Trick or Treat!?
The custom of 'trick or treat' probably has several origins. Again mostly
Irish.An old Irish peasant practice called for going door to door to collect
money, bread cake, cheese, eggs, butter, nuts, apples, etc., in preparation for
the festival of St. Columbus Kill. Yet another custom was the begging for soul
cakes, or offerings for one's self - particularly in exchange for promises of
prosperity or protection against bad luck. It is with this custom the concept of
the fairies came to be incorporated as people used to go door to door begging
for treats. Failure to supply the treats would usually result in practical jokes
being visited on the owner of the house.
Since the fairies were abroad on this night, an offering of food or milk was
frequently left for them on the steps of the house, so the houseowner could gain
the blessings of the "good folk" for the coming year. Many of the households
would also leave out a "dumb supper" for the spirits of the departed.
Irisleabhar na Gaedhilge, ii, 370, states that in parts of Count Waterford:
'Hallow E'en is called oidhche na h-aimléise, "The night of mischief or con". It
was a custom which survives still in places -- for the "boys" to assemble in
gangs, and, headed by a few horn-blowers who were always selected for their
strength of lungs, to visit all the farmers' houses in the district and levy a
sort of blackmail, good humouredly asked for, and as cheerfully given. They
afterward met at some point of rendezvous, and in merry revelry celebrated the
festival of Samhain in their own way. When the distant winding of the horns was
heard, the bean a' tigh [woman of the house] got prepared for their reception,
and also for the money or builín (white bread) to be handed to them through the
half-opened door. There was always a race amongst them to get possession of the
latch. Whoever heard the wild scurry of their rush through a farm-yard to the
kitchen-door -- will not question the propriety of the word aimiléis [mischief]
applied to their proceedings. The leader of the band chaunted a sort of
recitative in Gaelic, intoning it with a strong nasal twang to conceal his
identity, in which the good-wife was called upon to do honour to Samhain..."
According to Tad Tuleja's essay, "Trick or Treat: Pre-Texts and Contexts," in
Santino's previously mentioned anthology,Halloween's modern trick or treating
(primarily children going door-to-door, begging for candy) began fairly recently
in the US, as a blend of several ancient and modern influences. In 19th Century
America, rural immigrants from Ireland and Scotland kept gender-specific
Halloween customs from their homelands: girls stayed indoors and did divination
games, while the boys roamed outdoors engaging in almost equally ritualized
pranks, which their elders "blamed" on the spirits being abroad that night. Its
entry into urban world can probably traced back in mid-19th Century New York,
where children called "ragamuffins" would dress in costumes and beg for pennies
from adults on Thanksgiving Day. Things got nastier with increased urbanization
and poverty in the 1930's. Adults began casting about for ways to control the
previously harmless but now increasingly expensive and dangerous vandalism of
the "boys." Towns and cities began organizing "safe" Halloween events and
householders began giving out bribes to the neighborhood kids as a way to
distract them away from their previous anarchy. The ragamuffins disappeared or
switched their date to Halloween.
The term "trick or treat," finally appears in print around 1939! Pranks
became even nastier in the 1980's, with widespread poverty existing side-by-side
with obscene greed. Unfortunately, even bored kids in a violence saturated
culture slip all too easily from harmless "decoration" of their neighbors'
houses with shaving cream and toilet paper to serious vandalism and assaults.
Blaming either Neopagans or Halloween for this is rather like blaming patriots
or the Fourth of July for the many firecracker injuries that happen every year
(and which are also combatted by publicly sponsored events). Given this
hazardous backdrop town councils, school boards and parents in the 1930's
invented this custom as it is being celebrated today to keep their kids out of
trouble.
As far as the custom across the Atlantic goes, by the mid- 20th century in
Ireland and Britain, the smaller children would dress up and parade to the
neighbors' houses, do little performances, then ask for a reward. American kids
seem to remember this with their chants of "Jingle bells, Batman smells, Robin
laid an egg," and other classic tunes done for no reason other than because
"it's traditional."
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