History / Culture

The 3,000-year old Celtic festival behind Halloween

21:40 pm on 31 October 2024

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New Zealanders tend to be skeptical of Halloween as an imported, consumerist tradition that has no connection with our society.

But Halloween springs from a Celtic tradition thousands of years old, Samhain, and was originally a commemoration of summer passing into winter - a time where the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead was especially porous.

Dr Amy Whitehead is a social anthropologist of religion at Massey University.

Being born in the Northern Hemisphere and making her home in Aotearoa, she's experienced the holiday in autumnal, Halloween-mad America as well as here in our springtime, where she estimates only one in every eight houses in Auckland are welcoming of trick-or-treaters.

She joins Emile Donovan to share the origin of traditions like trick-or-treating, witches' broomsticks, dressing up, and carving pumpkins.

Photo: 123RF