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Happy haunting

Halloween celebrations through the years

Published Saturday, October 31, 2009

Not too many years ago, children all across the United States celebrated Halloween on Oct. 31, by dressing up in costumes and going trick or treating.

Today, Halloween is not widely celebrated in such a way. Many people frown on Halloween as a pagan holiday and have opted instead for Fall Festivals, which have adopted much of the fun and games of Halloween. Children have shed the ghost and witch costumes and instead dress as Barbie and Batman.

“Oct. 31, was once a day of dread for our European forbearers,” said Dr. Milton McPherson, retired Troy University history professor. “ European Catholics honored all saints on Nov. 1 and Oct. 31was all hallow evening or Halloween.

“It was widely believed that witches and other evil spirits were especially active that night. Europeans locked their doors and pulled their blinds and prayed that no witches would call on them during the night.”

A witch, or wizard if a man, was believed to be one who had entered in to a pact with the devil. Witches were condemned in the Bible.

“Heresy, challenges to the Catholic Church, spread throughout Europe during the 15th century and in 1484, the Pope urged that witches be exterminate as heretics,” McPherson said. “True Christians were urged to fear the devil as well as to trust in God.”

McPherson said that most accused witches were women because the belief was that women are frailer than men so it was easier for them to be entrapped in the “snares of the devil.”

“Every witch was believed to have a ‘familiar,’ which was an animal form they could assume at will,” he said. “The black cat was believed to be the most commonly used familiar.”

Should a familiar be killed with the witch “in residence,” the witch would not perish.

“Only after nine such deaths would the witch finally die,” McPherson said.

“A perversion of this belief gave rise to the popular superstition that cats have nine lives.”

A common belief among the more superstitious population was that witches met once a week in a coven, which consisted of 12 witches and the devil.

Four times a year, including October 31, all witches and the devil met in a terrifying witches’ sabbath held in a “frightful” part of the countryside.

“Witches would arrive and a fearful orgy would follow with feasting on the flesh of new-born babies and dancing to tunes played by thousands of toads,” McPherson said.

“At the height of the sabbath, the devil would appear, large and hairy with a tail, cloven hooves and horns. He would initiate new witches and punish those who had not been wicked enough by whipping them with thorns or scorpions.”

In Salem, Mass. in 1692, several young girls began to have fits and accused several townspeople of having bewitched them.

“There was likely some reasonable explanation but a local doctor concluded ‘the evil hand (witches) is on them.’ Eventually, 200 were jailed, 55 were tortured and 19 people and 2 dogs had been executed as witches,’ McPherson said.

“The victims died alone, deemed the worst of criminals and shunned by their own kinsmen for to show compassion for a witch was to invite death.”

Many were victims of spite or plain mischief and many were possibly suffering from mild forms of insanity in an age when mental diseases were not recognized as such.

“But all were victims of the ignorance and superstition which still abounds in many parts of the world today,” McPherson said.


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Comments

Posted by turtle (anonymous) on October 31, 2009 at midnight (Suggest removal)

Never was there a truer statement than the last one, that ignorance still abounds in many parts of the world today. I'm disappointed only the "bad" aspects were mentioned in this article. No mention of Samhain, legends of Jack-O-Lantern, etc all which predate the Christian fears and perversion of All Hallow's Eve.

Posted by DarrylDavis (anonymous) on October 31, 2009 at 9:35 a.m. (Suggest removal)

From what I have read "All Hallow's Eve" is aproximately 1 month after the fall equinox and has always been considered a celebration of darkness because the darkness is greater than the day. This is the reason for the symbols of the celebration " bats", "owls" ,"skeletons" etc. as all are representations of death and darkness.
In reality the death that is celebrated is the death of the sun as the time of year is the fall or the fall of the sun.(days are getting shorter)
This same aspect is observed in the spring as the sun springs forth.(the days are getting longer) The observance of Easter is the celebration of light and is celebrated aproximately one month after the spring equinox. The sun rises in the east therefore the name of the celebration is "Easter" . Churches will honor this day with an "Easter Sunday Sunrise Service".(Birth of the Sun).
So it appears both holidays are celebrations of darkness and light and have been since the beginning of recorded history from what I have read.

Posted by turtle (anonymous) on November 1, 2009 at 5:26 p.m. (Suggest removal)

They have been around since the beginning of time Darryl, however they were both originally "pagan" holidays. When conversion began to Christianity many still held on to the pagan beliefs associated with what is now Halloween, Easter, and even Christmas. To continue with the conversion while still appealling to those who wanted to hold onto the beliefs many of the traditions were Christianized. Look up the legends associated with the holidays such as Easter Eggs, the Easter bunny, the Christmas tree, etc. Many of them have their roots in pagan beliefs and celebrations.

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