I spoke to my friend Sam Hain this evening. He had a nice laugh. Apparently those celebrations of a celtic nature have been declared dead.
"Its dangerous to make those blanket statements" he told me with his dry raspy chuckle. Neitche, the old boy, said the same of God. 'God is dead' he proclaimed.
Of course a short time later God made his own proclamation. "Nietzche is dead". God really didn't have to say anything, his actions spoke clearly to the rest of us, the message was unmistakable.
So I asked Sam "What exactly are you talking about?"
He looked at me funny, and stated with a twinkle (that frankly was a bit scary) "France has declared Halloween dead.
French press declares Halloween dead
PARIS (Reuters) - Halloween, ancient Celtic festival or U.S. marketing gimmick according to your point of view, is dying in France after a short-lived breakthrough, French media reported on Tuesday.
"Halloween pretty much buried," the daily le Monde reported, quoting Benoit Pousset, head of costume company Cesar, who attributed the festival's demise in France to "a cultural reaction linked to the rise of anti-Americanism."
"Our Halloween sales have been falling by half every year since 2002," Franck Mathais of toys retailer La Grande Recre told the newspaper.
A group called "Non a Halloween" set up to fight the trend, which it saw as an unwelcome intrusion fostered by purely commercial interests, even wound itself up last year.
"There was no need for the group to exist any more," former president Arnaud Guyot-Jeannin told Reuters.
Halloween is believed to have originated as a Celtic agricultural festival before becoming associated with the night before the Christian festival of All Saints Day on November 1.
During the 20th century, it became firmly established in the United States, marked by hollowed out pumpkin heads and children dressed as ghosts demanding "Trick or Treat" from passers-by.
Introduced in France during the 1990s, it aroused strong opposition from many who found it artificial and over commercial and the festival never caught on properly. The Catholic church was particularly skeptical.
The daily Le Parisien painted a desolate picture of abandoned pumpkins and sorry displays in isolated restaurant doorways and declared "Halloween is dead."
"Halloween was a marketing gimmick aimed mainly at children. It's a big festival of consumption selling outfits, masks, gadgets and it couldn't last forever," Guyot-Jeannin said.
Leave it to the French to assume that the depth of Halloween is measured by American commercialism rather than a 3000 year old tradition that takes forms and will last longer and be deeper than mere commercialism. I think we will see the death of the French Press (which pretty much is becoming irrelevant with the internet) long before Halloween passes away.
{Inspector Clouseau accent} Swine French Press! {/Inspector Clouseau accent}
Long live the Freedom Fries!
Aaaaar! Avast thar, mateys! Thar be pillagin' a plenty... the streets shall run smelly with French perfume, wheels of brie, and a variety of fermented grape squeezin's...
We all need to take part in a collective gigantic enormous towards the French culture police... we could always boycott a holiday we celebrate that has "ostensible" french influence, but hey, I can't think of any...
'What a bunch of imbeciles! What a bunch of maroons!' -- paraphrase Buggs Bunny
__________________
It seems to me the only thing you've learned is that Caesar is a "salad dressing dude."