Halloween vs. Samhain
During the harvest
season we all like to decorate with corn stalks and pumpkins, we make pumpkin
cookies or cakes, assorted fruit or vegetable breads. Some of us attend parties
where we drink apple cider or dunk for apples. All of the foods here are
traditional bounty from the earth. In the old Celtic versions of
Samhain, it was a tradition to set out food and drink to welcome the ancestors
that might cross the thin veil between the worlds. The Celts also carved faces
in large turnips (pumpkins, native to the Americas, weren’t introduced to
Europe before the time of Columbus) to ward off any evil spirits that might be
passing by as well. In Halloween
celebrations, this custom lives on using pumpkins to carve Jack o’lanterns.
Though many people who celebrate Halloween today do not believe in evil
spirits, the jack o’lantern still makes a festive decoration.
Halloween
is a secular cultural holiday, which falls on October 31st every year,
everywhere. The theme is a playful look at death and human fears of death. Costumes
often connect with death, fright, or both. As a child, I celebrated Halloween like most American children. I
dressed up, went out, and gathered candy and other goodies and my children will
as well in addition to our pagan traditions. In older times costumes were once
part of another tradition that some chose to wear to scare others away that may
try to harm or “trick” them; this is in no way related to paganism. The ghosts,
goblins, and devils that some people associate with paganism are just plain
false. We pagans believe in Gods and Goddesses and there is no evil entity,
such as the devil, or a place such as Hell.
Samhain
is more of a holy day for Pagans, but not just one day, more like a period of
about ten days to two weeks. It is one of the most powerful times of year for
magick (“magick” is the work done in ritual, using natural energies, as opposed
to “magic”, which is defined as what happens only in fantasy or illusion). It is a day for pagans to remember those loved one
who have passed and also to celebrate the bounty of the earth in
the final harvest of the year, which makes it in many ways like Thanksgiving. It
is on Halloween night that many believe that the veil between this world and
the other one is more transparent so we get messages from the other side more
clearly. Some also believe it is the start of the New Year. It is a time to
honor and remember the dead, to honor our own mortality, to hold rituals, and a
time of merriment and fun.
Whether
one decides to celebrate Halloween, Samhain, or both, this time of the year is
amazing and there are so many great traditions to enjoy. I hope this has been
informational and I would like to wish you a fun-filled harvest holiday.
Remember safety first and Blessed Be!
I liked this compare and contrast of this essay. I did not know there was such a thing called Samhaim, which is pretty cool. I learned something from your essay. thanks.
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