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Why avoid using 'Merry Christmas'?
Christian Science Monitor ^ | 12/1/05 | Beth Waldron

Posted on 11/30/2005 2:46:46 PM PST by pissant

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – The all-inclusive "Happy Holidays" greeting has become an annual December puzzler for towns, public schools, and businesses: How do we respect the holiday traditions of one group of citizens without causing detriment to another? While Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and in some years Ramadan and Diwali, share the same season, last year's polls show around 96 percent of Americans celebrate Christmas.

For a pluralistic nation that prides itself upon embracing both freedom of expression and the separation of church and state, the widespread public celebration of Christmas poses a unique quandary. Guiding public displays of Christmas cheer are a patchwork of inconsistent, local-level policies - the perfect conditions under which litigation emerges.

Successive years of legal action by civil libertarians have effectively curtailed the public promotion of all things "Christmas," giving rise to more politically correct - and judiciously safe - "Holiday" observances. In doing so, public officials and retailers alike have nurtured a well-founded hypersensitivity to the opinions of a minority group.

But just when the scales of political correctness seem to be gaining balance, along comes a new backlash. This year, it's the majority group of Christmas adherents who are alleging a persecution of beliefs.

After nearly two decades of watching community Christmas parades slowly evolve into Holiday parades, school Christmas vacation into winter break, and town hall crèches into snowmen, Christmas observers are revolting.

Among the recent reactionary signs:

• More than 800 lawyers are enrolled for the third year of The Alliance Defense Fund's Christmas Project initiative, which supplies legal aid to towns and schools nationwide that face challenges to their traditional Christmas celebrations. Last year, the initiative successfully defended Christmas displays on public property by the town of Cranston, R.I., and the school district of Bossier Parrish, La.

• During a Nov. 9 broadcast, FOX news commentator Bill O'Reilly launched the first volley in an all-out television-based offensive against retailers which shun "Merry Christmas" for "Happy Holidays," going so far as to list specific offending merchants that should be boycotted.

• After threatening a boycott of Wal-Mart stores in early November, the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights successfully won concessions from the retail chain after an employee offered up his own explanation to a customer via e-mail for the store's policy of wishing customers "Happy Holidays" in lieu of "Merry Christmas." Wal-Mart stood by its all-inclusive "Happy Holidays" greeting, but did publicly apologize and promptly fired the offending employee.

• The Rev. Jerry Falwell and the conservative Liberty Counsel have launched a "Friend or Foe Christmas Campaign." Armed with 750 lawyers, the group promises to "reclaim Christmas" by filing suit against anyone who, in their view, limits the public celebration of Christmas. Reverend Falwell recently publically criticized the city of Boston for a reference on its website to the annual lighting of its "Holiday Tree."

• The conservative 150,000 member American Family Association has called for a boycott of Target stores for not utilizing the specific phrase "Merry Christmas" in their holiday advertising.

• A California organization called "The Committee to Save Merry Christmas" has garnered national media coverage with a grass-roots campaign to boycott Sears and Federated Department Stores Inc. for changing their advertising from "Merry Christmas" to "Season's Greetings."

The fundamental message of today's Christmas crusaders is not new; merely the societal context has changed. In the early 1950s, groups of clergy first began organizing against what they considered the disturbing commercialization and secularization of Christmas. While their efforts were largely confined to using the power of the pulpit, today's pleas are most likely to leverage the power of the judiciary and the court of public opinion.

In the end, the balance between sensitivity and celebration may always be elusive. A CNN/USA Today/Gallop poll conducted last year showed that Americans were evenly split on whether the public shift from "Christmas" to "Holidays" was a change for the better.

Such societal ambivalence exemplifies how the masquerading of traditionally held beliefs with insincere modern sensitivity ultimately serves no one well. When towns hold "Community Tree" lightings, do we all - majority and minority alike - not understand on a deeper level that it is really an old-fashioned "Christmas Tree" lighting redefined for the modern, politically correct era? Is it any big secret that the $435 billion dollar "Holiday shopping" bonanza currently under way is comprised primarily of "Christmas" gift buying? And when school children go on vacation for "winter break," do we not accept that it will always occur during Christmas week?

By softening the "Christmas" connection simply for December etiquette, we neither fully show sensitivity toward the views of the minority nor genuinely celebrate the traditions of the majority. We are left then with a sanitized holiday season, fraught with fears of politically incorrect missteps. Then, no one has a truly happy holiday of any sort.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: christmas
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To: pissant

Well, I do draw the line at "May your obsidian knife cut that victim's heart out cleanly." It's a little long for a phone greeting...


41 posted on 11/30/2005 3:11:31 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: laney

Does that mean you are married to Hank Hill?


42 posted on 11/30/2005 3:17:00 PM PST by pissant
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To: Billthedrill

Gotta be a way to shorten that and still relay the right sentiment..


43 posted on 11/30/2005 3:17:47 PM PST by pissant
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To: svcw
I wish my Jewish friends Happy Hanukkah. I wish everyone else Merry Christmas. There is no way not ever will I wish a happy kwanzaa.

I agree 100% . . . and don't get me started on Eids

44 posted on 11/30/2005 3:19:35 PM PST by WIladyconservative (Save us from future Freepathons - set up a monthly donation!)
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To: pissant

LOL...Maybe!


45 posted on 11/30/2005 3:19:47 PM PST by laney (ann-orexia wants to be me so bad!)
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To: mnehrling
We had to choose to have a Happy Holidays theme for the entire quarter in order to keep our prices competitive and hire extra people for the increased traffic.

So, one of the above posts says that 96% of Americans celebrate Christmas. Why would a retailer choose to make the remaining 4% happy by doing away with a Christmas theme and going to a Holiday theme?

Seems to me the smart retailer would pull out all of the stops to make the 96% feel really good.

46 posted on 11/30/2005 3:21:17 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (What? Me worry?)
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To: pissant

It's come to this: I now have to worry about offending someone who celebrates "Diwali," and I haven't the slightest idea what Diwali is. My solution: Merry Christmas to all (and to Diwali Good Night.)


47 posted on 11/30/2005 3:22:49 PM PST by Malesherbes
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To: pissant

Where can I get a Merry Christmas bumper sticker for my cars??

Anyone?


48 posted on 11/30/2005 3:24:49 PM PST by gathersnomoss
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To: Malesherbes
Merry Christmas to all (and to Diwali Good Night.)

LOL! The creative talent on FR gives one pause.

49 posted on 11/30/2005 3:25:40 PM PST by w_over_w (VISUALIZE using your turn signal.)
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To: pissant
I am starting a new one too. Beerfestmas. It will be 10,000 times more popular than Kwanzaa.

Considering that a sucking chest wound is approximately 33 times more popular than Kwanzaa, 10,000 times more popular is pretty conservative.

50 posted on 11/30/2005 3:27:17 PM PST by MediaMole
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To: Malesherbes

DeWally was DeBeaver's older brother.


51 posted on 11/30/2005 3:29:52 PM PST by drhogan
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To: pissant
I am starting a new one too. Beerfestmas

You could celebrate it the week after the Holiday I invented last week, "Bushwanza." It is a celebration of American Presidents named "Bush."
52 posted on 11/30/2005 3:30:13 PM PST by msnimje (Bob Woodward is the GRINCH who stole Fitzmas............Cindy Lou (sheehan) WHO?)
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To: pissant

I have no problem, as a Deist, hearing the phrase "Merry Christmas."

Make the Yuletide Gay.


53 posted on 11/30/2005 3:30:39 PM PST by Clemenza (I am here to chew bubblegum and kick ass, and I'm all out of bubblegum!)
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To: HHKrepublican_2
Kwanzaa already did that.

Ask any ignoramus that professes to celebrate Kwanzaa exactly what part of Africa corn comes from (it is central to the "celebration"). Ask them what part of Africa the NAME Kwanzaa comes from.

Ask them if they know ANYTHING about this "holiday."

They won't.

54 posted on 11/30/2005 3:33:08 PM PST by freedumb2003 (Let's tear down the observatory so we never get hit by a meteor again!)
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To: henderson field
Observations of Hanuka and Kwanza fall into the same category as speaking Spanish -- the hallmark of people who are disrespectful of the United States and everything it has give them, which is everything.

When did celebrating a Jewish Holiday become disrespectful of America? Just as I would expect Jews to respect my celebration of Christmas, I respect their right to celebrate Hanukkah, Yom Kipur.

Kwanzaa is a made-up holiday like sweetest day, so I do feel free to make fun of it, but Hanukkah is a traditional Jewish holiday that has been observed for thousands of years. Religion should not be a dis-qualifier to being considered an American.

55 posted on 11/30/2005 3:33:12 PM PST by MediaMole
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To: mnehrling
You should have chosen

Happerry HallothanksChristmasYears

56 posted on 11/30/2005 3:35:32 PM PST by OB1kNOb (I'm gonna boogie oogie woogie til I just can't boogie no more..............)
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To: pissant
are they forgetting the root of holiday is Holy? I think that these morons are so busy being offended, that they forget to research their replacement words. I hate ignorance.
57 posted on 11/30/2005 3:36:27 PM PST by whispering out loud (the bible is either 100% true, or in it's very nature it is 100% a lie)
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To: pissant

To answer the headline:

If you are wishing a good holiday to a jewish neighbor on the first night of Hannakuh.

If it is the day before Thanksgiving.

If it the week after Christmas, and people are shopping for party favors for New Year's Eve.

If you are singing the song "There is No Place Like Home for the Holidays".


There is nothing wrong with being sensitive. If you have a store selling stuff for all the holidays, it isn't a crime to wish people "happy holidays". If a person doesn't celebrate Christmas, why wish them a Merry Christmas?

We shouldn't ban the word "Christmas" from our public schools, but this is a different question.


58 posted on 11/30/2005 3:41:04 PM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: VeniVidiVici

Because that same 96% also celebrate Thanksgiving, Halloween, and New Years and the promotional budget was for the entire quarter, not for a specific holiday.. just to clear up, there was no forbidding anyone from saying Merry Christmas...


59 posted on 11/30/2005 3:51:48 PM PST by mnehring (My Karma ran over your Dogma)
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To: mobyss
Seems your explanation doesn't quite cover it all - let's just admit that a great many people (liberals, ACLU, anti-Christians) are really working to take the "Christ" out of "Christmas" - which if they get their way will someday be called "Winter gift Holiday" or something along those lines.

And I have long maintained that if it comes to that (i.e., the coming of a "Winter gift holiday"), the retail establishment will rue the day that they allowed that to happen, since it is quite possible that gift sales will tank. There really is such a thing as the "Christmas spirit" which encompasses the giving of gifts.

60 posted on 11/30/2005 4:12:24 PM PST by OldPossum
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