How to Explain Halloween to Children

By eHow Relationships & Family Editor

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Halloween is lots of fun for kids - mostly because it usually involves getting dressed up and eating candy. There's more to Halloween than trick-or-treating, though, and you may want to share the history of the holiday with your family.

Instructions

Difficulty: Moderately Easy

Things You’ll Need:

  • Pumpkins
  • Kids' Costumes

Step1
Explain the origins of the holiday. Although medieval Christianity is the origin for the majority of our modern Halloween celebrations, some traditions are rooted in Samhain, an old Irish festival. This festival honored the dead and marked the beginning of winter and the start of the new year (by the ancient Celtic calendar) in early Christian and pagan times.
Step2
Talk about how the celebration spread. As Christianity gained momentum in Europe in the ninth century, the church declared November 1 All Saints Day to honor saints who did not yet have their own day of homage. The special mass they held became known as Allhallowmas - the mass of all saintly ones. The night before was known as All Hallows Eve.
Step3
Discuss the origins of trick-or-treating. One version is that on All Souls Day, early Christians went door to door begging for "soul cakes," offering a prayer for the giver's soul in return. Others say that on Samhain, revelers would don masks representing the dead, and would go from house to house and collect food that had been reserved for the departed.
Step4
Explain why revelers wear Halloween costumes. People used to believe that on All Hallows Eve, the line between the dead and the living weakened, allowing spirits to re-enter the world and possess the living. Apparently, fearful folks wore the garb of ghouls and ghosts to avoid an encounter with the real thing.
Step5
Talk about jack-o'-lanterns, which originally were hollowed-out turnips, not pumpkins. According to folklore, a man named Jack who once tricked Satan was barred from heaven and hell when he died. He was condemned to wander in darkness, with just one coal to light his way. This is why we put candles inside carved pumpkins at Halloween.
Step6
Explain similar celebrations around the world. From Mexico's Day of the Dead to Sicily's Festival of the Dead and England's Guy Fawkes Day, there are many celebrations similar to Halloween around the world. Your family might even enjoy borrowing some traditions from these varied cultural celebrations.

Tips & Warnings

  • There are Halloween books available to suit most age ranges, so if your children are interested in history and cultural traditions, find some books at your local library or bookstore that will help you explain the complex details of the festival.
  • Some of the stories behind Halloween traditions can be quite frightening to very young or sensitive children. Go easy on them, especially if they are going to be out trick-or-treating after dark.

Comments

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Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 11/22/2005 Explain everything slowly (and as educationally as your kids will stand for) over the month of October. Point out the changing weather as why the Celts declared this to be the end of the year. Serve traditional seasonal foods, like colcannon. And depending on your children, you may even want to explain that bats and spiders are good animals who eat yucky bugs for us.

Of course, you could always dispel other potential phobias with "Graveyards are full of people's families" and "Witches have gotten a lot of bad publicity over the past 2000 years. If you don't bother them, they won't bother you."

Be creative. Try to make Halloween fun.

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 11/22/2005 Celebrate Halloween by having a Halloween Party. Use cute, African American Halloween party invitations.

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 11/22/2005 Most modern pagans still celebrate Samhain as one of the highest Sabbats. To us, as in days of old, it is a day of remembering our loved ones and of honoring our ancestors. This is a good time to share stories of your own family with your children.

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eHow Article:  How to Explain Halloween to Children

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