
On October 31, the Europa-Park Rust in Germany welcomes fearless visitors to its annual “Horror Night”. The event has been honored repeatedly as the Best Scare Event worldwide – Image: DW/Europa-Park
The streets come alive on the evening of October 31 for All Hallows’ Eve, more commonly known as Halloween. Dressed in spooky or comical costumes, kids across the globe walk up and down the streets, ringing doorbells and saying the magic words: “trick or treat.”
For those too old to go door-to-door collecting candy, Halloween parties are the order of the day.
Europeans tend to think that Halloween, which was shaped into its current form in the US, is a purely commercial holiday.
Valentine’s Day, for example, was popularized mainly by the Hallmark card company and inspires spending on flowers, jewelry and other gifts bought for loved ones on February 14.

Dressing up for Halloween is popular also in New Zealand: The “Living Dead” even work in a supermarket’s butchery… Image: NAN
Meanwhile, the Halloween industry never seems to stop churning out plastic pumpkins and packaged costumes that are sold throughout the world.
A custom, not an event
But behind the commercialism lies an actual custom that goes back centuries — although it does not originate in Celtic nations, as some might think.
Celtic pagans celebrated Samhain, a Thanksgiving-like festival to mark the beginning of winter, which starts the evening of October 31.
Meanwhile, the church, which dominated European culture in medieval times, celebrated All Saints’ Day on November 1.
Halloween is derived from “All Hallows Eve” — the evening before All Saints’ Day when the dead are commemorated and prayers are said for them.
According to Christian views, they were waiting for the Last Judgement. In early Christianity, people believed this day would come soon — but it didn’t.
“Then people began to ask themselves, ‘What about the souls, what are they doing?'” said Dagmar Hänel, a Bonn-based cultural anthropologist.
Out of this, purgatory was born — a stopover between death and eternity where people begin to work off their sins and cleanse themselves. And there was a connection between the living and the souls in the hereafter.

The dead are commemorated on All Saints’ Day – Image: GEORG HOCHMUTH/APA/picturedesk.com/picture alliance
“It is a belief found in all religions: We can influence the afterworld and vice-versa, so we pray the rosary, do good deeds and give alms — apparently that was believed to have a direct effect on the poor souls in purgatory,” Hänel told DW.
In the Middle Ages, on the eve of All Saints’, people went from door to door to ask for alms for the poor.
In some rural regions in Germany, the custom is still practiced — bachelors go from village to village, praying, singing, blessing people and soliciting money.
In the US, soliciting has become child’s play known as “trick-or-treating.”
A custom disappears from Europe
As the influence of the Enlightenment on religion grew in the 18th and 19th centuries, the church became increasingly skeptical of old customs and even banned them, Hänel said.
In the course of industrialization, denser social networks developed, so people did not need to collect as much for the poor, he added.
When German statesman Otto von Bismarck’s social legislation was implemented in the country in the 19th century, that need for alms disappeared.
The state became responsible for providing for the poor, whichh may be why the custom died out.
Halloween’s ‘transatlantic return’
But the custom was not quite dead everywhere.
Irish immigrants took Halloween to the US in the 19th century. It was therefore mainly celebrated in neighborhoods in large US cities where Irish immigrants lived, according to Lars Winterberg, an anthropologist at the University of Bonn.
“Integration rarely served as a one-way street,” Winterberg told DW. “In fact, the immigrant culture always merges with that of the host society.”
That’s how the Halloween tradition spread across the US. First, it was more or less a holiday for kids, and later, the adults took part with costume parties and decorations.
During World War II and after, the celebration returned to Europe when, for example, US soldiers stationed in Germany celebrated Halloween.
However, it didn’t exactly catch on with Germans at the time. The celebration became more interesting when it spilled over into European culture through films and TV series.
John Carpenter’s 1978 horror movie “Halloween” definitely stirred up enthusiasm for the celebration. It blended a mix of Halloweenish elements, from zombies, demons and witches to vampires, ghosts and children’s games.
Ironically, Halloween is now celebrated the American way, even in Ireland. (DW/NAN – 31-10-24)