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Halloween: Haunted ships in Newfoundland waters
It was the Irish pagan festival of Samhain, a night when the dead and the living edged near one another, whence came Halloween. On the night of Nov. 1, and with the dying crops, souls returned to walk the earth. Spooked pagans bolted their doors and extinguished the cooking fires that attracted witches. A rap on the door came from villagers dressed as dead relatives: "Trick or treat?" Best give the souls a treat lest they do something rotten. Canadians have kept the ancient belief in souls haunting the living alive, telling frightening ghost tales for the past 50 years, and not just on Halloween.
Program: This Country in the Morning
Broadcast Date: Sept. 2, 1972
Guest(s): Margaret Marinoff
Host: Danny Finkleman
Duration: 4:46
Last updated: May 14, 2012
Page consulted on March 25, 2013
All Clips from this Topic
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Margaret Marinoff tells her father's Placentia Bay ghost stories.
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A tour of the city's ghostly haunts.
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Commercialized Halloween began in 1980s.
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It was the Irish pagan festival of Samhain, a night when the dead and ...
