
Hallowe'en
is one of the old festivals of Britain
but has enjoyed a relatively recent resurgence
of popularity, undoubtedly due to influence
from the USA, where it is a far more important
holiday, and the impact of TV.

THE ORIGINS OF THE FESTIVAL
The name "Hallowe'en" comes
from the full name of the festival : All
Hallows Eve (the night before
All Hallows - or All Saints' Day which
is on November 1st.) This is the day in
the Christian Church which commemorates
all those saints who do not have a special
feast day of their own. As with many other
religious holidays, however, its roots
lie much earlier, in pre-Christian times.
The
Celtic festival of Samhain
(Gaelic for "summer's end")
was celebrated at the end of the Celtic
year, on October 31st. It marked the final
harvest of the year and symbolised the
death of the summer, exactly six months
after its counterpart, Beltane,
celebrated the coming of the summer. Both
festivals were marked by the lighting
of bonfires and dancing and feasting,
but whereas Beltane celebrated new life,
Samhain was associated with darkness and
the cult of the dead, and when in 837
AD Christian missionaries adapted this
extremely popular event by naming November
1st as All Saints Day, they were unable
to totally dissociate it from the supernatural
element with which Hallowe'en remains
connected to this day.
Hallowe'en
was believed to be the night when the
veil between the worlds of the living
and the dead was at its thinnest and communication
would be possible. The souls of the departed
would be able to travel between the two
worlds, hobgoblins and spirits would be
able to roam freely, and witches and even
the devil would be at the height of their
powers. In order to confuse these wandering
spirits, children would dress up in each
others' clothes, and "jack-o-lanterns"
would be placed by the doors to frighten
them away.

CUSTOMS AND TRADITIONS
Many of the practices carried out by today's
children, particularly in the cities,
are not traditional but merely copied
off American customs seen on TV. "Trick-or-treating"
in its present form is not a British custom
but is becoming more widespread, much
to the puzzlement of older people who
are not familiar with the practice and
don't know how to respond to a doorstep
demand for a "trick or treat."
It has its origins in the ancient Celtic
practice of dressing up to confuse the
devil and the wandering spirits, and no
doubt children suitably disguised would
take the opportunity to get up to mischief,
safe from being recognised and punished!
The
Hallowe'en bonfires have been transferred
to Guy
Fawkes Night (often called
"Bonfire Night") less than a
week later, but many other customs and
traditions persist.
The carved "Jack-o-Lanterns"
which everyone associates with Hallowe'en
were until recently always made out of
swedes (rutabagas) or turnips, or even
large beet or mangel-wurzels - quite difficult
to hollow out successfully, so now that
pumpkins are becoming more widely available
they are taking over from the traditional
vegetable. The name is said to come from
a legendary Irishman, condemned to walk
the earth until the end of time because
neither God nor the devil would have him,
with only a glowing coal in a hollowed-out
turnip to light his way

As this is an autumn festival, fruit and
nuts are used to foretell the future :
nuts roasted over the fire are watched
carefully to see whose cracks first, as
the owner of the nut will be the first
to marry, and apples can be used to tell
who is your "true love." This
is done by peeling the apple with a sharp
knife, trying to keep the peel all in
one piece, or at least as long as possible.
The peel is then thrown over the left
shoulder to land behind - the shape it
takes will be the inital of your "true
love" or the person you will marry.
This sometimes requires a bit of imaginitive
interpretation! Another way of finding
out the identity of a future spouse is
to brush one's hair in front of a mirror
at midnight, and the "shade"
of the person you will marry will appear
over your shoulder. No shade - no wedding
that year!
Apples
also feature in two variants of the most
common Hallowe'en game played today :
Apple-bobbing (also called apple-dookin
or ducking for apples) where apples are
floated on a large bowl or tub of water
and have to be picked up with the teeth,
and an even messier version where the
apples are supended on string after first
being smeared with honey or treacle to
make them good and sticky - in both cases,
use of the hands is not permitted!
In
some parts of the world Hallowe'en is
also Mischief Night but
in most parts of the UK this is celebrated
on November 4th, the night before Bonfire
Night (thus extending the
festivities.)
Web
set and page created by Dianne Davies
© September 2005; all rights reserved.
Nothing may be taken from this page without
the express
permission of the copyright holder.