Countdown to Halloween…! Reply

America’s favorite holiday is right around the corner and Do-it-yourselfers are dusting off their sewing machines and power tools in order to make their own costumes and decorate their homes. They’re also getting out their cookbooks and consulting online cooking sites to make homemade Halloween treats to please young and old alike (see my Halloween Pumpkin Bread which is perfect for this season!). A lot of my students don’t really understand the significance of Halloween in American culture as it’s seen as a rather pagan and silly tradition and wonder what all the ruckus is about. So…how much do you know about Halloween? Can you answer the following questions?

  1. What does the word ‘hallow’ mean in Halloween?
  2. What country did Halloween originate in? What was the Celtic Samhain holiday?
  3. Why did people wear masks on Halloween and dress up in costumes?
  4. Who was Jack O’ Lantern or Stingy Jack?
  5. What is the origin of ‘trick or treating’? Why did it become popular in the US?
  6. What is the day after Halloween called?
  7. What are the 2 traditional colors of Halloween and what do they symbolize?
  8. What big orange vegetable, originating in Mexico over 9000 years ago, is     traditionally carved on Halloween? Why? What was the first vegetable?
  9. Halloween is the 2nd most popular holiday in the US. What is the first?
  10. What is the most popular candy in the US given to trick or treaters?
  11. Ghost stories are popular at Halloween time. Which classic American author wrote The Raven’? Who wroteThe Legend of Sleepy Hollow’? Which British writer wrote this classic Gothic novel ‘Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus’ when she was only 21? What American horror fiction writer achieved posthumous fame by creating ‘The Cthulus Mythos’ and ‘Necronomicom’?
  12. What famous American rock ‘n roll singer recorded ‘The Monster Mash’ in 1962 imitating actor Boris Karloff’s voice (the star in the movie ‘Frankenstein’) and which has become America’s favorite Halloween song?

(Scroll down for the answers)

Here’s my take on Halloween:

As most people know, Americans love to have fun and they also like to commercialize any event or holiday where people can kick off their shoes and celebrate (any excuse for a party…!). This commercialization of Halloween also adds to the enjoyment and festive atmosphere of October 31. It’s the first big holiday of the school year, the true end of the summer season as the fall vegetables turn up on the produce stands (pumpkins, apples, turnips, corn and beets to name only a few) and the kickoff of the holiday season which culminates in the ushering in of the  New Year on Times Square in New York City.

The origins of Halloween date back to a Druidic fire festival known as Samhain (summer’s end) from the Old Irish samain. This festival was a celebration of the end of the harvest season for the Irish, Scottish and Welsh Celts. As it was a time when leaves started to wither and annual plants died as the coolness set in, the Gauls saw fit to commemorate the dead and departed and soon the divisions between the living and the dead blurred. Little by little this day became associated with celebrating the recently departed until by the 19th century November 1 was set aside to pay respect to all Saints in heaven. Thus came the names All Saints Day, then Souls Day, then Hallowed Day (sanctify those departed day) from the Scottish Hallowe-en. Because the celebration was the night before it, wasn’t long before Hallowed eve became Halloween and thus began a tradition of   respecting ancient beliefs and rituals which were adopted by the Roman Christians who had earlier conquered the ancient Celts.

So this day became special for the Celts as a way of helping the spirits pass on to the other world. Some spirits though are not so benevolent or need a little special care in passing judgment day or purgatory, so the ancient Celts began the custom of carving turnips and beets and lighting the inside with candles as a way of remembering these lost souls. Americans started using pumpkins in the 19th century to mark the end of harvest time and in the mid 19th century pumpkins became the symbol of Halloween in North America.

This symbol of Halloween is also called a “Jack-o-lantern”. This term stems from an old Irish folktale about a man called “Stingy Jack” who one day invited the Devil to have a drink with him. Living up to his reputation, Stingy Jack refused to pay for the drinks and through his cunning convinced the Devil to turn himself into a coin so that Jack could pay his bill. The Devil accepted and turned himself into a coin. But Jack changed his mind and decided to keep the coin. He put it in his pocket next to a silver cross which prevented the Devil from changing back. But the Devil begged Jack to set him free and Jack did so on the condition that the Devil would not bother him for one year and that if Jack died the Devil had to promise not to claim his soul. Jack continued making deals with the Devil until he eventually died. Because of his bad deeds, as the legend goes, God would not allow such a horrible human being into heaven. The Devil though would not allow Jack into hell because of the promise that he had made to not claim Jack’s soul.  So Jack, now homeless,  was condemned to roam the earth with only a burning coal that the Devil allowed him to have. Jack put this burning coal into a turnip and has been wandering around the earth ever since. The Irish began to refer to this ghostly figure as “Jack of the Lantern” and then it was shortened to “Jack o’ Lantern”. The Irish American immigrants brought these traditions to America and soon discovered that pumpkins made the ideal “lantern” for Halloween as they were much bigger than turnips and could be carved out more easily. These lanterns were traditionally put on window sills or doorsteps to ward off or frighten away evil spirits such as “Stingy Jack”.

The legend of Stingy Jack gave way to other stories of ghoulish beings who played tricks on humans during this nightly celebration (see 18th century Scottish Glasgow poet John Mayne’s poems relating to pranks at Halloween “What fearfu’ pranks ensue!”, Scottish poet Robert Burns’ poem “Halloween” written in 1785 and 19th century American poet Edgar Allan Poe’s poems “The Raven” (go to The Raven page to hear it read), “Ligeia” and “Ulalume” to name just a few) and before you knew it Americans picked up these legends and the holiday took on themes of death, evil, the occult or mythical monsters. Black (for death) and orange (for harvest time) became the theme colors. Peasants in early 15th England and Ireland took advantage of these fears that people had of evil spirits, and went from door to door begging for treats (cake, fruit or coins) in exchange for the promise to pray for the souls of the dead and to keep the spirits from playing tricks on the occupants of the house. The custom was called “souling” and was a common practice at holiday time for beggars.

Here’s a reading of the

“Souling” was transformed into “trick or treating” as a reminder of what the beggars said when the homeowners opened their doors.

Children soon picked up this custom of going from door to door for food or coins and started the custom of “guising” or disguising themselves in elaborate costumes. They are usually modeled after supernatural figures such as monsters, ghosts, skeletons, witches, and devils. Over time, people started disguising themselves as popular characters from fiction, celebrities with sophisticated rubber masks, and generic images from legends. Of course commercialism had its hand in these traditions also and the first mass-produced Halloween costumes appeared in stores in the 1930s when the custom of trick-or-treating was becoming popular in the United States. Halloween spending is more “treat” than “trick” as people spent more than $6 Billion in costumes and candy in 2010. Wow!

Tim Burton, an American film director and producer famous for dark, strange movies such as Beetlejuice, Edward Scissorhands, Planet of the Apes, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory to name a few. His latest film, Alice in Wonderland, was the 2nd highest grossing film of 2010. “This Is Halloween” is a song by composer Danny Elfman which Burton included in his film The Nightmare Before Chritmas (play on words of the Christmas poem “Twas Night Before Christmas” by Clement Clark Moore)  Sing along with Jack Skellington to practice your stress (a Disney re-cut):

[By the way…for all of my observant students…there were a few mistakes in the subtitles…did you find them? . Here they are: Everybody screm (sp)= everybody scream; Yours stairs = your stairs (possessive pronouns are always invariable); Something’s waiting no (sp) to pounce = now to pounce; Everyone screm (sp) = everybody scream…!]

In Los Angeles, California, folks from every walk of life flock to “Mr. Bone’s Pumpkin Patch” amusement park to spend a day with the family in a farm like setting and to leave with a perfectly shaped pumpkin to decorate their house.Here’s Paris Hilton leaving with her pumpkin:    

If Halloween falls on the weekend, people celebrate traditional games such as apple bobbing (with your hands tied behind your back you must “catch” an apple with your teeth in a pail of water) or playing fortune teller with Ouija Boards. It’s also an occasion to sit by the fireplace and tell Gothic ghost stories (Frankenstein and Dracula among others) or view horror films. Episodes of television series and Halloween-themed specials are usually shown before Halloween to get people in the holiday spirit. Or music videos. Here’s one of Michael Jackson’s best ‘Thriller’ which epitomizes America’s love of the occult:

So…how are you going to celebrate Halloween? Boo-oo-ooo!

Oh By the way…I almost forgot. Here are the answers to the quiz:

  1. The word ‘hallow’ means saint. Hallow + Eve became Halloween or the night of the celebration of the dead.
  2. Halloween originated in Ireland. Saimhain (pronounced /SOW:in/ ) was a celebration marking the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter or the dark days of the year.
  3. People wore masks and costumes to protect themselves from the spirits or ghosts who were thought to roam the countryside on Halloween. They wore masks and costumes to avoid being recognized as human.
  4. Jack O’ Lantern is a nickname for a carved turnip or pumpkin with a candle in it. It actually came from an Irish mythical character called Stingy Jack. He was a deceiver, manipulator and a drunk who had made a pact with the devil. Because of this he was doomed to wander the earth forever with only a hollowed out turnip to light his way.
  5. Probably comes from ‘guising’ in Scotland and Ireland where children would perform a ‘trick’ before collecting a ‘treat’ instead of praying for the dead. This is where the word ’disguise’ comes from. In the U.S. in the ‘30s, schools started encouraging youngsters to ‘trick or treat’ instead of playing pranks or tricks which caused a lot of damage to public and private property. The town councils and schools thought this created more of a fun community holiday event.
  6. The day after Halloween is called ‘All Saints’ Day’. People traditionally put flowers on the graves of their loved ones.
  7. The two traditional colors are ‘orange’ and ‘black’. Orange is associated with the Fall harvest and black is associated with darkness and death.
  8. The All American pumpkin is the traditional vegetable carved on Halloween and eaten on Thanksgiving. The Irish used to carve a turnip or a potato.
  9. Commercially speaking, Christmas is the number one holiday in the United States. Halloween is the 2nd most popular holiday. . People spend over $1.5 billion on costumes every year and more than $2.5 billion on Halloween decorations.
  10. The most popular candy given during Halloween is M&Ms. They got their start in 1941 to enable soldiers to carry their chocolate without it melting. They were named after Bruce Murrie from the American Hershey’s company and Forrest Mars from the Mars Candy company.
  11. The 19th century writer Edgar Allen Poe wrote the poem ‘The Raven’. He is best known for his tales of mystery and doom. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is a short story by American author Washington Irving who published it in 1820. It was made into a feature film by Tim Burton in 1999 starring Johnny Depp as Ichabod Crane and Christopher Walken plays the Headless Horseman. Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein in 1818 as a bet. She and her husband Percy Shelley were at Lord Byron’s summer home, I believe in Switzerland. There was a thunderstorm one night and while cooped up in the house, they came up with a friendly competition. They decided to see who could write the best ghost story. I think we can say that she won the bet! Way to go Mary!
  12. Bobby “Boris” Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers. The song is a narration by a mad scientist who creates a monster that late one night, gets up and begins dancing. This song has been recorded by other musicians including the Beach Boys and the Smashing Pumpkins.

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