What is a fact is that April fooling became customary in France after the adoptions of the reformed calendar by Charles IX in 1564 which made their calendar start on January 1. Before then, April 1 was the New Year and people customarily exchanged gifts. And so pranksters started sending mock gifts during April 1, or the old New Year. In France, a person fooled on April 1st is called poisson d avril, or April fish. There are two explanations for the term. One says that it is because the sun is leaving the zodiacal sign of Pisces; the other, that fish is easily caught in April.
In the Philippines, April Fools has not really caught on. This is because we already had an All Fools Day, which is the Feast of the Holy Innocents. That is when people play practical jokes on gullible victims.
Americas great contribution to our holiday customs is still Santa Claus and Valentines Day. Santa Claus has literally displaced the Infant Jesus as the central figure of the Christmas day celebration. Children look forward to getting gifts from Santa Claus during Christmas. Before the American period, gifts were given and exchanged during the Epiphany, more popularly known as the Feast of the Three Kings. Now, the epiphany is a movable feast made to coincide with the first Sunday of January that does not fall on a New Year and the Three Kings are no longer officially recognized by the Church. Valentines Day is still only celebrated by the so-called elite, but it has been gaining ground because restaurants have been using it to boost their clientele on that particular day.
Last year, a prankster sent text messages that Pope John Paul II had died. This year by sheer coincidence, Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin is in the hospital, but thank God, he is alive and well. There was also a year when rumors of a weekend coup against then-President Joseph Estrada was the biggest April Fools Day joke.
In our opinion, the best way to make April Fools Day a meaningful celebration is to make it either the official national election day or the day when the annual session of both houses of Congress starts. That would give every person a cause of celebrate.