Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Monday, October 31, 2005
Schools Increasingly Avoid Traditional Halloween Rites
Increasingly, public schools are eliminating traditional Halloween celebrations, according to today's Christian Science Monitor. Some Christians object to the celebration's pagan and satanic connections. Some Muslim parents have similar feelings. Church-state separationists object to the holiday's religious roots. Halloween dates back 2,000 years to Celtic traditions. The observance was appropriated in the 600's by the Roman Catholic Church as All Saints Day. Halloween came to America with the Irish, whose traditional harvest rituals involved dressing up and chasing restless "spirits" away as winter's dark nights approached. Replacing traditional school celebrations in some places are the type of activities held in Raleigh, NC's Washington Elementary School. Pumpkins are decorated and teachers dress up, but costumes are allowed only as part of a curriculum-driven literary parade. Teachers avoid using the word Halloween. The principal though wore a shirt with the word "boo!" on it.