pagan Celtics was abandoned during  Samhain, and people did unusual things, such as moving horses to  different fields, moving gates and fences, women dressing as men, and  vice versa, and other trickeries now associated with Halloween. Another  belief is that the Celtics honoured, celebrated, and feasted the dead  during Samhain. A sacred, central bonfire was always lit to honor the  Pagan gods, and some accounts say that individual home fires were  extinguished during Samhain, either to make their homes unattractive to  roving spirits, or for their home fires to be lit following the festival  from the sacred bonfire. Fortunes were told, and marked stones thrown  into the fire. If a person's stone was not found after the bonfire went  out, it was believed that person would die during the next year. Some  Celts wore costumes of animal skulls and skins during Samhain. Faeries  were believed to roam the land during Samhain, dressed as beggars asking  for food door to door. Those that gave food to the faeries were  rewarded, while those that did not were punished by the faeries. This is  reported to be the first origin of the modern "trick or treat"  practice. (If you're looking for halloween costumes, check out discount halloween costumes for great deals.) 
In the First century A.D., the Roman Empire had taken over most of  the Celtic lands. The Romans had two festivals also celebrated at the  same time of year as Samhain. One was Feralia, also in late October, was  the Roman day honouring the dead. The second festival was for Pomona,  the Roman goddess of trees and fruit. Pomona's symbol was the apple.  These two festivals were combined with Samhain in the Celtic lands  during the four hundred years the Roman Empire ruled over the Celts. The  goddess Pomona's apple might be the root of the Halloween tradition of  bobbing for apples. 
Over the next several hundred years, Christianity had spread to  include the lands inhabited by the Celtics and the Romans, but the  festival of Samhain was still celebrated by the people. The Christian  church reportedly did not like a festival with Pagan roots practiced by  Christians, so a replacement was needed. Pope Boniface IV designated May  13 as All Saints Day to honour dead church saints and martyrs. Samhain  continued to be celebrated, so in 835 A.D., Pope Gregory IV moved the  holiday to November 1, probably to take attention away from the Pagan  Samhain festival and replace it. Since All Saints Day was sanctioned by  the church, and related to the dead, the church was happy, but many  Pagan traditions of Samhain continued to be practiced, including  bonfires, parades, and dressing up in costume. All Saints Day was also  known as All Hallows, or All Hallowmas (Hallowmas is Old English for All  Saints Day). Since Samhain was celebrated the night before November 1,  the celebration was known as All Hallows Eve, and later called  Halloween. In the year 1000 A.D., the church designated November 2 as  All Souls Day, to honour the dead who were not saints, and they  eventually became combined and celebrated as Hallowmas. 
On All Souls Day in England, the poor would "go a-souling". They  would go door to door asking for food, and in return, would pray for the  souls of their dead relatives. It was widely believed at the time that  the souls of the dead would await passage into heaven until enough  people prayed for their souls. The Christian church encouraged this  practice to replace the old Pagan tradition of leaving cakes and wine  out for the spirits of the dead. The poor would be given "soul cakes",  which were pastries made for those who promised to pray for their dead  relatives. In some cultures, soul cakes would be given in exchange for a  performance or song as well. Children eventually adopted this practice,  and were given food, ale, or money. 
Jack o'lanterns are a Halloween staple today, with at least two  historical roots. The early Pagan Celtic peoples used hollowed out  turnips, gourds, or rutabagas to hold an ember from the sacred bonfire,  so they could light their home fires from the sacred bonfire. Another  tale from folklore gives jack o'lanterns their name. In Irish myth, a  man known as "Stingy Jack", who was a swindler and a drunk, who asked  the devil to have drink with him. Jack convinced the devil to change  himself into a coin so he could pay for the drink, but Jack put the coin  in his pocket next to a silver cross, which trapped the devil,  preventing him from changing himself back. Jack agreed to free the devil  on the condition that the devil would not bother Jack for a year. Next  year, Jack tricks the devil into climbing a tree to fetch a piece of  fruit. While the devil is up the tree, Jack carves a cross into the  trunk, preventing him from climbing back down the tree. In order to get  out of the tree, the devil promised Jack not to seek his soul any more.  When Jack died, he was not allowed into heaven, because of his drunken  and swindling ways, but he was not allowed into hell either, because the  devil kept his word. Taking pity on Jack, the devil gave him an ember  to light his way in the dark, putting it into a hollowed out turnip for  Jack to carry on his lonely, everlasting roamings around the Earth.  People from Ireland and Scotland would make "Jack o'lanterns" during  this season to scare away Stingy Jack and other evil spirits wandering  about.
Over the next several centuries, superstitions about witches and  black cats were added to to the folklore and legends of Halloween. Cats  were thought of as evil, especially black cats, and were killed by the  thousands in Medieval times, possibly contributing to the Black Plague,  due to the shortage of the rat's natural enemy, the cat. During this  time, the church created the belief that evil witches existed. 
In the 1500's, Martin Luther created the Protestant Church, which  had no saints, so no All Hallows Day was allowed. On November 5, 1606,  Guy Fawkes was executed for attempting to blow up England's Parliament.  Fawkes, along with an extremist Catholic organization he belonged to,  wanted to remove the Protestant King James from his throne. The English  wasted no time to have a celebration to replace All Hallows Day, so Guy  Fawkes Day was celebrated from then on. Many traditions of All Hallows  Day were practiced, such as bonfires, and children asking for money, but  the reasons why were different. Bonfires were known as "bone fires"  originally, because they were lit in order to burn an effigy of the  Catholic pope, burning his "bones". Two hundred years later, the effigy  of the pope was replaced by an effigy of Guy Fawkes, prompting children  to go door to door, asking for a "penny for Guy", so they could make  their effigy to burn. In the New World, the colonists celebrated Guy  Fawkes Day for a while, but as the colonies became the United States of  America, Guy Fawkes Day fell by the wayside.
In the United States
Halloween was not a popular observance in early United States  history, as most of the early settlers were Protestant. At the time,  Halloween was considered mostly a Catholic, Episcopalian, and Pagan  holiday, and therefore largely ignored. In the southern colonies, such  as Virginia and Maryland, there were some Halloween customs observed.  The first common events were called "play parties". These parties got  neighborhoods together to celebrate the harvest, dance, sing, tell  stories of the dead, tell fortunes, and have pageants for children in  costume. By the mid 1800's, immigration increased, and many Irish  immigrants, mostly Catholics fleeing the potato famine, brought many  Halloween traditions with them. Jack o'lanterns found a new face, the  pumpkin, which was very plentiful in the New World. Catholics and  Episcopalians sought to preserve their traditions, so started an effort  in the late 1800's to popularize and make their holidays known to the  general population. By campaigning to put these holidays (Halloween and  All Saints Day) on public calendars, magazines and newspapers started to  publicize these holidays, and soon became popular in the United States  more as a community and family holiday, rather than one of great  religious and supernatural importance.
By the mid twentieth century, Halloween turned into a secular  holiday, community centered with parties city-wide, parades, and great  costumes. Halloween is mostly aimed to children, but young and old enjoy  this holiday, with events and parties for both children and adults.  Starting in 1950, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) started a  campaign for children to collect money at Halloween for underprivileged  children around the world. Halloween is the United States' second  largest commercial holiday, spending approximately $6.9 billion a year.
In Other Countries
Mexico, Latin America, and Spain observe All Saints Day and All  Souls Day with a three day celebration starting on the evening of  October 31, through November 2. In most areas of Mexico, November 1 is  set aside to honour dead children, and November 2 to honour those who  died as adults. Starting in mid October, shops are filled with  decorations, flowers, toys made like skeletons and other macabre shapes,  sweets, pastries, and candies shaped like bones, coffins, and dead  bodies in preparation for the festivities. Called "Day of the Dead", the  spirits of relatives are supposed to visit their families homes. An  area of the home is cleared away, and an altar is erected decorated with  flowers, photographs of the deceased, candies and pastries shaped like  skulls inscribed with their name, candles, and a selection of the  deceased's favorite foods and drinks. Even after dinner cigarettes and  liquors are provided for the dear departed's after dinner enjoyment.  Incense is burning to help the spirits find their way home.
In preparation for November 2, the graves of the deceased are  cleaned, painted, and decorated for the occasion. Families gather  November 2 for a festive family reunion. Food, drinks, and tequila are  brought along, along with sometimes even a mariachi band. In some areas,  fireworks announce an open-air mass, the most solemn time of the Day of  the Dead. Many customs vary depending on the particular city, town, or  culture, but all over Mexico, Latin American, and Spain, the Day of the  Dead is considered a celebration of their departed family. 
Eastern Europe's celebration of All Saints Day are usually spent by  praying most of the day, praying to the Saints and thanking God. Often,  they visit their departed family members at the cemeteries. Slovakia,  Hungary, Lithuania, Slovenia, and Poland observe All Saints Day as a  public holiday, but unlike Mexico and the United States, this day is a  somber day of remembrance and reflection.   France, Italy, and Germany are celebrating Halloween, American style,  as does Canada.   Ireland celebrates American style, but a common town bonfire, a remnant  of Celtic days is still lit.  England still celebrates Guy Fawkes Day on November 5 with bonfires,  burning effigies of Guy Fawkes, and fireworks.
Halloween Traditions
Many traditions are observed for Halloween. 
Costumes: Dressing in costumes has its roots in the Pagan Celtic  roots of Samhain. One theory is they dressed as ghouls to fool evil   spirits let loose on October 31, so they would not be possessed  by  these spirits. Another theory is they dressed in costume just  for fun,  and to make mischief. Yet another theory is that faeries  would dress as  beggars asking for food, which would also be the  origins of the "trick  or treat" practice. After the Catholic Church replaced Samhain with All  Saints Day, people would dress as dead Saints and devils for their  festivities.
Trick or Treat: This practice might have had it's start in the legend   from Celtic days that faeries would dress as beggars going from  door  to door asking for food, and those that did not show hospitality would  be harshly dealt with by these magical faeries. On All Souls Day, the  poor would beg for "Soul Cakes" (sweet pastries) in exchange for prayers  for their departed loved ones, expediting their passage to heaven.  Sometimes costumed groups would sing and perform in exchange for food,  ale, or money. In the United Kingdom, Guy Fawkes effigies to be burned  were prepared by children, going door to door, asking for a penny for  Guy, on Guy Fawkes Day. 
Bonfires: These have two origins. The first is the sacred ritual of   extinguishing home fires, and one sacred bonfire is lit in each  town  for the end of the New Year. Some say the reason home fires  were  extinguished is to scare away evil spirits from homes, while  others say  that home fires were supposed to be lit from embers from the sacred  bonfire to start the New Year. The second origin was from Guy Fawkes Day  in the United Kingdom to burn effigies of the Catholic pope, and later  of Guy Fawkes himself.
Apples: A seasonal fruit, and also the symbol of the Roman goddess   Pomona, commonly thought at the time to possess qualities of  knowledge,  resurrection, and immortality. Bobbing for apples, peeling a long apple  peel, and other manipulations of the fruit  were thought to foretell  the future, on this night of Samhain.
Jack o'lanterns: From the Irish folk tale of Jack, who tricked the  devil, but was not allowed in heaven or in hell. The devil, taking pity   of Jack, gave him an ember to light his way on his eternal walks  on  Earth, carried in a hollowed out turnip. Because of their size  and  availability, pumpkins were substituted for turnips in the  United  States. The Celtics did use a hollowed out rutabaga to  carry an ember  from the sacred Samhain bonfire home to light  their home fires, but the  significance and relation to the Irish  tale of Jack is unknown.
Ghost Stories: Ghost stories probably have their roots in the  original Celtic belief that the spirits of the dead (both good and bad)   wandered the Earth on October 31 (Samhain). Later, when the church  replaced Samhain with All Saints Day and All Souls Day, the dead were  remembered, and spoken about. In the United States today, they are used  to amuse and scare children (and some adults) to get them in the  "spirit" of Halloween.
http://www.halloween-history.org/
Rabu, 07 Desember 2011
HALLOWEEN
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