From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
Many Years Ago:
The Celtic Origins of Halloween
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * October 25, 2000
Many centuries ago in ancient pre-Christian Ireland, Celtic society
marked the first day of November as New Year’s Day. They called it
Samhain – Celtic for “the end of summer.” Samhain eve, October
31, was a night of supernatural sights and sounds, where the dead walked
the earth to make contact with the living and strange things happened.
It’s a Celtic tradition that has survived to this day, albeit with many
changes and adaptations, as Halloween.
Samhain was the most sacred of four high holy days that marked
the Celtic calendar, the others being Imbolc (February 1), Bealtaine (May
1), and Lughnasa (August 1). Like Samhain, each marked the
change of a new season and was closely associated with the agricultural
cycle.
On one level, the association of Samhain with death is obvious,
for it marked the harvest, the end of the agricultural year. But
it also stemmed from the fact that the Celts viewed time as cyclical (as
opposed to our modern notion of linear time). The year ended at sundown
October 31 and a new one began the next day. In between was a night
outside of ordinary time (somewhat like the number 0) when the normal boundary
between the world and the otherworld was temporarily dissolved, thus allowing
the spirits of the ancestors to wander among the living.
As a result of this opening to the ancestors, the Druids, high
priests, if you will, of Celtic religion, considered Samhain to be the
best time for divination and prophesy. In many parts of the Celtic
world, marriages were arranged and contracts renewed on this day.
Traditionally Celts celebrated Samhain by building huge bonfires
on hilltops.
Celts also placed candles in hollowed out turnips and gourds, the precurser
to the modern jack-o-lantern. Many placed candles in the windows
of their homes to guide the spirits as they walked about. Believing
that the ancestors returned to their former homes on this night, Celts
set out food for the departed. They did so out of a combination of
hospitality and fear. Those who failed to set out food and light
candles might incur the anger of the dead and find their field trampled
or cattle set loose. Here we see the origin of Halloween’s notion
of “trick-or-treat.”
With the arrival of Patrick and other missionaries in Ireland
in the 5th century Samhain, like so many other Celtic traditions, was transformed
into a Christian holy day (similarly, Imbolc on February 1 was Christianized
to become St. Brigid’s day). Like Samhain, All Soul’s Day became
a day for remembering departed loved ones and the night before – All Hallows
Eve – one fraught with fearful notions of ghosts and spirits.
Over the centuries All Hallows Eve evolved into a night where
young men and women, often dressed in disguises and costumes, engaged in
raucous behavior and mischief making. Merchants and homeowners were
encouraged to provide food and drink to these rowdies as a way to ensure
that no harm came to their property.
Irish and Scottish immigrants brought this tradition with them
to America in the 18th and 19th centuries where it underwent further adaptation.
Hollowed gourds and turnips were replaced by the bigger and more plentiful
pumpkin. By the late 19th century, Halloween was increasingly seen
as a wholesome night of fun for children. “Trick-or-treat” ceased
to have any sinister connotation and came to mean simply “where’s the candy?”
In recent years, Halloween has once again been transformed.
Evangelical Christians (the same ones who want to ban Harry Potter books)
denounce Halloween as nothing short of Satan worship and try to provide
alternative ways for children to have fun on October 31. Despite
this effort, Americans as a whole have gone mad for Halloween. This
year alone total sales of Halloween-related goods will top $6 billion –
more than Easter, Valentine’s Day, or Thanksgiving. Only Christmas
is bigger.
Indeed, the American Halloween has grown so big that it is being re-exported
back to Ireland and the rest of Europe. These days if you’re in Dublin
in late October you’re likely to see more pumpkins than shamrocks or harps.
How’s that for scary?
Hibernian History This Week
Oct 24, 1880: The Ladies Land League is founded in New York
Oct 25, 1920: Lord Mayor of Cork, Terence MacSwiney, dies in a British
prison after a 74-day hunger strike during the War for Independence.
Oct 26, 1931: Eugene O’Neill’s play Mourning Becomes Electra opens at
Guild Theatre in New York City.
Oct 26, 1990: Tom Clancy of the Clancy Brothers dies.
Oct 31, 1903: John Barrymore makes his stage debut in "Magda" at the
Cleveland Theatre in Chicago.
Hibernians Born This Week:
Oct 26, 1914: First child star of the silver screen, Jackie Coogan,
in Los Angeles.
Oct 29, 1815: Songwriter (Dixie), Daniel Emmett, Mount Vernon, Ohio
Oct 30: 1892: Nationalist and organizer of the Blueshirts, Eoin O’Duffy,
in Castleblayney, Co. Monaghan.
Oct 31, 1931: Apollo 11 astronaut, Michael Collins, in Rome, Italy.
Oct 31, 1961: U2 drummer, Larry Mullen, in Dublin.
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2000
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