Saturday, October 31, 2009

Samhain


Samhain

"Samhain night with its ancient lore
was occasion for new and merry custom;
it was learned in the wilderness, in oak-woods,
from spirits and fairies."

  __ "The Metrical Dindshenchas" (trans CM)


   The festival Samhain (SOW'en) marked the start of Winter when beasts were brought in from the hills to the nearby fields for winter slaughter or for overwintering in barns. Samhain was a liminal time in which the world of the living and the ancestral realms overlapped. This was a time for the remembrance of the dead: candles were set in the window to welcome the loved ancestors and to shine upon the path of the unquiet dead to bless them on their way.

  There was always an element of fear and trepidation about this night - the eve before Samhain - and also one of expectancy. When the dead were abroad, certain kinds of divination could be practiced, which asked questions of the ancestors. This night was one when your people disguised themselves and play pranks on the community. The modern custom of trick-or-treating is bsed upon the old tradition of 'mischief night,' where the guisers begged for food and drink from door to door. At inhospitable houses, the gate might be removed from its hines, or other petty misdemeanors might be performed.

  The great fear that many still have about this night is not aided by the commercialism of modern Hallowe'en, which emphasizes ghoulish fascination with ghosts rather than communal reverence for the beloved ancestors. As we enter the darkness of winter this envening, let us remember our own ancestors with love, with a prayer that all unquiet souls be led to blessedness and peace, with a hope that this sacred festival may be restored to its former respect as a time of communal honoring.

"Lit your own candle for the ancestors this evening, and breathe your blessing upon all who no longer walk this world."
[From "The Celtic Spirit" by Caitlin Matthews]


And so with this essay, I am at the end of the book and will return to its beginning tomorrow with November 1st,,,,,   S.

1 comment:

  1. Wow!!!! It's a wonderful book, isn't it? It's so much more fun reading it here with all your photos. Blessed Samhain, Sobeit.
    Mary

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