I know it's been said before, but it bears repeating.Phoenix_XIII said:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/10/jesus-ween-christian-halloween_n_1003395.html?1318270211
Okay. So let me get on the rant now.
I am a Pagan. And I for one find this to be bullshit.
Halloween is a sacred holiday. Pagan New Year, my friends. And this bullshit is what makes me hate America.
Let me tell you, I'm done defending the intelligence of this country if no one can follow our own Freedom of Religion bit. Fucking hell, I can't even think straight right now in regards to this. Someone, please post a better rant. I don't even have words. There ARE no words....
Halloween has been a Christian Holiday since the 8th century, and certainly has been since 1556 when it was given the name "Halloween"
Hallow as in holy. Een as in Even as in Evening. Therefore Halloween as in "The Night Before All Saints Day" All Saints Day as in the Christian celebration.
It hasn't been purely non-Christian since the 8th century. It was/is the celtic harvest festival Samuin (Later re-named as Samhain) which is old Irish for "Summer's End" but it was strictly a secular gaelic harvest festival even then.
Halloween was only associated with Paganism as we understand the term today in the 19th century when the modern concept of Paganism actually arose with the occultic resurgance in Germany and the UK. This is a full eleven centuries after it became a Christian celebration. So you're coming a bit late to the party, I'm afraid.
If you're wiccan or Celtic Reconstructionist then you're even later as those didn't come about until the late 20th century. 12 centuries after the Secular harvest festival was co-opted by Christianity.
TL;DR Version: Paganism as a religious affiliation arose within the last 200 years depending on what you count as the Pagan religious affiliation. Halloween became Christian in the 8th century. Samuin/Samahain was always a secular celebration before neopagan co-option in the 1960s. Therefore complaining about Christians co-opting Samuin is
1) A bit late.
2) From the standpoint of an atheist British citizen of Celtic descent, highly amusing.
Just out of interest, and I do ask this out of genuine interest rather than facetiousness: Which form of Pagan are you? Are you Wiccan? Druidic? Celtic Reconstructionist?
Are you an Eclectic or Syncretic Pagan or do you follow a particular ethnocentric form of Paganism? Which one? Hellenic, Germanic, Slavic, Celtic, or Other?