Of Ghosts and More: A Random Walk on Halloween

It is Halloween today—a holiday that in the past decade or so has gained great popularity in India too.  The name ‘Halloween’ is linked to the Christian festival of ‘All Hallows’ or ‘All saints’ which falls on November 1. It was originally a day on which the church commemorated the lives of saints and martyrs. As time went along, it added on other connotations, such as praying for souls that were believed to be not yet in heaven or making offerings to the dead.

But what is the origin of Halloween as we celebrate it today? Well, it stems from an old belief that the spirits of the dead would roam the earth until All Saints Day, and that on Halloween they would take their last chance to have revenge on people they had a grouse against. That’s the reason why people dress up—in order to disguise themselves so the spirits would not recognise them!

Halloween

Of course, now in this as in many other festivals, it is commercial interests which drive the occasion, with costumes, masks, spooky decorations etc. becoming the theme for retail stores and festival sales.

Down history, the belief in ghosts and spirits has pervaded every culture—probably in an attempt to explain death, as well as phenomena which were not easily explainable by science. Witches, ghouls and other scary creatures exist in every country but they take different locale-specific manifestations.

In an interesting attempt to map the geography of these creatures, TheToyZone has developed what it calls a Boogeyman map. They see bogeymen as ’ frightening figures found all over the world, where they’re available to enforce discipline at a moment’s notice’—in other words, mainly a means of scaring small children into behaving themselves. The whimsically illustrated map shows over a hundred such fearsome creatures, with bat wings, reptilian bodies,  ghostly tattered robes, fire-breathing creatures and googly red eyes dominating.

As it is an attempt to cover the whole world, one can forgive the map for showing only one such creature from India—the bhoot. But the richness of the Indian ‘horror’ imagination can be estimated from ‘Assamese Demonology’ a 1905 book by scholar and researcher Benudhar. This classifies ghosts, demons and spirits of Assam into several categories., and the list includes ‘aquatic spirits like baank, dote, jakh, datial, jankakharia, jal-sai, jal-narayan and jal-konwar; sylvan spirits like chamon, burha-dangoriya, alakhani, pixach, daini, peret, bhoot, khetor, markuchia, prasuta, kandh, bira, parooa, khabish and thalgiri; celestial spirits like jam, bih-karam, kalika, deo, lakhimi, apeswari and bijuli; and subterranean spirits like gooloi’. And this is just one state!

Ghosts and spirits obviously don’t exist. Then why do so many people believe they have seen them? Science offers several explanations including sleep paralysis, hallucinations, pareidolia or inattentional blindness. 

Sleep paralysis is “like dreaming with your eyes open. Baland Jalal, nueroscientist explains it thus: ‘Our most vivid, lifelike dreams happen during a certain stage of sleep. It’s called rapid eye movement, or REM, sleep. In this stage, your eyes dart around under their closed lids. Though your eyes move, the rest of your body can’t. It’s paralyzed. Your brain usually turns this paralysis off before you wake up. But in sleep paralysis, you wake up while it’s still happening.’

Hallucinations: A hallucination is a false perception of objects or events involving the senses: sight, sound, smell, touch and taste. Hallucinations seem real, but they’re not. 

Pareidolia: This is a brain phenomenon in which a person sees or hears something significant in a random image or pattern. Pareidolia is what causes peoples to see faces in inanimate objects, i.e., faces in clouds, or the form of Gods on a tree bark etc. 

Inattentional blindness: This is the failure to notice unexpected objects or events when attention is focused elsewhere. 

But it is always a battle between the rational and the irrational, and belief in spirits and the like is not likely to go away in a hurry.

So we might as well let our children enjoy scaring themselves and over-dosing on sugar!

Happy Halloween.

–Meena