Question:
Why Do We Celebrate Halloween??
Someone S
2007-10-22 10:26:19 UTC
Does anyone actually know why we celebrate halloween lol???
33 answers:
It's the hair
2007-10-22 10:28:53 UTC
Because our culture is obsessed with death.
firey_cowgirl
2007-10-22 12:19:52 UTC
The only people who actually celebrate Halloween is pagan religions. It's called Samhain (pronounced sowun). It is kind of the new year for pagans. This is the day when the veil between the earthly realm and the spiritual realm is the thinnest. People would leave treats to honor the good spirits and leave carved gourds to scare off the bad ones and wear costumes to confuse some them.
Steffy
2007-10-22 10:32:54 UTC
Here is an article I found....hope it helps.



Halloween. Just the name of this holiday brings images of ghosts, witches, and goblins to mind. Yet it is the favorite holiday for many kids. Where did Halloween come from?



Halloween was first celebrated by the Celts, who lived in Scotland and Ireland in ancient times. The Celts held a special festival to celebrate Samhain, the god of the dead. The day they choose was their New Year's Eve, October 31 on our calendar. They believed the souls of the dead returned to visit their homes on this one night of the year to try to find another body to inhabit.



Homes had no fires in the hearth and the adults dressed as demons or witches so that no spirit would want to inhabit their body. Everyone would make their way out of town to the huge bonfires that were lit to draw the spirits away from town.



The other holiday which blended into our modern Halloween, is All Hallows' Eve the Christian holiday to honor the saints. People believed that on this night, witches (in the form of black cats), flew about and ghosts and demons were free to roam the land. It was the night to have your future told or play games like bobbing for apples.



The Irish thought leprechauns played pranks on Halloween, so mischief- making was added to the celebration of Halloween.



In Scotland, a hollowed out turnip was used as lantern to light your way in the dark of the night.



As people emigrated to North America, they each brought their own bit of Halloween with them. All the customs blended into our modern Halloween.
Cristi_me
2007-10-22 10:35:08 UTC
Halloween is an old celebrating day that has many other names like "Devil's Day" "Devil's Birthday" "Night of the spirits" etc. Now is not celebrated for a reason, just for fun. But many years ago, it was celebrated for "scaring" out the ghost, by wearing masks during the night and very big fires that were supposed to scare them also.
sharon b
2007-10-22 10:31:18 UTC
That's somewhat of a trick question. The reason I say that is because I do take my nieces to a few houses to get free candy and then come home and go thru it to make sure it's safe to eat but I don't know if that's it considered a celebration in regards to halloween.
Arizona
2007-10-22 10:46:49 UTC
Honestly, it comes from times of the Druids mostly. When Irish immigrants came to this country they brought with them the festival for SAMHAIN but the Halloween we celebrate today is more a mix of cultural backgrounds including the "Day of the Dead" from Mexico and Harvest festivals from our own pilgrim days.
TechGirl
2007-10-22 10:30:06 UTC
Halloween is a time for the community to come together and dress up and meet eachother by Trick-or-Treating. It is in no way the 'Devils Holiday" as some wish to believe. It is a time for the children to go out and get goodies once a year and be with there friends.
puzzeled UK
2007-10-22 10:38:45 UTC
Halloween comes from the Pagan festival of the dead "all hallows night" this is where traditionally the living, would visit and decorate the resting places of past family members, as a sign of respect. The dead were revered and consulted by the living. babies would be introduced, courting couples would ask permission to marry ect ect . the dead are still with us in spirit form. they would be a big part of family life, and "all hallows night" would be a huge celebration, with cooking on open fires , drinking and generally having a good time. there was no fear or menace as there is in todays Halloween parties. that stems from the later christian efforts to suppress the Pagan belifies. its actually a good night out i recommend it to you.
2007-10-22 10:38:57 UTC
Meh... it's a holiday. Or several holidays combined (see above).



The most basic origins are holidays and ceremonies to welcome in the spirits of those lost (family, friends, pets, etc...)... a large collective prayer, essentially. A good example of a Halloween-esque holiday that still holds to this is Day of the Dead... yes, there are parades and ghouls and lots of color. But also offerings... families leave out little shrines filled with the personal possessions of those they've lost, to draw them in, welcome them back for a quick visit home, and show that they still think about them and still love them... a reminder of their life and those who care about them.



Also, some of the more creepy things have their origins in trying to scare off evil spirits... welcome the good, scare off the bad, etc...



Now? It's an excuse to get drunk and eat lots of candy, and consequently puke all over the place from the horrible combination.
loveless_sselevol
2007-10-22 10:33:59 UTC
um... it's 'the day of the saints' or something ('alla helgons dag' in Swedish um... don't know exactly what you call it in English) and you are meant to think about the people you've lost and show respect to the dead by visiting their graves and whatnot. Why you guys in the US choose to show respect by dressing up like monsters and ask for candy is beyond me, lol :P! And you've got people in Sweden to celebrate Halloween to, annoying little children knocks on our door and steals my candy w00t xP!
Hoosier Daddy
2007-10-22 10:31:20 UTC
Three reasons:



1: Candy for kids.

2: Candy for kids.

3: To cheese off ex-wife who has to let me spend time with the kids.
ditzi_k
2007-10-22 10:31:10 UTC
my friends and i have a party each year for the children from church as an alternative to the mischief that sometimes accompanies this time of year.



basically we're celebrating being friends and having good clean fun!
smoofus70
2007-10-22 10:33:45 UTC
Because pagan holidays are fun. Even some of our Christmas traditions come from the pagans.
Nessie from Loch Ness
2007-10-22 10:30:09 UTC
Im going as a Monster?



Nessie



Trick or Treat?
D24
2007-10-22 10:29:56 UTC
its an occasion when we celebrate the naturally ugly. People try to immitate them by wearing masks. Its only politically correct!
Dreamer
2007-10-22 10:29:14 UTC
I dont know but is a great excuse to dress up and pig out on candy!!
2007-10-22 10:43:53 UTC
To worship Lord Satan. Or, if you want to be really ghoulishly minded, pray to a celibate executed man (the very symbol of death) and Damn to Hell anyone who isnt of your faith.
socalcrazydiamond
2007-10-22 10:30:28 UTC
Good question haha Here is a link!



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halloween
Nimrill
2007-10-22 10:29:55 UTC
it stems from the ancient wiccan religion where it was (and still is) the witch's new year...I suppose the tradition never died out and it is a great way for companies to make loads of money from sweets/costumes/pumpkins
Pamela
2007-10-22 10:29:36 UTC
It started as some kind of religious thing but now is it just FUN!
Calm
2007-10-22 10:27:51 UTC
Halloween is for the ghoulish at mind!
Andrea
2007-10-22 10:29:45 UTC
Historically, it has to do with people leaving offerings for ghosts (hence trick-or-treating) and trying to scare them away with jack-o-lanterns. Personally, I just enjoy dressing up, carving pumpkins, and getting candy. It's just fun.
~*tigger*~ **
2007-10-22 10:29:35 UTC
old hallowees eve is when we light candles and remeber the people who have passed

its an old custom and it arose when people thought 31/10 was the day when we were closest to the spirit realm so we could connect to them
oh no,,,it's the kevsta
2007-10-22 10:37:41 UTC
it's the only time the mother-in-law can go out without scarying the kids
Blake
2007-10-22 10:28:54 UTC
ist the time we pray for zombies to take over the world and then have epic cahse seens and lose yoru best friend and get to shoot stuff like on the tv!
2007-10-22 10:29:13 UTC
Because...



One day a little wee man shot his candy apple tree,



Then it grew bigger and he decided to share it with everyone!



So from this day everyone dresses freaky....



To show there love for the freaky little wee man!



AMEN!
2007-10-22 10:29:59 UTC
It's just a fun day . Take it or leave it .
sweetbeesma
2007-10-22 10:29:05 UTC
Because it's fun and we get candy! heehee
2007-10-22 10:39:01 UTC
to trick-or-treat someone
2007-10-22 10:30:31 UTC
http://www.halloweenhistory.com

http://www.wikipedia.org
DGW
2007-10-22 10:29:17 UTC
I dont
crypt
2007-10-22 10:37:37 UTC
The Real Origins of Halloween discusses the history of Halloween, the origins of trick-or-treating, reasons behind some of the symbols of the season, and why the holiday is well worth keeping and celebrating. Previous versions of this essay specifically contrasted the historical evidence with the absurd claims and urban legends used in most anti-Halloween propaganda. I have now put those latter materials into their own essay, Halloween Errors and Lies, since it seems that many people have never seen or heard those fearmongering tales and could not understand why I would spend so much space discussing them within an historical essay.



This is a work of amateur scholarship. If you wish to quote me in an academic environment, you may wish to first verify my statements by consulting the books linked within my text. A more formal Bibliography will appear in a future book, Some Truths About Halloween.



If you prefer black text on white, you can click here for a more easily printed (or for some folks, more easily read) edition of this specific essay. For a Spanish translation with graphics, go to Los Verdaderos Orígenes de Halloween or here for the easy printing/reading Spanish text without most of the graphics.



For information about the specific topic of Witchcraft, consider obtaining my book, Bonewits's Essential Guide to Witchcraft and Wicca.















There appear to have been four major holy days celebrated by the Paleopagan Druids, possibly throughout the Celtic territories: Samhain, Oimelc, Beltane & Lughnasadh (in one set of Irish-based modern spellings). Four additional holy (or “High”) days (Winter Solstice or “Midwinter,” Spring Equinox, Summer Solstice or “Midsummer,” and Fall Equinox), which are based on Germanic or other Indo-European cultures, are also celebrated in the Neopagan Druid calendar, along with others based on mainstream holidays (visit the linked essay for details).



The most common practice for the calculation of Samhain, Oimelc, Beltane and Lughnasadh has been, for the last several centuries, to use the civil calendar days or eves of November 1st, February 1st, May 1st and August 1st, respectively. Since we have conflicting evidence on how the Paleopagan Druids calculated these dates, modern Neopagans just use whichever method is most convenient. This means, of course, that we aren’t all doing anything uniformly on any given night, which fits perfectly with the Neopagan saying that, “organizing Pagans is like herding cats.” It doesn’t match the Evil Conspiracy theories — which have us all marching to a strict drumbeat in perfect Satanic unison — at all.



These four major holy days have been referred to as “fire festivals” for at least the last hundred years or so, because (1) to the ancient Celts, as with all the Indo-European Paleopagans, fire was a physical symbol of divinity, holiness, truth, and beauty; (2) fires play important roles in the traditional customs associated with these festivals; and (3) several early Celtic scholars called them that. Whether in Ireland or India, among the Germans or the Hittites, sacred fires were apparently kindled by the Indo-European Paleopagans on every important religious occasion. To this very day, among Eastern Orthodox and Western Catholics, you can’t have a satisfying ritual without a few candles being lit — of course, the Fundamentalists consider them Heathen too!



Samhain or “Samhuinn” is pronounced “sow-” (as in female pig) “-en” (with the neutral vowel sound) — not “Sam Hain” — because “mh” in the middle of an Irish word is a “w” sound (don’t ask me why, it’s just Irish). Known in Modern Irish as Lá Samhna, in Welsh as Nos Galen-Gaeaf (that is, the “Night of the Winter Calends”), and in Manx as Laa Houney (Hollantide Day), Sauin or Souney, Samhain is often said to have been the most important of the fire festivals, because (according to most Celtic scholars) it may have marked the Celtic New Year. At the least, Samhain was equal in importance to Beltane and shared many symbolic characteristics.





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Samhain was the original festival that the Western Christian calendar moved its “All Saints’ Day” to (Eastern Christians continue to celebrate All Saints’ Day in the spring, as the Roman Christians had originally). Since the Celts, like many cultures, started every day at sunset of the night before, Samhain became the “evening” of “All Hallows” (“hallowed” = “holy” = “saint”) which was eventually contracted into “Hallow-e’en” or the modern “Halloween.”



Whether it was the Celtic New Year or not, Samhain was the beginning of the Winter or Dark Half of the Year (the seasons of Geimredh=Winter and Earrach=Spring) as Beltane was the beginning of the Summer or Light Half of the Year (the seasons of Samradh=Summer and Foghamhar=Fall). The day before Samhain is the last day of summer (or the old year) and the day after Samhain is the first day of winter (or of the new year). Being “between” seasons or years, Samhain was (and is) considered a very magical time, when the dead walk among the living and the veils between past, present and future may be lifted in prophecy and divination.



Many important mythological events are said to have occured on that day. It was on a Samhain that the Nemedians captured the terrible Tower of Glass built by the evil Formorians; that the Tuatha De Danann later defeated the Formors once and for all; and that many other events of a dramatic or prophetic nature in Celtic myth happened. Many of these events had to do with the temporary victory of the forces of darkness over those of light, signaling the beginning of the cold and dark half of the year.



There is some evidence to indicate that three days were spent celebrating this festival. Philip Carr-Gomm, Chosen Chief of the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids, speaking of both Paleopagan and Mesopagan Druids in England, had this to say about it in his Elements of the Druid Tradition:



Samhuinn, from 31 October to 2 November was a time of no-time. Celtic society, like all early societies, was highly structured and organised, everyone knew their place. But to allow that order to be psychologically comfortable, the Celts knew that there had to be a time when order and structure were abolished, when chaos could reign. And Samhuinn, was such a time. Time was abolished for the three days of this festival and people did crazy things, men dressed as women and women as men. [This happened at Beltane too — IB] Farmers’ gates were unhinged and left in ditches, peoples’ horses were moved to different fields, and children would knock on neighbours’ doors for food and treats in a way that we still find today, in a watered-down way, in the custom of trick-or-treating on Hallowe’en.



But behind this apparent lunacy, lay a deeper meaning. The Druids knew that these three days had a special quality about them. The veil between this world and the World of the Ancestors was drawn aside on these nights, and for those who were prepared, journeys could be made in safety to the ’other side’. The Druid rites, therefore, were concerned with making contact with the spirits of the departed, who were seen as sources of guidance and inspiration rather than as sources of dread. The dark moon, the time when no moon can be seen in the sky, was the phase of the moon which ruled this time, because it represents a time in which our mortal sight needs to be obscured in order for us to see into the other worlds.



The dead are honoured and feasted, not as the dead, but as the living spirits of loved ones and of guardians who hold the root-wisdom of the tribe. With the coming of Christianity, this festival was turned into Hallowe’en (31 October), All Hallows [All Saints Day] (1 November), and All Souls Day (2 November). Here we can see most clearly the way in which Christianity built on the Pagan foundations it found rooted in these isles. Not only does the purpose of the festival match with the earlier one, but even the unusual length of the festival is the same.



The Christian Church was unable to get the people to stop celebrating this holiday, so they simply sprinkled a little holy water on it and gave it new names, as they did with other Paleopagan holidays and customs. This was a form of calendrical imperialism, co-opting Paleopagan sacred times, as they had Paleopagan sacred places (most if not all of the great cathedrals of Europe were built on top of earlier Paleopagan shrines and sacred groves). So when Fundamentalists come to your local school board and try to get Halloween removed from the public schools because “it’s a Pagan holiday,” they are perfectly correct. Of course, Valentine’s Day/Lupercalia, Easter/Eostre, and Christmas/Yule also have many Paleopagan elements associated with their dating and/or symbols, as the Jehovah’s Witnesses and others have pointed out for decades. So if we decide to rid the public schools of all holidays that have Pagan aspects to them, there won’t be many left for the kids to enjoy.



I find it amusing that American teens and pre-teens seem to have instinctively expanded their seasonal celebrations to add another night before Halloween, one on which they commit various acts of harmless (or unfortunately not) vandalism, including pranks on neighbors. If we assume that All Saints Day was moved to co-opt the central day of Samhain which was associated originally with the Gods and Goddesses of the Celts, and All Souls Day was supposed to co-opt the worship of the Ancestors, then the modern “Cabbage Night,” “Hell Night” (boy does that push the Fundamentalists’ buttons!), or simply “Mischief Night” (which used to be April 30th — the night before May Day — in Germany — there’s that Beltane/Samhain connection again) would correspond to a celebration of the often mischievous Nature Spirits. This then nicely covers the Indo-European pattern of the “Three Kindreds” of Deities, Ancestors, and Nature Spirits.
2007-10-22 10:28:29 UTC
to scare people..



Boooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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