Jews do not celebrate death, but why do some celebrate Halloween?

October 31, 2023 ,
Image created by: www.creabranding.es

By José I. Rodríguez

In the present days and in the days to come we will continue to mourn the massacre of October 7 that will remain in the history of the people of Israel as an unthinkable pogrom in these apparently modern times. The massacre perpetrated by Hamas jihadists, obscenely celebrated throughout the Muslim world, has produced an indescribable social change. Some have defined it as that which was yesterday and that will never be the same or similar again.

The danger that pagan festivals represent is that they are essentially anti-Jewish, although the most dangerous and worrying thing is that we are not aware of the assimilation to which they lead to societies contaminated by their uses and customs. In these ominous, dark and dangerous days, some who define themselves as Jews or Christians immerse themselves in the depths of evil and celebrate the festival of the exaltation of death known as Halloween. Today we will insist on the naivety of the families who let their children or grandchildren celebrate tonight in a playful way what is a party that assimilates them with evil.

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The Peace Festival in which hundreds of young people were murdered was a tragedy that we will never forget. Who would think that by celebrating life what happened could happen? The reflection that moves us is that if by celebrating life we ​​suffer the greatest attack in the modern history of Israel, what could happen if our children were celebrating the festival of the exaltation of death that Halloween represents? What we try to see is that we will always be in danger, but more obviously when we get into the den of the lone wolf.

The jihadist wolf packs attacked the Dagestan airport a few hours ago, which some media have described as frantic mobs trying to hunt blood-curdling Jews. The reasoning is none other than being aware of how dangerous it is to mix in any way with those who worship death and live to die killing Jews and Christians.

The uncontrolled rise of anti-Semitism around the world should lead us to a deep reflection that would lead us to be cautious about where we walk, who we interact with and the lifestyle we claim to have. We have the sacred responsibility of transmitting the faith inherited from our grandparents and parents to each generation. Tears should also run down our cheeks when we see that young people from families with Jewish culture, also Christians, run to celebrate a party on Halloween night with the approval of parents who unfortunately have not instructed them to differentiate light from darkness. darkness.

The Halloween party is celebrated under the euphemism of being a playful celebration that tries to hide the occult and bloody undertone of the exaltation of death. The assimilation to which we are subjected worldwide could be weakening our faith in the Creator and bringing us closer every day to esoteric practices that have also been introduced in a society that seeks instant satisfaction and dispenses with the spiritual part without which we descend to level of mere creatures without awareness of what is right or wrong. Jews do not celebrate death, we celebrate life, which is incompatible with the violent and cruel practices of Halloween. We are not for parties and even less for those that exalt death. The celebration we hope for is to see free those who are kidnapped by Hamas, who are the most accurate expression of cruel worshipers of death. No, Jews do not celebrate death. We Jews celebrate life, even with tears in our eyes. Let it be known.

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12 thoughts on “We Jews don't celebrate death, but why do some celebrate Halloween?”
    1. I think he did not understand the text... however, Halloween is a pagan holiday that exalts the dark spiritual side and the curses (tricks) that the druids did to those who did not do what they asked... those "tricks" included violent acts, although sometimes smaller scale, like those done by the Palestinians.

    1. Hercules was also the son of a supposed D. This idea is totally pagan, typical of the Greeks and Romans. The messiah of Israel is neither son nor D, nor anything like that. Mashiach (in Hebrew means the envoy) is an envoy of D With whose arrival there will be no more wars and there will be justice and life and a world full of the knowledge of D. and evidently none of that has brought, much less the Roman Christ.

      1. No, messiah = mashiach means ANOINTED, because the kings of Israel anointed themselves with oil before entering office.
        Incidentally, King Charles III of England also anointed himself behind a screen this year on the day he was crowned with lots of pomp and circumstance. It would have been to continue the custom and give more "legitimacy" to his reign, I suppose.

        1. On the one hand, I think you are wrong because anointed is called mashuaj משוח.
          On the other hand, it is evident that no matter how you say it, the important thing about what I have written is that Christianity is a Roman invention, which relied on the prophecy of the Mashiach to build a powerful religion that could serve and did serve to strengthen the empire and which had as its immediate consequence the ruin of our people on our Earth. We did not have enough and 3 centuries later, with a similar argument, another ruin arose with the arrival of Islam, from whose arrival we could not raise our heads until the arrival of the liberal revolutions.
          A regrettable story of suffering, persecution and massacre.
          Israel Lives

          1. The root is mem-shin-jet, the conjugation was not standardized two thousand years ago, even the mishna does not have a standardized conjugation, the standards were adopted in much more recent times.
            At first in the Christian religion the rituals did not differ much from those of the Jewish religion, both were hidden in the catacombs of Rome because they were prohibited, after Constantine they made it the official religion. In any case, it should be noted that at least 11 of the 12 apostles were Jews, and the gospels are not understood without our Torah. Anyway, as time went by they added pagan elements, but the roots are Jewish and that is how they are understood today.

            1. Today's Christianity, with a Church that has evolved with the loss of its power, tries to remove all anti-Semitic connotations, especially since Pope John XXIII. Currently, the coexistence between Judaism and Christianity is normal. Let us hope that, in a short time, this will also be the case with the Muslim religion. This would be a very good sign, for similar reasons.

  1. The day of the dead is not a party or celebration, it is a day of remembrance for the dead who left us, families go to cemeteries to bring flowers to their deceased relatives, at least in my land of Catalonia.

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