“Trick or treat, smell my feet, give me something good to eat!” Many people have sung, as a joke for the most part, in hopes to get something sweet. But have people always sang this chime? Halloween has changed, there is no doubt about it. Halloween wouldn’t even be recognizable if one was to go back in time. Halloween is a day full of spirits, demons, and candy. From the start to now, a lot is to be uncovered, there is even a special day just before halloween called Devil’s night.
Did you know that Halloween started over 2,000 years ago? A pre-Christian Celtic festival of Samhain, Celebrated on October 31, is were this day of the dead starts. The Celts believed that the dead would came back, on this day, and visit the earth once more, but
…show more content…
If one looks back, some of the features of the original, are still present. Children still dress up as ghosts and demons, and even more. There is a game called “Bobbing for apples” and treats designed around the apple, preserving the fruit aspect of early halloween. Some things are different, though. The jack o’ lantern for one thing, wasn’t around till the irish had started carving faces on turnips, and putting candles in them to light them up in the 1870’s and around the 1930’s. The costumes for people are getting more revealing, and the holiday is becoming much more violent. Now parents worry about poisoned candy, when in actuality this never happened. Police have never had a case such as this, and hopefully never will (David, par. 1). When it comes to violence, there are kids drinking spiked apple cider, and then going off and doing something not very smart without thinking, like robbing a house (Ryan, par.1-2). This is not to say all kids are bad. That would be a bad assumption. Most kids go around trick or treating, play at parties, go to the movies, have dates, or just hang out with friends and eat the candy from the trick or treat bowl (Elizabeth, Par.2-3). There’s so much about halloween, but what about the special day that was said? Hint:
Today I will be talking about the holiday we call Halloween. Halloween is where we all dress up in costumes and get candy from houses on the thirty first of October. Here are three things about halloween. First, I am going to be talking the history of halloween.
To better understand the history of the two holidays, we should look at where it all first began. An ancient Celtic festival of Samhain about 2,000 years ago was when Halloween was first created. This celebration took place on October 31st and it marked the end of summer, the harvest and the beginning of winter. During this time, winter resembled a cold and dark time which was often
Dia de los Muertos and Halloween can often be confused because they are celebrated within very close dates, but in reality they have distinct characteristics. Dia de los Muertos was originally introduced in Mexico with the Aztec Festival of the Dead, but the traditions have been tweaked over the years. Likewise, Halloween originated in Ireland, beginning with the Celtic Festival called “Samhain”. Now, the popular holiday, Day of the Dead, is celebrated from October 31st through November 2nd by visiting the graves of dead friends or family members. People who participate in Dia de los Muertos leave food, candles, incense, a poem, or a picture at the altar to honor the past lives of people they love.
In today’s society witches are usually linked with Halloween. Kids envision witches flying across a moonlit sky on broomsticks and having slinky black cats as pets. Evil cackling, pointy hats, bubbling cauldrons, and ugly physical appearances spring to mind. All of this is in good fun and people open their doors and give little witches candy and smiles. There is no fear.
You also go out to haunted attractions like corn mazes and hayrides. Also Halloween is on October 31st and Dia
Everyone agreed. We could not think of what else we could do and were bored because we did not go trick-or-treating this
In contradiction to Halloween, it is not a scary holiday and instead focuses on remembering those who have died with love and respect. On the first day (November 1) all the spirits of children who died come back and are remembered. The next day everyone else is celebrated. The living prepare their homes and towns for the return of the dead on October 31st. There are many other things traditionally done to honor the dead and enjoy the holiday.
All Hallow 's Eve, or as it’s known to everyone who 's not a priest in a B horror movie: Halloween, has never been a pre-holiday season staple in my Southern Baptist family. My parents have never embraced the spooky side of Halloween. While the other kids were cramming entire chocolate bars into their mouths amid heated debates over how many rolls of Smarties it takes to equal a fun size Twix bar for a trade, I was learning how candy corn can remind me of Jesus. Not only are my parents morally opposed to Halloween, but we also live off a highway in the country where the trees form a tunnel of foliage over the road almost cheering on drivers as they fly around corners like NASCAR racers. If I had ever dared to go out trick-or-treating on this Daytona speedway of a road, I would have
One of the most-awaited moments of the year is right here once again. Dim neighborhoods are brightened by ghastly smiles of Jack-o '-lanterns in communities where the breeze is also slowly getting colder and the leaves that have fallen off of pines give each step a crunch. In a few days, children dressed like pirates, princesses, ghouls, and little monsters will be knocking on doors requesting goodies and several other goodies. Yet just before Halloween begins, you can delight the kids in your community by teaming up with several moms and dads and arranging a Halloween scavenger quest.
Halloween and Day of the Dead, despite their similarities, are very different. They are similar because they both have sugary treats and they are different because they are celebrated in different ways, and the preparation of the holidays are different. Day of the Dead is a holiday celebrated in Mexico, and Central America where people celebrate their ancestors souls and bring them some of their favorite things to their graves and throw many parties. Halloween is a day when children go out in costumes to trick-or-treat for candies and other sugary items, people also setup decorations outside their houses that look go along with the holiday.
However, there is a distinct difference between the two holidays. In America, Halloween has shifted from focusing on death to focusing on trick-or-treating. The Day of the Dead celebrates the fact that death does not destroy the unity between those alive and those dead. While both celebrate with dressing up, eating with loved ones, and spending time with family, they gather for vey different reasons. In keeping with their culture, Americans celebrate being with those still alive, while Mexicans include deceased individuals in their
Since we were little children, we all have been eager for experiencing emotions. Who has not played trick or treat? The thrill ran through our veins each time Halloween was celebrated. However, as life goes on, people 's interests changed. What was enjoyed in our first years of life will not be anymore.
Personally I think that many of us are ill informed concerning our biblical responsibilities towards things like the celebration of Halloween it's become a boiling cauldron of controversy among Christians tell me do you have a well thought out response to this other than its just a little harmless fun? Because to be quite honest with you I've grown increasingly tired of having to deal with this struggle I don't want to be made out to be a killjoy and I certainly would never want to deny kids the fun I don't mind a little candy either! You're thinking but we did it when we were kids
WIIFM Statement: Most people today celebrate this holiday. If you chose to dress up, or hand out candy, or even just use it as an excuse to have a big party. But most people have no idea how it originated and why it is so big today. Credibility: I have celebrated halloween ever since I was born. My parents would dress me up when I was a baby and I would pick out my costumes every year after.
Some American colonists celebrated Guy Fawkes Day, and in the mid-19th century large numbers of new immigrants, especially those fleeing Ireland’s potato famine in the 1840s, helped popularize Halloween. In the early 20th century, Irish and Scottish communities revived the Old World traditions of souling and guising in the United States. By the 1920s, however, pranks had become the Halloween activity of choice for rowdy young people, sometimes amounting to more than $100,000 in damages each year in major metropolitan areas. The Great Depression exacerbated the problem, with Halloween mischief often devolving into vandalism, physical assaults and sporadic acts of violence.