HALLOWEEN My candy bill is about to go sky high, this week. - TopicsExpress



          

HALLOWEEN My candy bill is about to go sky high, this week. Halloween is upon us. I will, I am sure, have kids from far and near descend upon me. And, I won’t know any of them. That is so much different than I remember doing it in the Twin Cities of Festus and Crystal City, Missouri in the 1940’s and the early 50’s. Back then my parents always admonished us to only call on friends of the family or people that would know me and my sisters. This might seem rather limiting to most, but back then it hardly limited any of us at all—because almost every family knew every other family. My bag of loot would weigh me down by the time I staggered home. Of course we were not allowed to stay out too late. Back then, I think you were allowed to go out as soon as it was dark and be home around 9 or maybe 9:30. You can cover a lot of territory in an hour or two when you are 9 or 10---young legs never stop running. The treat that I enjoyed the most were caramel pop-corn balls and caramel covered apples…they both lasted a long time. My father once told me that when he was very young, the mid to late 20’s I would guess he meant, that Halloween was very different. It was more or less along the line of ‘Show us your trick and we’ll give you a treat.’ The kids would knock on the door and then would do a little dance or maybe sing a little song; the home owners would then reward them with candy, {usually homemade} or a drink. How and why did such a strange custom get started? Halloween has its roots in the ancient, pre-Christian Celtic festival of Samhain, which was celebrated on the night of October 31. The Celts, who lived 2,000 years ago in the area that is now Ireland, the United Kingdom and northern France, believed that the dead returned to earth on Samhain. People would gather to light bonfires, offer sacrifices and pay homage to the deceased. Although it is unknown precisely where and when the phrase “trick or treat” was coined, the custom had been firmly established in American popular culture by 1951, when trick-or-treating was depicted in the Peanuts comic strip. In 1952, Disney produced a cartoon called “Trick or Treat” featuring Donald Duck and his nephews Huey, Dewey and Louie. During some Celtic celebrations of Samhain, villagers disguised themselves in costumes made of animal skins to drive away phantom visitors; banquet tables were prepared and edible offerings were left out to placate unwelcome spirits. In later centuries, people began dressing as ghosts, demons and other malevolent creatures, performing antics in exchange for food and drink. This custom, known as mumming, dates back to the Middle Ages and is thought to be an antecedent of trick-or-treating. By the ninth century, Christianity had spread into Celtic lands, where it gradually blended with and supplanted older pagan rites. In 1000 A.D. the church designated November 2 as All Souls’ Day, a time for honoring the dead. Celebrations in England resembled Celtic commemorations of Samhain, complete with bonfires and masquerades. Poor people would visit the houses of wealthier families and receive pastries called soul cakes in exchange for a promise to pray for the souls of the homeowners’ dead relatives. Known as souling, the practice was later taken up by children, who would go from door to door asking for gifts such as food, money and ale. In Scotland and Ireland, young people took part in a tradition called guising, dressing up in costume and accepting offerings from various households. Rather than pledging to pray for the dead, they would sing a song, recite a poem, tell a joke or perform another sort of “trick” before collecting their treat, which typically consisted of fruit, nuts or coins. I would think that this is the tradition that my father and his young friends were brought up in. Still another potential trick-or-treating predecessor is the British custom for children to wear masks and carry effigies while begging for pennies on Guy Fawkes Night (also known as Bonfire Night), which commemorates the foiling of the so-called Gunpowder Plot in 1605. On November 5, 1606, Fawkes was executed for his role in the Catholic-led conspiracy to blow up England’s parliament building and remove King James I, a Protestant, from power. On the original Guy Fawkes Day, celebrated immediately after the famous plotter’s execution, communal bonfires, or “bone fires,” were lit to burn effigies and the symbolic “bones” of the Catholic pope. I don’t think being a Catholic and living in England at that time was a very good idea! By the early 19th century, children bearing effigies of Fawkes were roaming the streets on the evening of November 5, asking for “a penny for the Guy.” 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. One theory holds that it was the excessive pranks on Halloween that led to the widespread adoption of an organized, community-based trick-or-treating tradition in the 1930s. This trend was abruptly curtailed, however, with the outbreak of World War 2, when children had to refrain from trick-or-treating because of sugar rationing. At the height of the postwar baby boom, trick-or-treating reclaimed its place among other Halloween customs, quickly becoming standard practice for millions of children in America’s cities and newly built suburbs. No longer constrained by sugar rationing, candy companies capitalized on the lucrative ritual, launching national advertising campaigns specifically aimed at Halloween. Today, Americans spend an estimated $6 billion annually on Halloween, making it the nation’s second-largest commercial holiday. I have to say---I liked it better when most of the treats were homemade as were the cute costumes that people invented for their kids. I guess what I also liked was that big business wasn’t making a killing off of us while the CEO’s and their factories were located in China. Wearing a cheap looking costume made overseas while celebrating an American custom just seems… well, it seems un-American, to me.
Posted on: Tue, 28 Oct 2014 18:05:09 +0000

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