Here's my post for my research on Halloween around the world. Please let me know what you think. Check it out:
Halloween around the World!
Halloween
is a fun day of parties, costumes, pranks, candy and lots of fun. However, Halloween
is not just a United States holiday, many countries have deep seeded cultural/spiritual
beliefs regarding this fun yet ominous day. We are going to cover some of the
history and cultural beliefs surrounding Halloween around the world. Ireland is
where it is said that Halloween has evolved from. In the 16th
Century, it was shortened from All-Hallows-Even to All-Hallows-Day or
Halloween. You will see how many countries celebrate it very similarly to the
way we do and many others are similar to each other in celebrating it as a day
relating to the dead and/or spirits of their ancestors.
Arab Christians-Labanon, Syria and
the West Bank/GazaMany of the people celebrate Saint Barbara’s Day or Eid Il-Burbara on December 4 which is similar or Halloween where children dress up in costumes and go trick or treating while singing a song. There is also traditional food for the occasion which is a bowl of boiled barley, pomegranate seed, raisins, anise and sugar which is offered to the children. The children believe that Saint Barbara disguised herself as many character to avoid persecution by the Romans.
Australia
Halloween
in Australia is frowned upon by many because it has little to do with
Australian culture. Though the US has bombarded Australia with horror movies
and sit-coms it seems to be an unwelcomed holiday.
BrazilBrazilians never celebrated anything on October 31, but little by little, they are jumping on the bandwagon. The Portugese name is Dia das Bruxas (Day of the Witches). In Brazil kids yell "Doce ou Travessura!"while trick or treating.
Canada
Celebrating Halloween in Canada is
very similar to celebrating it in the US. They happily decorate everything they
can, stores, houses, yards, garages, etc. They dress up, adults and children
and the children trick or treat. There is also a good amount of baking done for
this day along with a special Halloween Beer that is created just for this
holiday. Canada is a huge sponsor for UNICEF at Halloween, collecting money for
them instead of candy for the children.
Central and South America
In most parts of Central and South America, kids will pay a visit to their
neighbors and yell "¡Dulce o Truco!" ('Sweet or Trick!') in
order to get candy. In Chile, Halloween has become more and popular over the
last 20 years, imitating North American customs such as children dressing up,
going house to house asking for candy, yelling "¡Dulce o travesura!",
whereas teenagers and adults go to costume parties at discotheques. The Spanish
name for Halloween is Noche de Brujas (Night of the Witches).
China
In
China, Halloween is known as Teng Chieh. Food and water are placed in front of
pictures of family members who have departed. Lanterns are lit in order to
light the paths of the spirits as they travel the earth on this day.
ColumbiaMany of the customs in Columbia mask those of the US. Children dress up and visit their neighbors chanting, "¡Triqui triqui halloween, Quiero dulces para mi, Si no hay dulces para mi, Se le crece la nariz!" (Tricky tricky halloween, I want candy for me, If there is no candy for me, Your nose will grow!). There is no cultural precedent for the celebration of Halloween so they follow the US along with the US symbols associated with Halloween, witches, skeletons, spider webs, pumpkins, etc.
England
They
celebrate the day before Halloween, October 30th on a night they
call Mischief Night where the children play tricks on the adults. Over the
years, this has gotten out of control and criminal actions have been a part of
the celebrations. The children made “punkies” out of beetroots which were
carvings of faces of their choosing on the root. They carried these along with
them through the streets while trick or treating. In rural areas, turnip
lanterns were carved and set on gateposts to ward off the evil spirits. Bobbing
for apples is a fun activity they enjoy at parties along with making toffee
apples and apple tarts. A custom was to throw a pebble into a bonfire at night.
If it wasn’t visible in the morning it was then believed that the person who
tossed the pebble would not survive another year. If nuts tossed into the blaze
by young lovers then exploded, it signified a quarrelsome marriage.
France
In France, Halloween is known as La
fete d' Halloween. They do not celebrate the holiday to honor the departed.
Halloween was virtually unknown in this country until 1996, due to it being an
American holiday, and some French natives refuse to celebrate it. It is
not known if they are going to consider keeping the holiday long-term, but for
now they wear costumes and attend parties. The local bakeries and candy shops
make special desserts for the holiday and supermarkets sell pumpkins. Since
pumpkins are not commonly sold in France, they are in high demand around the
holiday for jack o' lanterns. Trick-or-treating is very rare in this country,
but when they do it is from store to store, not house to house.
Germany
Many people also regard Halloween as
an American custom imported to Germany. In present times, Halloween has become
a ‘cool’ party theme for children and teenagers, who organize costume parties
on that day, having a lot of fun. In certain regions, children even take part
in trick or treating, where they wander from house to house seeking goodies and
giving an idle threat of mischief, if the treat is not given. Another popular
custom associated with Halloween in Germany involves the ‘Jack-o-Lantern’. In a
small town in Austria, known as Retz, not very far from the city of Vienna, an
annual pumpkin fest called Kurbisfest is also held, complete with parties and
parades (Halloween Umzug). A major aspect of Germans’ spiritual pagan past is
the famous spot for witches in the Harz Mountain in Germany. In the 18th
century, natives believed that the region was the hovering spot for witches who
were initially worshipped as forest goddesses and priestesses and later were
damned as evil creatures. For the local people of Germany, the festival of
Halloween is blended with Walpurgisnacht (night of the witches), which took
place in the Harz Mountains. Today, the current Halloween traditions in the
country includes parties and themed decorations, costume parades, watching
horror movies, visiting the graveyards of near and dear ones and so on. In
certain big cities like Berlin, school children even get ‘fall vacations’.
Parties and excursions are organized and people spend the entire occasion in
merry making and having a gala time.
Hong Kong“Yue Lan” or Festival of the Hungry Ghost where the people of Hong Kong give gifts to the spirits of the dead to provide comfort and ward them off. They would burn pictures of fruit and money hoping the images would reach the spirit world and comfort the ghosts. Secondly, the Americans and Canadians have brought Halloween to the city so locals decorate and dress up but trick or treating is not observed.
India
Again, American pop culture has brought Halloween into the mainstream for the new generation in India. It is considered a social event and mostly observed in major cities. They do decorate, dress up and collect candy which they then donate to the poor of the community.
Ireland
Halloween
is a widely celebrated cultural event known as Oiche Shamhna, literally “Samhain
Night” which signified the end of the summer harvest. There would be a fire
festival and feast where bonfires were lit to ward off evil and dead spirits
who were trying to revisit the mortal world. Costumes and masks were worn to
placate the spirits. Candle lanterns were carved from turnips (as pumpkins
weren’t popular in Europe) and placed in windows to ward off evil spirits.
Apples would be tied to a tree and hung from a string and the person would have
to try to catch the apple in their mouth with no hands. A traditional food
is eaten on Halloween called "barnbrack." This is a type of fruitcake
which can be baked at home or store-bought. A muslin-wrapped treat is baked
inside the cake which, so it is said, can foretell the future of the one who
finds it. If the prize is a ring, then that person will soon be wed and a piece
of straw means a prosperous year is forthcoming.
Italy
Between
1630 and 1640 the Catholic Church launched a campaign to get rid of surviving
pagan traditions connected to All Saints’ Day and its eve. These feasts
vanished completely until the mid-1970’s where just 1 million people out of 57
million admitted to celebrating Halloween. Their new traditions are based
mostly on US traditions but not everything. They don’t know the history of the
pumpkin or “zucca di Halloween” but they still carve it. Children trick or
treat and get fruit or candy. The teens mostly enjoy just dressing up and
playing tricks on each other. The elderly, obviously weren’t a part of this
generation so they haven’t really accepted it and don’t really understand it as
well.
Japan
"Obon Festival" (also known as "Matsuri" or "Urabon") is dedicated to the spirits of ancestors and their version of Halloween. Special foods are prepared and bright red lanterns are hung everywhere. Candles are lit and placed into lanterns which are then set to float on rivers and seas. During the "Obon Festival," a fire is lit every night in order to show the ancestors where their families might be found. "Obon" is one of the main occasions during the Japanese year when the dead are believed to return to their birthplaces. Memorial stones are cleaned and community dances performed. The "Obon Festival" takes place during July or August. Tradition Halloween has only recently become popular in Japan due to American pop culture at such places as Tokyo Disneyland and Universal Studios Japan which put on many Halloween events. Trick or treat is not practiced and costumes are mostly limited to the small children and bars that are owned/run by foreigners.
Mexico
Mexico
has celebrated Halloween since the Aztecs where it is a three day celebration.
First is Halloween where the death of the deceased person is celebrated, then
All Saints’ Day and then Day of the Dead or Dia de los Muertos. The Day of the
Dead is usually celebrated at the gravesite with flowers, candles, a small
shrine, sometimes a mariachi band and a parade through the city. Also the
return of the Monarch Butterflies to this area since in the time of the Aztecs it
was believed to bring the spirits of the ancestors with them.
Philippines
They
celebrate a holiday called Undas or Araw ng mga Patay (Day of the Dead) on
November 1st or November 2nd. Recently trick or treating
has become popular in major cities.
Romania
Halloween
is celebrated around the myth and their claim to fame, Dracula. Transylvania
and Sighisoara are the biggest cities that hold costume parties for teens and
adults and are modeled after US Halloween parties. The spirit of Dracula is
believed to be there because the town was the site of many witch trials and due
to many movies about Dracula.
SwitzerlandIn Switzerland, Halloween is seen as a Pagan Festival. It first became popular in 1999 but it is starting to decrease in popularity. People see it as a product imported from the United States and they’re not willing to buy into it. They already have a festival overload that is wrought with tradition.
Wales
Halloween
is known as Nos Calan Gaeaf, the beginning of the new winter. Spirits are said
to walk around and a ‘white lady’ ghost sometimes shows up. Bonfires are lit on
the hillsides to mark the night.
***Recently the Catholic Church and some parents have expressed their concerns over the celebration of a day in which ghosts, goblins, witches and other expressions of evil are linked to the happiness of children. In recent years there has been a push to change the celebration of Halloween to the celebration of Children's Day, in which costumes and sweets would still be present, but the “sinister side” of the event would be suppressed. ***
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