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Holiday Has-Been This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine.

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     Halloween does not deserve to be called a holiday. “Holiday” means “holy day,” but Halloween does not fit this definition. It has deteriorated into a candy fest and a costume-celebrating commercial event, an excuse for money-hungry marketers to sell over three billion dollars worth of merchandise every year.

Halloween began as the ancient Celtic festival Samhain, pronounced sow-en and meaning “summer’s end.” Samhain marked the Celtic new year and was celebrated on October 31. It was believed that on this day the souls of the dead wandered the earth looking for bodies to possess for the coming year. The priest would light a bonfire in the middle of the village to thank the sun god for the harvest and to repel the evil spirits. The villagers would then proceed from their homes to the bonfire, dressing as monsters and being as destructive as they could in order to ward off the spirits.

In the early 600’s, Pope Boniface IV was trying to spread Christianity to pagan people. Since he could not stop them from celebrating Samhain, he put a Christian spin on it by moving All Saints Day (a.k.a. “All Hallow’s”) from November 2 to November 1. October 31 then was referred to as “All Hallow’s Eve,” which has become our “Halloween.”

Today, Halloween makes us think of costumes and candy more than its pagan and Christian roots. The typical buyer is projected by the National Retail Federation to spend almost $50 on Halloween decorations, candy, and costumes. It has degenerated into nothing more than a commercial event: just an excuse to buy stuff in-between real holidays.

This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine. This piece has been published in Teen Ink’s monthly print magazine.





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This article has 27 comments. Post your own!

TargonTheDragonThis teenager is a 'regular' and has contributed a lot of work, comments and/or forum posts, and has received many votes and high ratings over a long period of time. said...
today at 4:06 pm:
i dont think its a problem to celebrate holidays, even if you play along with your communities traditions, as long as you realize and dont take for granted the purpose of the holiday.
 
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NobodyYouKnow said...
Dec. 31, 2011 at 11:25 am:
You are making a good point on your article. But I think that the spiritual vs. cultural components to celebrations of most holidays have changed over the years. Just the same way as the meaning of the word "holiday"has. Many modern celebratory days do not have religious components. If you ask me, language is like a limestone statue that sits out in the rain. After a few centuries, bits of it take a completely different form than they had to begin with.
 
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ellie315 This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine. said...
Aug. 25, 2011 at 11:39 pm:
Although I really enjoyed reading this - I do think that Halloween is a holiday. It may be manipulated, just like Christmas was manipulated from originally celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ to a day about Santa Claus and presents. The magic of Christmas is no longer the love of God and the miracle of Jesus, but about how a jolly fat man can visit every house in the world all in one night delivering presents. But it is still a holiday none the less. I agree that Halloween has much deviated fr... (more »)
 
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Katie1234This teenager is a 'regular' and has contributed a lot of work, comments and/or forum posts, and has received many votes and high ratings over a long period of time. said...
Aug. 25, 2011 at 7:58 pm:
With all due respect, this is slightly ridiculous. All holidays have some sort of past that could frowned upon. It shouldn't be about how everybody else is celebrating, but how you are. I don't really celebrate Halloween all that much. I dress up with friends if I feel like it, and give candy to the kids. I use it as a way to share the Gospel. How many others celebrate it that way? I really don't care. Holidays are mostly a personal thing.
 
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paige14This teenager is a 'regular' and has contributed a lot of work, comments and/or forum posts, and has received many votes and high ratings over a long period of time. This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine. said...
Aug. 19, 2011 at 10:54 pm:

What about Christmas: decorations/tree/ornaments/Santa/presents/cards/food?

What about Easter: baskets/candy/eggs/Easter Bunny/presents/food?

What about Thanksgiving: pretty much just food?

What about President's Day/Memorial Day/MLK Jr. Day/All those other holidays we get a day off school for: Sleep and homework we didn't do?

What about Labor Day and all the holidays we don't even get off school for?

 
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rockyraccoon said...
Jun. 26, 2011 at 3:52 am:
you due realize the same could be said for almost all holidays i celebrate candy on halloween family on christmas and chocalte bunnys on easter and thanksgiving is not realy holy at all.
 
andromeda13This teenager is a 'regular' and has contributed a lot of work, comments and/or forum posts, and has received many votes and high ratings over a long period of time. replied...
Jul. 28, 2011 at 6:36 pm :
thats what i was just thinking. you could pretty much say the same for all the holidays. i don't know why everyone chooses too pick on Hollowe'en. i've seen so many articles like this. 
 
andromeda13This teenager is a 'regular' and has contributed a lot of work, comments and/or forum posts, and has received many votes and high ratings over a long period of time. replied...
Jul. 28, 2011 at 6:37 pm :
anyway i like the article even if i don't fully agree with it ****
 
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Sythan said...
Jun. 5, 2011 at 2:12 pm:
Christmas and Easter are both Pagan holidays as well, just so you know. It's a holiday for us Pagan people, so yeah.
 
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Tabansi said...
Apr. 15, 2011 at 3:59 pm:
What about Satanists? is it not holy for them as well?
 
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Phantom_Girl This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine. said...
Aug. 31, 2010 at 6:40 am:
Halloween is still Samhain for some. It's a sabbat for the Wiccan religion. That means it IS a holy day, and therefore, a holdiay.
 
Phantom_Girl This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine. replied...
Aug. 31, 2010 at 6:45 am :

Aside from my disagreement with your opinion, the piece is actually very well written and the research is good, but you should have gone farther with it. Then you would have found out that it is still celebrated in pagan religions.

4 out of 5 stars.

 
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AnonymousPoster said...
Aug. 16, 2010 at 5:10 pm:
If you think about it, Halloween is probably one of the least commercial holidays.

All are based on some parts of history, from the Jack O' Laterns (which was based on an Irish Folk tale) to the apple bobbing, to the trick or treating (at the end of the fall harvest everyone would go around tasting each others meals. The ones who didn't have any had a "trick" played on them) to the witchs (you've probably heard tales about this).

Halloween is a wonderful mixture of many di... (more »)
 
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shinytarly said...
Apr. 6, 2010 at 11:26 am:

I enjoy the direction of this piece. All to often we find that what was once a sacred day or rite in a certain culture, is merely reduced into a commercialized smorgasboard of candy and gifts.

If there was one complaint I have about this piece, is the fact that it's scope is way too narrow. The premise that Halloween is the only Holiday to be subject to sacralige is quite undeveloped. You'll find that every Holiday, from Halloween to Easter to Christmas, now feature a mascot enticing t... (more »)

 
mandapanda91 replied...
Jul. 26, 2010 at 11:40 am :
Good direction, though researching more would be great and some of us do actually celebrate the old ways and know that 90% of all "modern" holidays are based upon centuries of pagan holidays. IE Christmas- Saturnalia.
 
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KitCat said...
Apr. 6, 2010 at 6:10 am:
I like your point of view but halloween started in the ancient time to celebrate death it's less commonly known as alll souls eve. people used to believe it's where the spirits of the dead haunt the streets but it has been changed to gain something out of it. So it used to be an ancient holiday but now it's an excuse to get chocolate and sweets and to buy scary merchandise. Halloween is great and all too.
 
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skywitch said...
Mar. 31, 2010 at 1:27 pm:
Me and my family spend no more that $10 each year on halloween for candy, my mom used to make my costume. And if we're going to talk commercial events what about Christmas? What about people buying all those presents?
 
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Claudia M. This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine. said...
Feb. 4, 2010 at 8:04 pm:
If every holiday were to be "holy," we would have a minute amount of them. Thanksgiving, for example, is not a holiday with holy origins. And Christmas? It was originally a PAGAN holiday that Christians adopted in an attempt to draw more people to their religion. Valentine's Day? Well, that provokes more of the teenage "love," frowned upon in most religions. Groundhog Day-- well, that's self-explanatory. And even those few holidays with religious origins from the ... (more »)
 
SilverSnowflakes replied...
Mar. 24, 2010 at 7:36 am :
what about Holy Thursday? Good Friday? I don't think they've been commercialized, lol. but they may be the only two....
 
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BaiLiHua This work has been published in the Teen Ink monthly print magazine. said...
Jan. 30, 2010 at 8:46 pm:
Thanks for the Halloween information. The thing is, a lot of holidays have become commercial. Good for you for observing Halloween in your own, more serious way.
 
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