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File: 1413298273819.jpg (53.35 KB,540x720,3:4,asatru_pumpkin_carving_by_….jpg)

 No.59

____________________________
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 No.61

The Fantasy and Folklore of Halloween
Celtic Samhain and the Origins of Halloween
http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/celtsmyth/a/lochalloween_2.htm

The Fantasy and Folklore of All Hallows
By Jack Santino

Halloween had its beginnings in an ancient, pre-Christian Celtic festival of the dead. The Celtic peoples, who were once found all over Europe, divided the year by four major holidays. According to their calendar, the year began on a day corresponding to November 1st on our present calendar. The date marked the beginning of winter. Since they were pastoral people, it was a time when cattle and sheep had to be moved to closer pastures and all livestock had to be secured for the winter months. Crops were harvested and stored. The date marked both an ending and a beginning in an eternal cycle.

The festival observed at this time was called Samhain (pronounced Sah-ween). It was the biggest and most significant holiday of the Celtic year. The Celts believed that at the time of Samhain, more so than any other time of the year, the ghosts of the dead were able to mingle with the living, because at Samhain the souls of those who had died during the year traveled into the otherworld. People gathered to sacrifice animals, fruits, and vegetables. They also lit bonfires in honor of the dead, to aid them on their journey, and to keep them away from the living. On that day all manner of beings were abroad: ghosts, fairies, and demons–all part of the dark and dread.

Samhain became the Halloween we are familiar with when Christian missionaries attempted to change the religious practices of the Celtic people. In the early centuries of the first millennium A.D., before missionaries such as St. Patrick and St. Columcille converted them to Christianity, the Celts practiced an elaborate religion through their priestly caste, the Druids, who were priests, poets, scientists and scholars all at once. As religious leaders, ritual specialists, and bearers of learning, the Druids were not unlike the very missionaries and monks who were to Christianize their people and brand them evil devil worshippers.

As a result of their efforts to wipe out "pagan" holidays, such as Samhain, the Christians succeeded in effecting major transformations in it. In 601 A.D. Pope Gregory the First issued a now famous edict to his missionaries concerning the native beliefs and customs of the peoples he hoped to convert. Rather than try to obliterate native peoples' customs and beliefs, the pope instructed his missionaries to use them: if a group of people worshipped a tree, rather than cut it down, he advised them to consecrate it to Christ and allow its continued worship.

In terms of spreading Christianity, this was a brilliant concept and it became a basic approach used in Catholic missionary work. Church holy days were purposely set to coincide with native holy days. Christmas, for instance, was assigned the arbitrary date of December 25th because it corresponded with the mid-winter celebration of many peoples. Likewise, St. John's Day was set on the summer solstice.

Samhain, with its emphasis on the supernatural, was decidedly pagan. While missionaries identified their holy days with those observed by the Celts, they branded the earlier religion's supernatural deities as evil, and associated them with the devil. As representatives of the rival religion, Druids were considered evil worshippers of devilish or demonic gods and spirits. The Celtic underworld inevitably became identified with the Christian Hell.

The effects of this policy were to diminish but not totally eradicate the beliefs in the traditional gods. Celtic belief in supernatural creatures persisted, while the church made deliberate attempts to define them as being not merely dangerous, but malicious. Followers of the old religion went into hiding and were branded as witches.
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 No.62

>>61

Christian feast and Celtic beliefs in Samhain

The Christian feast of All Saints was assigned to November 1st. The day honored every Christian saint, especially those that did not otherwise have a special day devoted to them. This feast day was meant to substitute for Samhain, to draw the devotion of the Celtic peoples, and, finally, to replace it forever. That did not happen, but the traditional Celtic deities diminished in status, becoming fairies or leprechauns of more recent traditions.

The old beliefs associated with Samhain never died out entirely. The powerful symbolism of the traveling dead was too strong, and perhaps too basic to the human psyche, to be satisfied with the new, more abstract Catholic feast honoring saints. Recognizing that something that would subsume the original energy of Samhain was necessary, the church tried again to supplant it with a Christian feast day in the 9th century. This time it established November 2nd as All Souls Day–a day when the living prayed for the souls of all the dead. But, once again, the practice of retaining traditional customs while attempting to redefine them had a sustaining effect: the traditional beliefs and customs lived on, in new guises.

All Saints Day, otherwise known as All Hallows (hallowed means sanctified or holy), continued the ancient Celtic traditions. The evening prior to the day was the time of the most intense activity, both human and supernatural. People continued to celebrate All Hallows Eve as a time of the wandering dead, but the supernatural beings were now thought to be evil. The folk continued to propitiate those spirits (and their masked impersonators) by setting out gifts of food and drink. Subsequently, All Hallows Eve became Hallow Evening, which became Hallowe'en–an ancient Celtic, pre-Christian New Year's Day in contemporary dress.

Many supernatural creatures became associated with All Hallows. In Ireland fairies were numbered among the legendary creatures who roamed on Halloween. An old folk ballad called "Allison Gross" tells the story of how the fairy queen saved a man from a witch's spell on Halloween.

O Allison Gross, that lives in yon tower
the ugliest witch int he North Country…
She's turned me into an ugly worm
and gard me toddle around a tree…


But as it fell out last Hallow even
When the seely [fairy] court was riding by,
the Queen lighted down on a gowany bank
Not far from the tree where I wont to lie…
She's change me again to my own proper shape
And I no more toddle about the tree.


In old England cakes were made for the wandering souls, and people went "a' soulin'" for these "soul cakes." Halloween, a time of magic, also became a day of divination, with a host of magical beliefs: for instance, if persons hold a mirror on Halloween and walk backwards down the stairs to the basement, the face that appears in the mirror will be their next lover.
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 No.63

>>62

Witches, Masks and Mumming on Halloween

Virtually all present Halloween traditions can be traced to the ancient Celtic day of the dead. Halloween is a holiday of many mysterious customs, but each one has a history, or at least a story behind it. The wearing of costumes, for instance, and roaming from door to door demanding treats can be traced to the Celtic period and the first few centuries of the Christian era, when it was thought that the souls of the dead were out and around, along with fairies, witches, and demons. Offerings of food and drink were left out to placate them. As the centuries wore on, people began dressing like these dreadful creatures, performing antics in exchange for food and drink. This practice is called mumming, from which the practice of trick-or-treating evolved. To this day, witches, ghosts, and skeleton figures of the dead are among the favorite disguises. Halloween also retains some features that harken back to the original harvest holiday of Samhain, such as the customs of bobbing for apples and carving vegetables, as well as the fruits, nuts, and spices cider associated with the day.

Today Halloween is becoming once again and adult holiday or masquerade, like mardi Gras. Men and women in every disguise imaginable are taking to the streets of big American cities and parading past grinningly carved, candlelit jack o'lanterns, re- enacting customs with a lengthy pedigree. Their masked antics challenge, mock, tease, and appease the dread forces of the night, of the soul, and of the otherworld that becomes our world on this night of reversible possibilities, inverted roles, and transcendency. In so doing, they are reaffirming death and its place as a part of life in an exhilarating celebration of a holy and magic evening.

September 1982
Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/folklife/hallobib.html
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 No.70

Asatru, Winter Nights, Samhain, and Us
http://asatruupdate.blogspot.com/2011/10/asatru-winter-nights-samhain-and-us.html

About two weeks ago we celebrated the Asatru festival called Winter Nights, at which we honored the female ancestors, or Disir.

Tonight, millions of Americans will celebrate Halloween by dressing up in costumes and acting bizarrely. Children will go from door to door, decked out as mummies or witches or princesses, and beg for candy. The older set will go to parties at the office or in homes, but the general spirit will be the same as that of their children - a night of fantasy, of the eerie, the strange.

Halloween takes its name from "Hallows Eve," which comes just before before All Souls Day in the Catholic calendar. It is hardly a coincidence that this is the date of the old Celtic festival of Samhain (pronounced SOW-an). As always, the Church was adept at co-opting indigenous holy days and using them for its own ends.

If we compare Samhain and Winter Nights, we see strong similarities. The time of year is significant; harvest has ended and the rigors of winter are coming. The dark half of the year is beginning. The nights are longer. Life retreats from the cold. The wall between the worlds is thin, and the ancestors are near.

Samhain and Winter Nights remind us of the closeness of the European peoples. For all our squabbles, and all our distinct cultural differences, we are in many ways the same bunch of people. The Celts, Germans, and Slavs all descend from the folks of the Funnel Beaker Culture. Even today the European genome is eighty-five to ninety percent derived from the earliest hunter-gatherers to inhabit what are now our homelands. Unfortunately, this closeness has not kept us from fighting one fratricidal war after another with our kin. The bloodbaths of World War One and World War Two are the most obvious examples, but countless less spectacular slaughters have darkened our past. Yes, I know we have always fought among ourselves and I am sure we always will. But modern warfare is a dysgenic disaster of proportions which we can no longer accept.

As for me, I will have a Guinness and remember my ancestors - men like Fergus, son of Nellan, who gave my blood a name - but I will also toast those other men and women of Europa who have made me who I am.

Slainte!…and Prost!

Steve McNallen

Asatru Folk Assembly
http://runestone.org
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 No.85

http://www.odinsvolk.ca/O.V.A.%20-%20SACRED%20CALENDER.htm#Winter%20Nights

HARVESTFEST / WINTER NIGHTS
October 31st
Winternights is held the 31st of October. Winternights marked the final end of harvest and the time when the animals that were not expected to make it through the winter were butchered and smoked or made into sausage. The festival is also called "Elf-Blessing", "Dis-Blessing", or "Frey-Blessing", which tells us that it was especially a time of honouring the ancestral spirits, the spirits of the land, the Vanir, and the powers of fruitfulness, wisdom, and death. It marks the turning of the year from summer to winter, the turning of our awareness from outside to inside. Among the Norse, the ritual was often led by the woman of a family - the ruler of the house and all within. One of the commonest harvest customs of the Germanic people was the hallowing and leaving of the "Last Sheaf" in the field, often for Odin and/or his host of the dead, though the specifics of the custom vary considerably over its wide range. The Wild Hunt begins to ride after Winternights, and the roads and fields no longer belong to humans, but to ghosts and trolls. The Winternights feast is also especially seen as a time to celebrate our kinship and friendship with both the living and our earlier forebears. It marks the beginning of the long dark wintertime at which memory becomes more important than foresight, at which old tales are told and great deeds are toasted as we ready ourselves for the spring to come. It is a time to think of accomplishments achieved and those which have yet to be made. Winternights also marks the beginning of a time of indoor work, thought and craftsmanship.

These festival and feast celebrated the accessibility, veneration, awe, and respect of the dead. This was also a time for contemplation. To the ancient Germanic peoples death was never very far away, and it viewed as a natural and necessary part of life. To die was not as much of a surprise or tragedy it is in modern times and death as not viewed as something "scary" or "evil". Of higher importance to the Germanic people was to live & die with honour and thereby live on in the memory of the tribe and be honoured at this great feast.

Starting on this night, the great divisions between the worlds was somewhat diminished which can allow the forces of chaos to invade the realms of order, the material world conjoining with the world of the dead. At this time began the Wild hunt in which the restless spirits of the dead and those yet to be born walked amongst the living. The dead could return to the places where they had lived and food and entertainment were provided in their honour. In this way the tribes were at one with its past, present and future.

Again, the Christians forcefully subverted the sacred Germanic Heathen calendar to honour Christianity, Winter nights on October 31 became "All Hallows Eve" and November 1st was declared "All Saint's Day".
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 No.796

File: 1414679770857.jpg (408.14 KB,800x450,16:9,RIR-141029_big.jpg)

James Swagger - Hour 1 - The Irish & Scottish Origins of Halloween
October 29, 2014
http://www.redicecreations.com/radio/2014/10/RIR-141029.php

James Swagger is a researcher, field investigator and engineer who has dedicated the last 15 years of his life to researching megalithic sites and ancient cultures. James has been to over 400 megalithic tombs dotted across Europe, in addition to stone circles and henges in search of commonalities and design. James utilizes his engineering background as a systems analyst as a utility to reduce the complexity of ancient megalithic sites. He returns to discuss the Irish and Scottish origins of Halloween. He’ll talk about the Irish/Scottish ‘Samhain’ festival originating in the British Isles about 1300 years ago. He’ll tell about Celtic pagan rituals that relate to the megalithic calendar and solar wheel. James says pagans inherited their solar worship from the megalith builders. He also talks about how the church aimed to Christianize the Celtic pagans and how the shift from Hallows day became Hallows Eve or Halloween. In the second hour, we’ll hear about the mythology of spirits and inter-dimension beings at Halloween. He’ll talk about the Aos Si, banshees, witches, fairies and supernatural women of Ireland. We also hear about the Tuatha De Danann, a race of supernaturally-gifted people in Irish mythology. Later, we discuss other deities and festivals of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland and variant branches of paganism.
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 No.850

Asatru - Winter Nights & the Disir
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KL2Xcv8IEek
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 No.7663

Halloween coming up in a few months. Bump.

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 No.8483

Relevant thread. Share material please.

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 No.8484

YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play.

Varg - About Halloween

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 No.8504

>>850

I don't understand this, why is Freya observed on this day? Should it not be Thor? I heard Thor was "god of the Harvest" (forgot from which source). Would it not make sense that we should sacrifice to him? Freya is often associated with Spring since she is a goddess of Fertility I mean she is the Norse equivalent to the Germanic Eostre who is celebrated on the Spring Equinox (Easter).

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 No.8668

>>8504

>Freya is often associated with Spring since she is a goddess of Fertility I mean she is the Norse equivalent to the Germanic Eostre who is celebrated on the Spring Equinox (Easter).

Aye. I also thought that Walpurgisnacht was a more appropriate time to offer to her as well. Though I don't think it's too much of a stretch to honor her on a night honoring the Disir.

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 No.14580

File: 9bca57754cce826⋯.jpg (125.33 KB,634x845,634:845,2755877B00000578-3028252-i….jpg)

>>14576

Reported, enjoy ban virghinchode mass-ghostbumper lmao

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