Halloween
may be over but our school hasn´t missed our appointment with the scary
festivity this month. Like in previous years our IES has organized a ghostly
pumpkin contest which again has been a real success thanks to the collaboration
of all the students from 1st and 2nd year ESO. Your
imagination and carving skills are more and more original and every year it
takes teachers a lot of effort to decide the winner pumpkins. Thanks to you all
folks. The Bilingual Department also collaborated with this celebration
organizing activities Halloween-related. Do you want to see pictures of it all?
Click here and watch out……..
HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!!
Like many other holidays, Halloween has evolved and changed throughout
history. Over 2,000 years ago people called the Celts lived in what is now
Ireland, the UK, and parts of Northern France. November 1 was their New Year's
Day. They believed that the night before the New Year (October 31) was a time
when the living and the dead came together.
More than a thousand years ago the Christian church named November 1 All
Saints Day (also called All Hallows.) This was a special
holy day to honor the saints and other people who died for their religion. The
night before All Hallows was called Hallows Eve.
Later the name was changed to Halloween.
Like the Celts, the Europeans of that time also believed that the spirits
of the dead would visit the earth on Halloween. They worried that evil spirits
would cause problems or hurt them. So on that night people wore costumes that
looked like ghosts or other evil creatures. They thought if they dressed like
that, the spirits would think they were also dead and not harm them.
The tradition of Halloween was carried to America by the immigrating
Europeans. Some of the traditions changed a little, though. For example, on
Halloween in Europe some people would carry lanterns made from turnips. In
America, pumpkins were more common. So people began putting candles inside them
and using them as lanterns. That is why you see Jack 'o lanterns today.
These days Halloween is not usually considered a religious holiday. It is
primarily a fun day for children. Children dress up in costumes like people did
a thousand years ago. But instead of worrying about evil spirits, they go from
house to house. They knock on doors and say "trick or treat." The
owner of each house gives candy or something special to each trick or treater.
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