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Celebrating Halloween’s Irish Roots
IrishShopShare
Halloween as we celebrate it today – with children dressed as superheroes, princesses and adorable animals going door to door collecting candy - is an American invention. But it wasn’t invented out of thin air. Halloween’s roots reach back to ancient Ireland and our Celtic ancestor’s beliefs. We celebrate differently today, but many elements of the festivities have an origin in pre-Christian Ireland. So Halloween is one of those beloved American holidays that could be considered Irish gifts.
The Celtic year begins on November 1st, and the night before was known as Samhain (pronounced sow-ain). Our ancestors believed that a sort of veil separated their everyday world from the world of the spirits, where the souls of the departed dwelled with various ghouls and monsters. They believed that over the course of the year, this veil wore thinner and thinner until at the very end of the year it was porous. So on Samhain, those ghosts and goblins were able to move from the spirit world to the human world and cause all sorts of mischief and mayhem. And that was pretty terrifying to them.