Yes. If your a mom or a dad, you don't have to celebrate Halloween, but you have to let your kids celebrate themselves. You have to let them make their own desicions.
Yes. There are similar holidays to Halloween (like the Day of the Dead in Mexico, for example) in many nations, but many of them (including China and many parts of Mexico) have adopted it as their own holiday.
Halloween is celebrated by most of the Western world, as well as much of Europe. However, Middle Eastern and Asian cultures don't celebrate Halloween, but have their own (somewhat similar) festivities around the same time. For example, China celebrates Yue Lan, or the Festival of the Hungry Ghosts, where they give gifts of food and money to the spirits of departed relatives so they will be at rest.
Currently they celebrate their own religious holidays many in the form of dances feasts or special events, some also recognize catholic holidays and others such as Halloween and Thanks Giving Day.
No, Pagans do not proselytize. We believe in free will, and letting people decide on their own on what they want to do/believe spiritually.
The Spanish and Mexican and other similar cultures celebrate their own holiday, known as "Dios de Los Muertos" or "Day of the Dead". It is similar to Halloween in the sense that it involves ides of ghosts and spirits and treats and costumes, but it is more of a holiday to honor those who have passed on and celebrate the idea of a happy afterlife.
Yes. Sadly many people do not know any history, so they make up their own or believe what their religion tells them.
They used their own language and it is still the same with the universal church.They are the same liturgy.
The Japanese do not celebrate 'our' Halloween. The have their own called o-ban. If you want to write it you would use katakana (they use this writing system for foriern words) and it would be this: ハロウィーン. If you want to say Halloween in Japanese (Nihongo), you'd just have to adapt to their sounds. So you would say : HaROwiin (wiin as in lean sound wise).
Individual schools set their own days if they have Halloween parties for students; however, since Halloween is not a national holiday in the U.S., schools do not get out for Halloween.
Celebrate what?
I-Party or make your own