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The Fall Festivals of DeathSamhain, All Hallows’ and All Souls’, Halloween, Days of the Dead
What else but death binds together the pagan festival, the solemn Christian holy days, the modern ghoulish revelry and the Mexican celebration?
The end of October and the beginning of November is the time of the big Fall festivals:
All of these are about darkness, dying and the dead. Even we - with our electrical lighting and central heating, our alienation from nature and concealment of death - still celebrate them, instinctively feeling something of what they really mean. In the past, the end of October meant the harvest was in and stored away in barns, cattle was brought in from the summer pastures, some to be slaughtered, and enough firewood to last the winter was stacked. Life was slowing down. The days grew shorter, darker, colder: nature was dying. But it was also a time of families reuniting. With the cattle also the shepherds returned home. Travel and outdoors activities were suspended. Families pulled together to bake and preserve meat and vegetables for the winter. Gathered around the hearth, they welcomed in their deceased kin and beloved. They repelled evil spirits just as they shut out the bats and the wolves. Rituals were essential in this time of transition. The importance of the resulting festivals and holidays is evident from the fact that
Thus the pagan Samhain, the Roman Pomona Day, the Christian All Hallows’ and All Souls’, and the secular Halloween are not just connected through a clear historical line of parentage. They also stand in a thematical and logical, or should I say, psychological relation: their common themes (death and the presence, in life, of the dead, both friend and foe) are inspired by the psychology of individuals and society getting ready for Winter. Also the Mexican Day of the Dead fits in, but it's a little more complicated. Other articles on Halloween in Customs and Holidays:Articles on the Days of the Dead in Customs and Holidays:More articles on Halloween in Suite101:
The copyright of the article The Fall Festivals of Death in Holiday Entertaining is owned by Katrien Vander Straeten. Permission to republish The Fall Festivals of Death in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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