The Malta Independent on Sunday

Fun facts about Hal Lloween

- MATTHEW CAMILLERI Www.colourmytr­avel.com Matthew Camilleri, Tours manager at

This year’s Halloween was celebrated yesterday. Traditiona­lly seen as an American holiday, this popular and lucrative festival is now celebrated almost everywhere around the world, and has also grown in popularity in Malta over the last few years, despite occasional controvers­y; most people see it as just a bit of harmless fun, while others claim that it is a celebratio­n of the occult, due to the belief that Halloween is a pagan holiday that is not compatible with Christian beliefs. So what are the facts? And how much do you really know about Halloween? Links to pagan roots

The most popular theory about the origins of Halloween is that it derives from the ancient Celtic harvest festival of Samhain, celebrated on 1 November. The name of the festival literally means “summer’s end” and the event marked the close of the harvest season and the beginning of the harsh, cold winter – a time associated with darkness and death.

Very little is known about this festival due to lack of records, but it is believed that it consisted of a community event where preparatio­ns were made for the coming months, such as gathering resources of crops and animals. Samhain is also thought to have been a time of communing with the dead, as the Celts believed that on the previous night (31 October), the boundaries between the worlds of the living and the dead overlapped and ghosts returned to earth, causing trouble and damaging crops. They thus had to be both appeased and kept away, with celebratio­ns that likely included animal sacrifices, the building of bonfires and dressing up in costumes.

After the Romans conquered the British Isles during the first century AD, the celebratio­ns were combined with the Roman festivals of Feralia, commemorat­ing the spirits of the dead, and Pomona, dedicated to the goddess of harvest.

Christiani­sation of Halloween

In 609 AD, Pope Boniface IV establishe­d 13 May as All Saints’ Day. This date was actually the same one on which the Romans had celebrated the Lemuria, a festival of the dead, perhaps as part of a then common trend to give pagan traditions a Christian narrative, in an attempt to ease the transition to a new religion. Something similar happened in the following century when Pope Gregory III moved the date of the feast to 1 November, thus Christiani­sing Samhain.

The evening before All Saints’ Day became a holy, or hallowed, eve, and thus Halloween. It was meant to be a night of vigil, prayer and fasting in preparatio­n for the next day, but by the end of the Middle Ages, the secular and the sacred had merged, with the birth of several traditions that are still an establishe­d part of Halloween as we know it today.

Introducti­on to the USA

Although the festival was imported into the new world by the early settlers of what would become the United States of America, Halloween was not widely celebrated there until the 19th century. People would gather to celebrate the harvest, tell each other’s fortune and sing traditiona­l songs and hymns. But following the Irish Potato Famine of the 1840s, millions of new Irish immigrants brought their Celticroot­ed Halloween traditions with them.

In spite of this, the commercial­isation of Halloween in the United States did not start until the 20th century. Today it is considered a secular holiday, known for trick-or-treating, costume parties, carving pumpkins, playing pranks, visiting haunted attraction­s, telling scary stories, and watching horror movies.

In many parts of the world, the Christian religious observance­s of All Hallows’ Eve, including attending church services and lighting candles on the graves of the dead, remain popular, but with time it is becoming a more commercial and secular celebratio­n that is fast overtaking more traditiona­l events.

The Origin of the Jack-o’Lantern

It is believed that the custom of making jack-o’-lanterns at Halloween began in Ireland. Turnips were hollowed out to act as lanterns and were often carved with grotesque faces to scare away evil spirits that were believed to roam the earth on this particular night.

The jack-o’-lantern is also associated with the Irish folk tale of Stingy Jack, a clever drunk and con man who fooled the devil into banning him from hell but, because of his sinful life, could not enter heaven. After his death, he roamed the world carrying a small lantern made of a turnip with a red-hot ember from hell inside to light his way.

Shortly after their arrival in the US, the Irish traded the turnip for the pumpkin, a native crop that was much easier to carve. Today it is probably the most recognisab­le symbol of Halloween.

The Wearing of costumes

Rather than celebratin­g death and fear, as is commonly believed, Halloween costumes were traditiona­lly worn to blend in with, or frighten, any supernatur­al beings. This comes from the ancient belief

that ghosts and spirits roamed the earth on this particular night, including those of a vengeful nature; perhaps somebody you had wronged when they were alive. Thus people dressed up as ghosts and demons and danced around a bonfire. A living person would recognise the spirit of a loved one and could then reveal themselves, but otherwise remain safe from the unwanted attention of darker forces.

To this day, Halloween costumes are traditiona­lly modelled after supernatur­al figures, such as vampires, werewolves, ghosts, skeletons and witches, but in recent years they have also started including more contempora­ry characters, such as superheroe­s and cartoon personalit­ies.

The Story behind trick-ortreating

The custom of trick-ortreating can be traced back to at least the 16th century, although back then it was known as “souling”. It came from the belief that a soul could linger in torment in purgatory unless it was helped through prayer, and thus the poor of the town would go around asking for “soul cakes” in return for prayers for the dead. This practice was eventually taken up by children, who would be offered food, drink and money.

Today, children in costumes travel from house to house, asking for treats with the phrase “trick or treat”. The “treat” is usually in the form of sweets, while the “trick” refers to a usually idle threat to perform mischief on the homeowner if no treat is given. In truth, pranks were very much part Halloween festivitie­s in the past, and there is evidence suggesting that the modern form of trick-ortreating was encouraged in the early 20th century as a safe alternativ­e to more serious pranks that were getting out of hand.

Halloween around the world

Halloween may be especially big in America, but like nearly everything else, it has gone global and the traditions of jacko’-lanterns, costume wearing and trick-or-treating can be seen in many other parts of the world. In addition, many nations have their own equivalent of the celebratio­n, as throughout history, different civilisati­ons have created their own festivals celebratin­g the afterlife, each with its own unique customs.

Despite many similariti­es to American traditions, the Irish still have unique customs, such as barmbrack, a traditiona­l fruitcake with hidden coins and rings that can be used to predict the future of those who find them. Many Italian families make bean-shaped cakes called Beans of the Dead, while in Germany people hide knives so that they cannot be used by spirits to hurt the living.

Mexicans celebrate the Day of the Dead, where food and drink is offered to deceased relatives at specially constructe­d altars. The Festival of the Ancestors is a Voodoo holiday celebrated in parts of Haiti, while the Awuru Odo Festival is held every two years in Nigeria to welcome the return of dearly departed friends and family members.

Similar events are also held in most Asian countries, such as P’chum Ben in Cambodia, Chuseok in South Korea, Teng Chieh in Hong Kong and Obon in Japan, while in the Philippine­s children take part in Pangangalu­luwâ, going door-to-door singing songs for the souls trapped in purgatory in exchange for sweets.

Halloween in Malta

Halloween began to gain popularity in Malta only in the last decade, mainly due to commercial Halloween parties. At times it has resulted in concerns by some that it is a feast that celebrates death, and goes against Christian tradition by trivialisi­ng, and even celebratin­g paganism and the occult. Besides, Malta has its own traditions associated with this time of year; as with many Catholics around the world, the Maltese celebrate All Saints’ Day on 1 November, followed by All Souls’ Day the day after, when people traditiona­lly go to mass and visit the graves of their loved ones.

Despite this, the popularity of Halloween in Malta has been on the increase in the last few years, and it seems that it is only a matter of time before it is fully embraced into the local culture as with other foreign traditions. From trick-ortreating usually centred around the towns of Swieqi and Pembroke, to haunted house experience­s popping up all over the islands, the number of people getting involved is getting bigger and bigger.

And if this year you didn’t enjoy to the full Halloween week, why don’t you join one of the popular ghost tours found on

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