Re: Halloween
wintermute, on host 195.153.64.90
Monday, October 22, 2001, at 01:34:44
Re: Halloween posted by Nyperold on Thursday, October 18, 2001, at 12:11:17:
> > Heh. A LOT of that has been lost. Nowadays, it's not about celebrating evil (or whatever other mythology that Halloween was built on, can't remember the specifics right now) > > The Druids. > > Instead of what we think of as Trick-or-Treat, they went around gathering virgins from houses. If they got one, they left a candle made of human fat burning inside a pumpkin. The virgin would be put inside a wicker man(or wicker cage if the man wasn't big enough). They were each given a choice to take a chance as to whether they would be allowed to escape. If someone accepted, that person would have one try to grab an apple with her teeth -- from a vat of boiling cider-like substance. Failure meant death on the spot; success meant going free... with damage from the boiling water. Any who declined a bid for freedom would be burned in their cages. > > Back at the houses, any who didn't produce a virgin when asked for one would be cursed... and they drew a pentagram on the door. > > Fun for the whole family! > > > Sosi"oh, and toilet paper trees"qui > > Nyperold
Ummm... no. Not true at all. This isn't a version I've heard before, but it looks like standard Catholic revisionism.
Samhain was a celebration of the Autumn Equinox, and of thanks for the bountious harvest. Druids did not kill anyone for the celebration, or for any of the other druidic celebrations (the main ones being Yule in winter, Beltain in spring and Lammas in Summer).
Food may have been sacrificed for Samhain, but never people.
winter"Druids were nice people"mute
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