EDITORIAL – Let’s forget Black and Orange Day and keep Halloween
An ArmchairMayor editorial by Mel Rothenburger.
IT’S BEEN a long time since anybody celebrated Halloween for any reason other than it’s fun. Fun to dress up in costumes, fun to set off fireworks, fun to carve pumpkins and decorate the front porch, and fun for the little nippers who come to your door begging for treats.
Every year, some party pooper will resurrect the story of the real meaning of Halloween, pointing out its 2,000-year history and origins in a Celtic festival centered on life and death and All Saints Day and all that, and lecturing us on spelling it “Hallowe’en.”
In recent years, a bit of spiritual and cultural correctness has crept in to spoil the Halloween fun, much like a rotting pumpkin after a hard frost. It isn’t appropriate, they say, to celebrate a day that has no special meaning to so many of our new citizens, and may even be religiously offensive to some. Even the Vatican has waded into the debate.
Many schools across the country have banned Hallowe’en and replaced it with “Black and Orange” day, or “Black and Orange Spirit Day,” or “Orange and Black Day.” Kids can dress up in black and orange, as long as they don’t wear costumes. It’s “more inclusive” that way, explain the school brass.
(Kamloops is not exempt. One school, for example, has a “Hallowe’en dance” but lists Halloween as “Black and Orange Day” on its calendar.)
This, of course, has elicited much predictable outrage from those who like to rant about political correctness.
To be sure, Halloween is not without its problems. Some misfits use it as an opportunity to commit vandalism or worse, spiking candy treats with harmful stuff. Fortunately, such incidents have become more rare.
Another excuse for banning Halloween is that poorer families might not be able to afford costumes, but any old thing made out of a discarded bedsheet or a cardboard box will do. And who hasn’t had kids come to the door with nothing more than some lipstick and mascara passing for Hallowe’en dressup?
And then there are the bullies who like wearing scary clown costumes just to frighten children (Trump costumes are even scarier), but that’s a fad that will pass.
We should certainly be sensitive to the cultural and religious traditions of others, but nobody celebrates Halloween in this country for its pagan roots.
Like Christmas, it’s just a time to enjoy. Which we can do by putting reflective vests over the kids’ costumes in the evening, checking over the candy carefully, being careful with the fireworks, and keeping pets inside.
mrothenburger@armchairmayor.ca
thank you mel for awell thought out and well put together editorial!
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Diwali, the Festival of Lights is something worth of celebratory editorial. It is time to do away with the silliness and absurdity of Halloween.
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Regarding the schools going to Orange and Black day- Mr Rothenburger is misinformed. At our school the decision was based on what was best for the children’s learning.
Having children dress up in costumes for part or all of the day can create a lot of hype, attempts at teaching any real content must be repeated on a more productive day (not usually the day after when many are tired or don’t arrive) costumes get ripped or having hem takes time from class time with teachers helping put them on, fixing them, consoling those whose outfits broke and dealing with emotions from the hectic feel of the day.
Why do we expect our schools to take this day to celebrate when the idea for children is to go spend time with moms and dads AFTER, at night.
Our school had a dance with costumes, why bring them again only for the day to be disrupted? Some students just need a calm, consistent environment in order to learn. Some things should be left for home.
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