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Euroweenies skared of Halloween....

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
Wusses!



Some Europeans Aren't Fans of Halloween
WILLIAM J. KOLE, Associated Press Writer

VIENNA, Austria - It's almost Halloween — and all those ghosts, goblins, tricks and treats are giving Hans Kohler the creeps.

So the mayor of Rankweil, a town near the border with Switzerland, has launched a one-man campaign disparaging Halloween as a "bad American habit" and urging families to skip it this year.

"It's an American custom that's got nothing to do with our culture," Kohler wrote in letters sent out to households. By midweek, the mayors of eight neighboring villages had thrown their support behind the boycott. So had local police, annoyed with the annual Oct. 31 uptick in vandalism and mischief.

Although Halloween has become increasingly popular across Europe — complete with carved pumpkins, witches on broomsticks, makeshift houses of horror and costumed children rushing door to door for candy — it's begun to breed a backlash.

Critics see it as the epitome of crass, U.S.-style commercialism. Clerics and conservatives contend it clashes with the spirit of traditional Nov. 1 All Saints' Day remembrances.

And it's got purists in countries struggling to retain a sense of uniqueness in Europe's ever-enlarging melting pot grimacing like Jack o' Lanterns.

Halloween "undermines our cultural identity," complained the Rev. Giordano Frosini, a Roman Catholic theologian who serves as vicar-general in the Diocese of Pistoia near Florence, Italy.

Frosini denounced the holiday as a "manifestation of neo-paganism" and an expression of American cultural supremacy. "Pumpkins show their emptiness," he said.

To be sure, Halloween is big business in Europe.

Germans alone spend nearly $170 million, on Halloween costumes, sweets, decorations and parties. The holiday has become increasingly popular in Romania, home to the Dracula myth, where discotheques throw parties with bat and vampire themes.

In Britain, where Halloween celebrations rival those in the United States, it's the most lucrative day of the year for costume and party retailers.

"Without Halloween, I don't think we could exist, to be honest," said Pendra Maisuria, owner of Escapade, a London costume shop that rakes in 30 percent of its annual sales in the run-up to Oct. 31. Metropolitan Police, meanwhile, haven't logged any significant increase in crime.

But not everyone takes such a carefree approach toward the surge in trick-or-treating — "giving something sweet or getting something sour," as it's called in German.

In Austria, where many families get a government child allowance, "parents who abuse it to buy Halloween plunder for their kids should be forced to pay back the aid," grumbled Othmar Berbig, an Austrian who backs the small but strident boycott movement.

In Sweden, even as Halloween's popularity has increased, so have views of the holiday as an "unnecessary, bad American custom," said Bodil Nildin-Wall, an expert at the Language and Folklore Institute in Uppsala.

Italy's Papaboys, a group of pope devotees who include some of the young Catholics who cheer wildly at Vatican events, have urged Christians not to take part in what they consider "a party in honor of Satan and hell," and plan to stage prayer vigils nationwide that night.

Don't take it all so seriously, counters Gerald Faschingeder, who heads a Roman Catholic youth alliance in Austria. He sees nothing particularly evil about glow-in-the-dark skeletons, plastic fangs, fake blood, rubber tarantulas or latex scars.

"It's a chance for girls and boys to disguise themselves and have some fun away from loud and demanding adults," Faschingeder said. "For one evening, at least, kids can feel more powerful than grown-ups."
 

steve45

Monkey
Sep 30, 2003
483
1
Dundee, Scotland
its almost non existant here, you'd be lucky to see anyone in costume let alone have as you guys call "trick or treaters" up at the door.

i remember doing it once or wice as a kid, but its just not a big deal here.
 

SkaredShtles

Michael Bolton
Sep 21, 2003
67,771
14,132
In a van.... down by the river
steve45 said:
its almost non existant here, you'd be lucky to see anyone in costume let alone have as you guys call "trick or treaters" up at the door.

i remember doing it once or wice as a kid, but its just not a big deal here.
You Scots are too drunk all the time to be doing that $hite. :D
 

MudGrrl

AAAAH! Monkeys stole my math!
Mar 4, 2004
3,123
0
Boston....outside of it....
I lived in Germany for four years.

The Germans would come on base and go Trick-Or-Treating, and it was a lot of fun to see them.
Every year, there is a halloween ball held at a castle complete with DJs...

At about this time of year, I would gather a car full of friends and go 'castle hopping' at night. We would drive to castle ruins and explore them in the dark, then get back in the car and drive to the next one.. It was lots of fun.
We went to Frankenstein Castle, which was really freaky at night because you had to pass a cemetary that had all sorts of little red candles...




And... I went TDY in Romania and visited Vlad's Castle (complete with 'recently' discovered secret passage...). It was not that creepy looking, actually pretty cozy and cute believe it or not. What was creepy was looking out from the castle and into the next village. There was a fairly large hill sloping down from the castle, and that's where the impalements were.




There's plenty of Halloween to go around Europe.