Move Hallowe'en?? Horrors! |
There’s
an underground rumbling that suggests the scariest night of the year be moved
from the last day of October to the last Saturday of October.
WTF?
Granted,
the rumbling comes from disgruntled parents and teachers who are inconvenienced by managing
children jacked on sugar the day after Hallowe’en, but it also indicates a lack
of understanding about the day itself and why it exists in the first place.
“Hallowe’en”
is the contracted form of “All Hallow’s Eve”, “All Hallows” being November 1, otherwise
known as “All Saints Day” on the religious calendar.
Did I
say “religious”? Yes, and I meant to say it. And I’m not apologizing, either. I
may not be conventionally religious, but I do enjoy the holidays and
observances associated with (and some say stolen from) annual celebrations of
spring, fall, and winter.
I
wonder why no one bothered to Christianize the summer solstice.
I
digress.
Hallowe’en
happens on October 31 for a reason. It’s not about the candy. Okay, maybe now
it is, but originally, it was the last chance day in the year for evil spirits
to work their nefarious magic on innocent souls before the saints came marching
in on November 1. The dead rose to walk again, witches cast wicked spells and
Satan roamed free. Folks dressed up to fool said evil spirits – and their
earthbound minions – on the premise that they wouldn’t be recognized and the
spirits would bypass them. That’s where the tradition of Hallowe’en costumes
come from. In truth, I’m unsure where the trick-or-treat thing started, though
it’s likely rooted in the same occasion, and candy was not the anticipated
outcome. Successfully dodging the demons was.
The
Easter argument doesn’t support moving October 31, either. Easter happens in
coincidence with Passover, an event dependent on the lunar cycle, which is not
attached to a static date. Candy wasn’t the anticipated outcome at Easter or
Passover, either, by the way. I’m not at all sure where chocolate fits into
history though, being a fool for Cadbury Creme eggs, I do appreciate its
presence in the modern era.
If it
hasn’t become obvious by now, I’m all for keeping Hallowe’en where it is. If
anything needs to change, perhaps getting rid of trick-or-treat is the answer. After
all, I’m not the only one who’s been buzzed on Hallowe’en candy since August!
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