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                                THE ORIGINS OF HALLOWEEN
                           (c) copyright 1989, Rowan Moonstone

          In recent years,  there have been a number of  pamphlets and books put
          out  be various  Christian organizations  dealing with  the origins of
          modern- day Halloween customs.

          Being a Witch myself, and a student  of the ancient Celts from whom we
          get this holiday, I have found these pamphlets woefully inaccurate and
          poorly researched. A typical example  of this information is contained
          in the following  quote from the pamphlet entitled  "What's Wrong with
          Halloween?" by Russell K. Tardo.  "The Druids believed that on October
          31st, the  last day of  the year by  the ancient Celtic  calendar, the
          lord of  death gathered together  the souls of  the dead who  had been
          made to  enter bodies of animals,  and decided what forms  they should
          take the following year. Cats were held sacred because it was believed
          that they were once human beings ...  We see that this holiday has its
          origin, basis and root in the  occultic Druid celebration of the dead.
          Only they  called it 'Samhain',  who was the  lord of the  dead (a big
          demon)".1  When these  books and  pamphlets cite  sources at all, they
          usually  list the  Encyclopedia Britannica,  Encyclopedia Americana,
          and  the World  Book Encyclopedia.  The Britannica  and the Americana
          make no  mention of cats, but  do, indeed list Samhain  as the Lord of
          Death, contrary to Celtic scholars,  and list no references. The World
          Book mentions the cats, and calls Samhain the Lord of Death, and lists
          as  its  sources  several  children's  books  (hardly  what  one could
          consider  scholarly  texts,  and,  of  course,  themselves  citing  no
          references).

          In an  effort to correct  some of this  erroneous information, I  have
          researched the  religious life of  the ancient Celtic  peoples and the
          survivals  of that  religious life  in modern  times. Listed below are
          some of the  most commonly asked questions concerning  the origins and
          customs   of  Halloween.   Following  the   questions  is   a  lengthy
          bibliography where the curious reader can  go to learn more about this
          holiday than space in this small pamphlet permits.













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          1.      Where does Halloween come from?

                  Our  modern celebration  of Halloween  is a  descendent of the
                  ancient  Celtic   festival  called  "Samhain".   The  word  is
                  pronounced "sow-in", with "sow" rhyming with "cow".  
            
          2.      What does "Samhain" mean? 

                          The Irish-EnglishDictionary published bythe IrishTexts
                        Societydefinesthewordas follows:"Samhain,AllHallowtide, 
                      the feast ofthe dead inPagan andChristian times,signaling 
                    theclose ofharvest and the initiation ofthe winter season,  
                  lasting till May,during  which troopswere quartered. Fairies  
                wereimagined as particularly active at this season. From it,    
              the half-year is reckoned.  Also calledFeile Moingfinne (Snow     
            Goddess).2  The  Scottish  Gaelic  Dictionary  defines  it  as      
          "Hallowtide.  The Feast   of All  Souls. Sam  + Fuin  = end  of       
          summer."3  Contrary  to  the  information  published  by  many        
          organizations, there is  no archaeological or literary evidence       
          to indicate that Samhain was a deity. Eliade's Encyclopedia of        
          Religion states as  follows: "The Eve and day  of Samhain were        
          characterized as  a  time when  the barriers between  the human       
          and supernatural worlds were broken... Not  a festival honoring       
          any particular  Celtic deity, Samhain  acknowledged the entire        
          spectrum of nonhuman forces that  roamed the earth during that        
          period."4 The Celtic  Gods of the dead were  Gwynn ap Nudd for        
          the British and Arawn for the  Welsh. The Irish did not have a        
          "lord of death" as such. 

          3.      Why was the end of summer of significance to the Celts?       
            The Celts were a pastoral peopleas opposed to an agricultural       
          people. The end  of summer was significant to   them because it       
          meant  the time  of year   when the  structure of   their lives       
          changed  radically.   The  cattle  were  brought  down from the       
          summer pastures in the hills and the  people were gathered into       
          the houses  for the long  winter nights of  story- telling and        
          handicrafts . 











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          4. What does it have to do with a festival of the dead?         

          The Celts believed that when people  died, they went to a land        
          of eternal youth and happiness called Tir nan Og. They did not        
          have the concept of heaven  and hell that the Christian church        
          later brought into the land.  The dead were  sometimes believed       
          to be dwelling with the Fairy  Folk, who lived in the numerous        
          mounds,  or sidhe, (pronounced "shee" or "sh-thee") that dotted       
          the Irish  and Scottish countryside. Samhain   was the new year       
          to  the Celts.  In the  Celtic belief  system, turning points,        
          such as the time between one  day and the next, the meeting of        
          sea and shore,   or the turning of one year  into the next were       
          seen as magickal  times. The turning of the  year was the most        
          potent  of  these  times.  This  was  the  time when the "veil        
          between  the worlds" was at  its thinnest, and the living could       
          communicate with their beloved dead in Tir nan Og.     

          5. What about  the aspects of "evil'  that we  associate with the     
            night today?

          The  Celts did  not have   demons and  devils in   their belief       
          system.  The fairies,  however, were  often considered hostile        
          and  dangerous  to  humans  because  they  were  seen as being        
          resentful of man  taking over their land. On  this night, they        
          would sometimes   trick humans into becoming  lost in the fairy       
          mounds, where they would be  trapped forever. After the coming        
          of the Christians to the Celtic lands,  certain of the folk saw       
          the fairies as those angels who  had sided neither with God or        
          with  Lucifer in their dispute, and thus were condemned to walk       
          the earth  until judgment day.5   In addition   to the fairies,   many
          humans were  abroad on this night, causing mischief. Since  this night
          belonged neither to one  year  or  the  other,  Celtic  folk  believed
          that chaos reigned,   and  the  people  would   engage  in  "horseplay
          and practical jokes".6  This also served as a final outlet for high   
          spirits before the gloom of winter set in. 














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          6. What about "trick or treat"?         

          During the course   of these hijinks, many of  the people would       
          imitate  the fairies  and go  from house   to house begging for       
          treats.  Failure  to supply the treats  would usually result in       
          practical jokes being visited  on the owner of the house. Since       
          the fairies were abroad on this   night, an offering of food or       
          milk was frequently  left for them on the  steps of the house,        
          so the  homeowner could gain  the blessing of  the "good folk"        
          for the coming  year. Many of the households  would also leave        
          out  a "dumb  supper" for  the spirits  of the  departed.9 The        
          folks who were abroad in the night imitating the fairies would        
          sometimes carry turnips carved to represent faces. This  is the       
          origin of our modern Jack-o-lantern. 

          7. Was there any special significance of cats to the Celts?

          According  to Katherine  Briggs in  Nine Lives:   Cats   in           
          Folklore,, the Celts associated cats with the  Cailleach Bheur,       
          or Blue Hag  of Winter. "She was  a nature goddess, who herded        
          the   deer as  her cattle.  The touch  of her   staff drove  the      
          leaves off the trees and  brought snow and harsh weather."7   Dr. Anne
          Ross addresses the  use  of  divine animals in  her book Pagan  Celtic
          Britain   and has  this to day   about cats."Cats do  not play a large
          role in  Celtic mythology ... the evidence for the cat as an important
          cult animal  in Celtic  mythology is slight"8 She cites  as supporting
          evidence,   the    lack   of  archaeological  artifacts  and  literary
          references in surviving works of mythology.    
           
          8. Was this also a religious festival?         

          Yes. Celtic  religion was very closely tied to the Earth. Their       
          great  legends are  concerned with  momentous happenings which        
          took  place around  the time    of Samhain.  Many of  the great       
          battles and legends of kings  and  heroes center on this night.       
          Many of the legends concern  the promotion of  fertility of the       
          earth and the insurance of the continuance of the lives of  the       
          people through the dark winter season. 










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          9.      How was the religious festival observed?        

          Unfortunately,   we  know    very  little   about  that.    W.G.      
          Wood-Martin,   in  his  book,  Traces  of  the   Elder Faiths of      
          Ireland, states,  "There  is comparatively little  trace of the       
          religion of the Druids  now  discoverable, save in the folklore       
          of the peasantry, and  the references relative to it that occur       
          in  ancient  and  authentic Irish  manuscripts are,  as far   as      
          present  appearances go,   meager and  insufficient to  support       
          anything  like  a  sound   theory  for  full development of the       
          ancient  religion."10    The Druids  were  the priests  of  the Celtic
          peoples. They passed  on  their teachings  by  oral  tradition instead
          of committing them  to  writing,  so  when  they  perished,  most   of
          their religious teachings  were lost. We do  know  that this festival 
          was characterized  as one of the four great "Fire Festivals" of       
          the  Celts. Legends tell us that  on this night, all the hearth       
          fires in  Ireland were extinguished, and   then re-lit from the       
          central  fire of  the Druids  at Tlachtga,  12 miles   from the       
          royal  hill of  Tara. This   fire was  kindled from "need fire"       
          which had been generated by the friction of rubbing two sticks        
          together, as opposed to more conventional methods (such  as the       
          flint-   and-steel  method)   common  in   those  days.11  The        
          extinguishing  of  the fires symbolized the  "dark half" of the       
          year, and the re-kindling from  the Druidic fires was symbolic        
          of the returning life hoped for, and brought about through the        
          ministrations of the priesthood. 

          10.     What about sacrifices?         

          Animals were certainly  killed at this time  of  year. This was       
          the time to "cull" from the herds those animals which were not        
          desired  for   breeding  purposes   for  the  next  year.  Most       
          certainly,  some of  these would  have been  done in  a ritual        
          manner for the use of the priesthood.    














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          11.     Were humans sacrificed?         

          Scholars are sharply divided on  this account, with about half        
          believing that  it took place and  half doubting its veracity.        
          Caesar  and   Tacitus  certainly  tell   tales   of  the  human       
          sacrifices of the  Celts, but Nora Chadwick points  out in her        
          book  The Celts  that "it   is not  without  interest  that the       
          Romans  themselves  had  abolished  human  sacrifice  not long        
          before  Caesar's time,  and references   to the  practice among       
          various   barbarian   peoples   have   certain   overtones  of        
          self-righteousness.   There  is  little  direct  archaeological       
          evidence  relevant to  Celtic sacrifice."12  Indeed, there  is        
          little reference  to this practice  in Celtic literature.  The        
          only  surviving story echoes the  tale of the Minotaur in Greek       
          legend: the Fomorians,  a race of evil giants   said to inhabit       
          portions of Ireland before the   coming of the Tuatha de Danaan       
          (or "people  of the Goddess Danu"),   demanded the sacrifice of       
          2/3  of the   corn, milk,  and first  born children  of the Fir       
          Bolg,  or human  inhabitants of  Ireland. The  de Danaan ended        
          this  practice  in  the  second  battle   of  Moy  Tura,  which       
          incidentally,  took  place  on   Samhain.  It  should be noted,       
          however,  that  this  story  appears  in  only one (relatively        
          modern) manuscript from Irish literature,  and that manuscript,       
          the  "Dinnsenchus", is  known to  be a  collection of  fables.        
          According to  P.W. Joyce  in  Vol. 2 of  his Social History  of       
          Ancient  Ireland,  "Scattered  everywhere  through  our ancient       
          literature, both secular and  ecclesiastical, we find abundant        
          descriptions and details of the rites and superstitions of the        
          pagan Irish; and in no place - with this single exception - do        
          we find   a word or hint  pointing to human sacrifice  to pagan       
          gods or idols."13 

          12. What other practices were associated with this season?         
          Folk   tradition  tells   us  of   many  divination  practices        
          associated   with  Samhain.   Among  the    most  common   were       
          divinations  dealing with  marriage, weather,  and  the  coming       
          fortunes for  the year. These were  performed via such  methods       
          as ducking  for apples and  apple peeling. Ducking  for  apples       
          was a marriage   divination. The first person to  bite an apple       
          would be the first to marry  in the coming year. Apple peeling        
          was  a divination   to see  how long  your life  would be.  The       
          longer  the  unbroken  apple  peel,  the  longer your life was        
          destined to  be.14 In  Scotland,  people would place  stones in       
          the ashes of the hearth  before  retiring for the night. Anyone       
          whose stone had been disturbed during the night was  said to be       
          destined to die during the coming year.    


                                            31
          



          13. How did these ancient Celtic practices come to America?         
          When the potato  crop in  Ireland failed,  many of  the Irish  people,
          modern   descendants   of     the   Celts,   immigrated    to America,
          bringing  with them their folk   practices, which were remnants of the
          Celtic festival observances. 

          14. We in America view this as a harvest festival.  Did the  Celts    
             also view it as such? 

          Yes. The Celts had 3 harvests. Aug  1, or Lammas, was the first       
          harvest,  when the  first fruits  were offered  to the  Gods in       
          thanks. The Fall  equinox was the true  harvest.  This was when       
          the  bulk  of the crops  would be brought  in. Samhain was  the       
          final harvest  of  the year. Anything  left on the vines  or in       
          the  fields  after   this  date  was  considered blasted by the       
          fairies ("pu'ka") and unfit for human consumption. 

          15. Does anyone today celebrate Samhain as a religious observance?

          Yes.  many  followers  of  various  pagan  religions,  such  as       
          Druidism and Wicca, observe this  day as a religious festival.        
          They  view it  as a   memorial day  for their  dead friends and       
          family,  much  as  the  world  does  the national Memorial Day        
          holiday in May. It is still  a night to practice various forms        
          of divination concerning future  events. It is also considered        
          a time to wrap up old  projects, take stock of one's life, and        
          initiate  new  projects  for   the  coming  year. As the winter       
          season is  approaching, it is  a good  time  to do studying  on       
          research   projects, and  also a  good time  to begin hand work       
          such as  sewing, leather working, woodworking,  etc., for Yule        
          gifts later in the year.  And while "satanists" are using this        
          holiday as their  own, this is certainly not  the only example        
          of a holiday (or even religious symbols) being "borrowed" from        
          an older religion by a newer one. 

          16.     Does this involve human or animal sacrifice?

          Absolutely NOT! Hollywood to  the contrary, blood  sacrifice is       
          not practiced by modern followers  of Wicca or Druidism. There        
          may  be some  people who  THINK they   are practicing  Wicca by       
          performing  blood sacrificing,  but  this  is NOT  condoned by        
          reputable practitioners of today's neo-Pagan religions.    







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                                        FOOTNOTES: 
          1       Tardo, Russell K., What's Wrong with Halloween?, Faithful Word
                 Publishers, (Arabi, LA, undated), p. 2 

          2       Rev.  Patrick Dinneen,  An Irish  English Dictionary, (Dublin,
                 1927), p. 937 

          3       Malcolm MacLennan,  A Pronouncing and  Etymological Dictionary
                 of the Gaelic Language, (Aberdeen, 1979), p. 279 

          4       The Encyclopedia  of Religion, ed.  Mircea Eliade, "Halloween"
                 by Primiano, (New York, 1987) pp. 176-177 

          5       Katherine Briggs, Nine Lives: Cats in Folklore, (London,1980),
                 p.5 

          6       Dr. Anne Ross, Pagan Celtic Britain, (London,1967), p. 301-302
          7       W.G. Wood-Martin, Traces of the  Elder Faiths of Ireland, Vol.
                 II, (Port Washington, NY, 1902), p. 5 

          8       Kevin Danaher, The Year in Ireland, (Cork, 1972), p. 214 

          9       Alwyn & Brinley Rees, Celtic Heritage, (New York, 1961), p. 90

          10      Wood-Martin, op. cit., p. 249 

          11      Rees & Rees, op. cit., p. 90 

          12      Nora Chadwick, The Celts, (Harmondsworth, 1982), p. 151 

          13      P.W. Joyce,  A Social History of  Ancient Ireland, Vol.2, (New
                 York, 1968), pp. 282-283 

          14      Madeleine Pelner Cosman, Medieval Holidays and Festivals, (New
                 York, 1981), p. 81   














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                                       BIBLIOGRAPHY:

            *Bord,  Janet &   Colin, The   Secret Country,   (London: Paladin   
          Books,1978)

            *Briggs, Katherine, Nine Lives, Cats inFolklore, (London: Routledge 
          & Kegan Paul, 1980)

            *Chadwick, Nora, The Celts, (Harmondsworth,  England: Penguin Books,
            1982)

            *Coglan, Ronan, ADictionary of Irish Myth and Legend, (Dublin: 1979)
            *Cosman, Madeleine  Pelner, Medieval  Holidays and Festivals,  (New 
          York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1981)

            *Danaher, Kevin,The Year in  Ireland, (Cork, Ireland: The  Mercier  
          Press, 1972)

            *Dinneen,  Rev.  Patrick S.,  M.A.,  An  Irish-English Dictionary,  
          (Dublin: The Irish Texts Society, 1927)

            *Joyce,  P.W., A  Social  History of  Ancient Ireland,  (New  York: 
          Benjamin Blom, 1968)

            *MacCana,  Proinsias,  Celtic  Mythology,    (London:  The  Hamlyn  
          Publishing Group Limited, 1970)

            *MacLennan, Malcolm, A pronouncing   and Etymological Dictionary of 
          the  Gaelic Language, (Aberdeen: Acair and  Aberdeen University       
          Press, 1979)

            *MacNeill, Maire', The Festivalof Lughnasa, (Dublin: Comhairle      
          Bhealoideas Eireann, 1982)

           *Powell, T.G.E., The Celts, (New York: Thames & Hudson, 1980) 
            *Primiano, Leonard Norman, "Halloween" from The Encyclopedia of     
          Religion, ed. Mircea   Eliade, (New  York, McMillan Publiching        
          Co., 1987)

            *Rees, Alwyn and Brinley, Celtic Heritage, Ancient Tradition in     
          Ireland and Wales, (New York: Thames & Hudson, 1961)








                                            34
          



            *Ross, Dr. Anne, Pagan Celtic Britain, (London: Routledge  and Kegan
            Paul, 1967)

           *Sharkey, John, Celtic Mysteries, (New York: Thames & Hudson, 1975) 
            *Spence, Lewis, British Fairy Origins, (Wellingborough:  Aquarian   
          Press, 1946)

            *Squire, Charles, Celtic Myth & Legend, Poetry & Romance, (New York:
            Newcastle Publishing Co., Inc., 1975)

            *Toulson, Shirley,  The  Winter  Solstice, (London:  Jill Norman &  
          Hobhouse, Ltd., 1981)

            *Wood-Martin, W.G.,Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland, Vols. I & 
          II, (Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1902) 

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