Halloween Celebration is one of the most superstitious and at the same time the most traditional ritual in the United States and some other Western countries, which is held on October 31st (November 1st) on November 9th.
 
The origins of this celebration are back to the ancient Samhain orbits. The people of Celt, who lived about 2,000 years ago in parts of Europe (now known as Ireland, England, and France), celebrated the start of their new year at the same time as harvesting crops on November 1, for which they symbolized the end The summer and the beginning of the dark and cold season.
Since the cold season, the deaths of human beings at that time increased, people believed at that time that by burning the fire and wearing strange clothes from the skin of animals and the use of scary smileys or placing the cut off heads of animals on their heads They can wander away their spirits or at least prevent them from being identified. At that time, this notion was more rooted in their fear of darkness.
They also drank food and food at their door to prevent them from coming home, and on various routes they could illuminate candles or large burners so that spirits could find their way back to another world!
This traditional tradition continued for centuries until Pope Gregory III officially named Nov. 1 in the eighteenth century, adding a condiment to it, the day "commemorating saints and dead in the path of God." Of course, with the passage of time, traditional Halloween celebrations went out of religious rituals and embarked on fun activities such as scaring each other and carrying out children's favorite activities, along with Irish and Scottish immigrants to the American community.
Halloween celebrations are now becoming more of an opportunity to entertain, and telling stories about wandering ghosts is not much in it, but wearing strange dresses and scary smileurs has kept its place in the ceremony.
One of the symbols of this celebration, which has been left intact after centuries, is the use of pumpkins. Many families, as part of the ceremony, empty the pumpkin and give it eyes and eyebrows and mouths and give it a scary look by lighting the candle inside it.
Halloween celebrations after Christmas are the second major celebration of the West, and especially the Americans, so they spend more than $ 6 billion each year on celebrations.