Where does the custom of trick or treating
come from? Is it really ancient, a few centuries old, or relatively
modern? Lets look at the evidence:
Kevin Danaher, in his remarkable book The
Year in Ireland, has a long discussion of the traditional
Irish celebrations of this festival. In one section on Hallow-Een
Guisers, he says:
A familiar sight in Dublin city on and about
October 31 is that of small groups of children, arrayed in grotesque
garments and with faces masked or painted, accosting the passers-by
or knocking on house doors with the request: Help the Hallow
Een party! Any apples or nuts? in the expectation
of being given small presents; this, incidentally, is all the
more remarkable as it is the only folk custom of the kind which
has survived in the metropolis.
A couple of generations ago, in parts of Dublin
and in other areas of Ireland, the groups would have consisted
of young men and grown boys, who often travelled considerable
distances in their quest, with consequently greater reward. The
proceeds were usually expended on a Hallow Een party,
with music, dancing, feasting and so on, at some chosen house,
and not merely consumed on the spot as with the children nowadays
Irisleabhar na Gaedhilge, ii, 370, states that in parts of Count Waterford,
Hallow Een is called oidhche na h-aimléise,
The night of mischief or con. It was a custom in
the county it survives still in places for the
boys to assemble in gangs, and, headed by a few horn-blowers
who were always selected for their strength of lungs, to visit
all the farmers houses in the district and levy a sort
of blackmail, good humouredly asked for, and as cheerfully given.
They afterward met at some rendezvous, and in merry revelry celebrated
the festival of Samhain in their own way. When the distant winding
of the horns was heard, the bean a tigh [woman of
the house] prepared for their reception, and got ready the money
or builín (white bread) to be handed to them through
the half-opened door. Whoever heard the wild scurry of their
rush through a farm-yard to the kitchen-door there was
always a race amongst them to get possession of the latch
will not question the propriety of the word aimiléis
[mischief] applied to their proceedings. The leader of the band
chaunted a sort of recitative in Gaelic, intoning it with a strong
nasal twang to conceal his identity, in which the good-wife was
called upon to do honour to Samhain
A contributor
to An Claidheamh Soluis, 15 Dec. 1906, 5, gives a example
of these verses, from Ring, County Waterford:
Anocht Oidhche Shamhna, a Mhongo Mango. Sop is na fuinneogaibh;
dúntar na díirse. Eirigh id shuidhe, a bhean
an tighe. Téirigh siar go banamhail, tar aniar go flaitheamhail.
Tabhair leat ceapaire aráin agus ime ar dhath do leacain
fhéin; a mbeidh léim ghirrfiadh dhe aoirde ann
ages ciscéim choiligh dhe im air. Tabhair chugham peigín
de bhainne righin, mín, milis a mbeidh leawhnach n-a
chosa agus uachtar n-a mhullaigh; go mbeidh sé ag
imtheacht n-a chnocaibh agus ag teacht Ôn-a shléibhtibh,
agus badh ó leat go dtachtfadh sé mé, agus
mo chreach fhada níor bhaoghal dom.
(Oh Mongo Mango, Hallow Een
tonight. Straw in the windows and close the doors. Rise up housewife,
go inside womanly, return hospitably, bring with you a slice
of bread and butter the colour of your own cheek, as high as
a hares jump with a cocks step of butter on it. Bring
us a measure of thick fine sweet milk, with new milk below and
cream above, coming in hills and going in mountains; you may
think it would choke me, but, alas! I am in no danger.)
Wow, that chant sure sounds scary, doesnt
it?
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As I mentioned before, because
it was an in-between kind of holiday, spirits (nice
or nasty), ancestors (ditto), or mortals (ditto?) were thought
to be more easily able to pass from This
World to the Other World and vice versa. It was also a perfect
time for divination or fortune telling (Danaher talks
about all of this at great length). While some monotheists may
consider these activities to be evil, most religions
in human history have considered them perfectly normal. |
Before and after the arrival of Christianity,
early November was when people in Western and Northern Europe
finished the last of their harvesting, butchered their excess
stock (so the surviving animals would have enough food to make
it through the winter), and held great feasts. They invited their
ancestors to join them, decorated family graves, and told ghost
stories all of which may strike some monotheists today
as spiritually erroneous, but which hardly seems evil
and many modern polytheists do much the same (though few
of us have herds to thin). So where does trick or treating
come in?
According to Tad Tulejas essay, Trick
or Treat: Pre-Texts and Contexts, in Jack Santinos
anthology, Halloween
and Other Festivals of Death and Life, modern trick
or treating (primarily children going door-to-door, begging for
candy) began fairly recently, as a blend of several
ancient and modern influences. Im mixing Tulejas
material here with my own insights, see his essay for details
of his opinions, which Ill mark with italics to separate
from mine:
- At various times and places in the Middle
Ages, customs developed of beggers, then children, asking for soul cakes on All Souls
Day.
- At some other Medieval times and places,
costumed holiday parading, singing and dancing at May Day,
Halloween, and Yule (with different themes, of course,
though sometimes with similar characters, such as the Hobby
Horse) became popular in Ireland and the British Isles.
Originally these costumed celebrants were adults and older teens,
who would go from house to house (as Danaher describes above)
demanding beer and munchies in exchange for their performances,
which mixed Pagan and Christian symbols and themes. While many
Neopagans may think these folk customs go all the way back to
Paleopagan times, they are actually fairly modern (see Stations
of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in England,
by Ronald Hutton).
- To the medieval householders, of course,
being thought stingy (especially in front of the visiting ancestors
and faery folk at Halloween) would be very bad luck, as it would
violate the ancient laws of hospitality. Perhaps there were some
inebriated paraders who might have decided to come back later
in the night and play tricks upon those who hadnt rewarded
them properly, but any references to such are fairly modern.
- In 1605 c.e., Guy Fawkes abortive
effort to blow up the British Parliament on November 5th, led
to the creation of Guy Fawkes
Day, celebrated by the burning of effigies of Fawkes
in bonfires and children dressing in rags to beg for money for
fireworks. As the decades rolled by, this became thoroughly entwined
with Halloween celebrations and customs. This is not surprising,
considering that bonfires were a central part of the old Samhain/Halloween
tradition, and that Nov. 5th was actually closer to the astrological
date for Samhain (thought by some Neopagans to be the original
dating method) than Nov. 1st was! In the year 2006, the movie
V for Vendetta introduced the image of Guy Fawkes to millions
of Americans.
- In 19th Century America, rural immigrants
from Ireland and Scotland kept gender-specific Halloween customs
from their homelands: girls stayed indoors and did divination
games, while the boys roamed outdoors engaging in almost equally
ritualized pranks, which their elders
blamed on the spirits being abroad that
night.
- Also in mid-19th Century New York, children
called ragamuffins
would dress in costumes and beg for pennies from adults
on Thanksgiving Day.
- Things got nastier with increased urbanization
and poverty in the 1930s. Adults began casting about for
ways to control the previously harmless but now increasingly
expensive and dangerous vandalism of the
boys. Towns and cities began organizing
safe Halloween events and householders
began giving out bribes to the neighborhood kids as a way to
distract them away from their previous anarchy. The ragamuffins
disappeared or switched their date to Halloween. The term
trick or treat, finally appears
in print around 1939!
Pranks became even nastier in the 1980s,
with widespread poverty existing side-by-side with obscene greed.
Unfortunately, as criminologists, military recruiters and historians
know, the most dangerous animals on our planet are unemployed
teenaged males. Bored kids in a violence-saturated culture slip
all too easily from harmless decoration of their
neighbors houses with shaving cream and toilet paper to
serious vandalism and assaults. Blaming Halloween for this is
rather like blaming the Fourth of July for the many firecracker
injuries that happen every year (and which are also combatted
by publicly sponsored events).
By the mid- 20th century in Ireland and Britain,
it seems only the smaller children would dress up and parade
to the neighbors houses, do little performances, then ask
for a reward. American kids seem to remember this with their
chants of Jingle bells, Batman smells, Robin laid an egg,
and other classic tunes done for no reason other than because
its traditional.
To a great extent, the costumes worn by modern
trick-or-treaters represent, as they might have in older times,
an effort to entertain, amuse and/or scare the neighbors, and
to compete a bit with others in beauty, ugliness, humor, scariness,
and costuming skill.
What was Halloween in America like forty years
ago? Read Lady Phaes Halloween
and Me essay on my website for some heartwarming memories.
Why
Bother to save Halloween? is an essay
by Richard Seltzer, which has yet more reasons why its
important to keep the custom of trick or treating alive:
Halloween is a time that reconfirms the social
bond of a neighborhood (particularly the bond between strangers
of different generations) by a ritual act of trade. Children
go to lengths to dress up and overcome their fear of strangers
in exchange for candy. And adults buy the candy and overcome
their distrust of strange children in exchange for the pleasure
of seeing their wild outfits and vicariously reliving their own
adventures as children.
In other words, the true value and importance
of Halloween comes not from parading in costumes in front of
close friends and family, but from this interchange with strangers,
exorcising our fears of strangers, reaffirming our social bond
with the people of the neighborhood who we rarely, if ever, see
the rest of the year.
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