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Finding your Celtic Roots

Happy Halloween!

by JaneW on Oct.31, 2009, under Finding your Celtic Roots

Thanks to Wanda Corn for contributing this.

How Halloween Began:

One of the most fascinating tales about Halloween is how and why it began.

Celebrating our fear of ghosts and goblins began 2,000 years ago with the Celts, people who lived in an area that is now Ireland, the United Kingdom and northern France.

The Celts celebrated the birth of the new year on Nov. 1, which they associated with the end of the harvest and the death of the old year.

They believed that on the night before the new year, the ghosts of the dead returned to walk the streets and create mayhem, including playing practical jokes and damaging the crops.

They also believed that during the Oct. 31 holiday of Samhaim, named for their Lord of the Dead, otherworldly spirits returned to earth to help their holy men predict the future.

Because they knew little of the science needed to understand the natural world around them, the Celts found the prophecies of their Druid priests comforting.

During this time, an Irish legend developed about a man named Jack who was denied entrance to Heaven when he died because he was a miser. The devil didn’t want Jack, either, so he was forced to roam the earth holding a lantern until Judgment Day.

The Irish, wishing to avoid Jack’s ghost, carved out turnips and potatoes and placed candles inside for protection. When the Irish people immigrated to America, they brought along the tradition. After seeing pumpkins for the first time, they replaced other vegetables and our jack-o’-lantern tradition was born

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