About Me

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Troy Nahumko is an award-winning author based in Caceres, Spain. His recent work focuses on travels around the Mediterranean, from Tangier to Istanbul. As a writer and photographer he has contributed to newspapers and media such as Lonely Planet, The Globe and Mail, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Toronto Star, Couterpunch,The Irish World, The Straits Times, The Calgary Herald, Khaleej Times, DW-World, Rabble and El Pais. He also writes a bi-weekly op-ed column 'Camino a Ítaca' for the Spanish newspaper HOY. His book, Stories Left in Stone, Trails and Traces in Cáceres, Spain is published by the University of Alberta Press. As an ESL materials writer he has worked with publishers such as Macmillan and CUP.

Saturday, November 6, 2021

Live and Let Live (a Halloween Tale)



It's the Halloween special here on the Camino a Ítaca. My latest looks at the false rage at a harmless 'tradition'. Click over to read the original in Spanish or have a look at the English version below. (PDF en castellano abajo).

Sacrilege comes in many forms, though I’m not sure that putting pineapple on pizza can be categorized as such. True, it may not be your favorite type of pizza, it may even make your stomach turn somewhat, but is it really worth losing sleep over?

In today’s social media world, where people relate with each other in their echoing online bubbles, the smallest things get blown up way beyond their origins. The easily offended suddenly proclaim themselves victims and words lose their meanings overnight.

The quickly triggered choose the strangest things to get upset about. For some, and here I’m not including Neapolitans, putting pineapple on pizza is the moral equivalent of poisoning an entire city’s water system. The sin of admitting that the Vikings had reached North America half a century before Columbus is akin for some here in Spain to setting the Spanish flag on fire. Not to mention the sight of two persons of the same sex touching lips, or acknowledge the mere fact that some might desire to, become harbingers of the coming of the apocalypse for some. These subjects can provoke without warning, either by flaring up suddenly or forming part of the cyclical moaning calendar we all suffer (next comes the so-called 'War on Xmas').

One of the most perplexing of these comes up every year around about this time; Halloween or as I have seen it delightfully spelt phonetically here in Spain, Jalogüín. A day on the calendar that sparks anger in certain circles. What’s even more curious about all of the false rage that surrounds All Saints Eve is that it drives the quickly offended on both extremes of the political spectrum equally mad.

The standard bearers of the progressive leftist moral compass vigorously protest that this age-old Celtic tradition is actually an imperialist American imposition led by the CIA, specifically designed to wipe out Sephardic buñelos and the roasting of chestnuts. It is true that most of this hashtag activism takes place on their iPhones over Twitter, Facebook or Google before having a hamburger while watching their favorite American series on Amazon Prime or Netflix and then falling asleep to their favorite British rock band. I’m sure that deep down they mean what they say.

Those on the right deeply fret over the unreligious symbolism of some of the costumes depicting heaven and hell and more importantly, yet at the same time somewhat ironically, fervently maintain that the dead cannot come back to life. It’s true, a quick look at the most popular Halloween costumes of the past few years lists witches as the most popular costume but these are closely followed by morally tainting dinosaurs, fairies, cowboys and clowns, not to mention those morally reprehensible bunny rabbits. It makes you wonder if the inhabitants of the peninsula complained with the same vigour when the church coopted Saturnalia.

Both sides seem to forget that culture and cultures are not permanent, fixed states. People learn from one another. Ideas travel. Jazz may have been born in America, but it would be absurd to say it can’t be played elsewhere by non-Americans.

But really, if someone has a serious problem with kids dressing up in costumes and eating candy on a special day of the year, there truly are monsters to worry about.

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