Halloween In Siberia - Sort Of
Live in another country and you'll start to experience serious
cultural differences. This is particularly true as I discovered
with Halloween in Siberia.
Russian Holidays
I loved living in Russia and the primary reason was people.
Russians love to celebrate and they are big into holidays. In
Chita, Siberia, practically everyday was a holiday. During
communism, Russia celebrated the worker with holidays such as
bus driver day, teacher day and so on. When the fun loving
Russians dropped communism from the menu, they decided to keep
the holidays and add new ones for the new political bent. While
Oligarchs' Day isn't yet a holiday, practically everything else
is. With the approach of Halloween, I was ready to go nuts and
show them a little of the American spirit.
At the time, I was teaching roughly 12 classes a week on law and
business at Chita State Technical University. This gave me the
opportunity to put together a wing dinger of a Halloween party
since the students would generally follow directions without
question. Accordingly, I announced to each class that we would
be building a haunted house at my place and with roughly 150
students, it was going to be the haunted house of all houses. No
student had any questions, but I should have noticed the blank
stares.
The morning after making my announcements, the Dean of the
University approached me. She had some rather pointed questions
about Halloween. Nobody had ever heard of Halloween and no,
children didn't trick or treat. After all, what kind of person
would trick a child? Americans do this? Every year? And they try
to scare the children? Why?
The more we went back and forth, the more I started to wonder
about Halloween. When I made the fatal mistake of bringing up
the headless horseman, the gig was up. The Dean gave me that
furrowed brow perfected by all administrators. There would be no
haunted house on October 31st.
After all, October 31st was the guy who makes duplicate keys
day!