Trick-or-treat!
Many different cultures have had traditions about the dead. People in
places like Ireland, China, Egypt and Mexico believed that souls
needed food. They thought the food nourished them on their journey
from cemeteries to heaven. People had to put out good things for souls
to eat. However, if the food rotted or spoiled, the soul got mad. The
wicked soul might curse the family and make them starve during the
winter.
ln other places, people begged for food on a holiday that remembers
the souls of dead saints. People wore disguises with hoods that
covered their faces. If they did not get food, they played a trick on the
home. For this reason, the activity is known as "trick-or treating."
Shortly after people first began trick-or-treating, parents started sending
their children to beg on that day. Housewives gave the children food if
they performed a sang or a dance. When people moved to America
from all over the world, they brought this tradition with them. Inhabitants
of villages started trick-or-treating in the early 1900s. ln 1939 a
children's publication acquainted the whole country with the tradition. It
became very popular.
Today, trick-or-treaters are not begging for food, and they are not
scared of souls. They just enjoy the thrill of dressing up like creatures
and getting candy. Ghosts and skeletons are favorite costumes. But
some children wear fancy disguises, like pirates. They carry flashlights
instead of fires. ln some places, children still perform songs or riddles
to get candy. But most of the time, they just say "Trick-or-Treat!"