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The Jewish Case For "Merry Christmas" (Don Feder Says Believe It Or Not, Its Good For Jews Alert)
Frontpagemag.com ^ | 12/07/2006 | Don Feder

Posted on 12/07/2006 1:01:42 AM PST by goldstategop

You may find the title confusing. After all, religious Jews don’t celebrate Christmas. So why should a Jew care if a store clerk says “Merry Christmas?” Why should the public disappearance of Christmas matter to the Jewish people?

Patience. All will be explained in due course.

In the meantime, ‘tis the season to be politically correct – a coast-to-coast harkening-free zone and the tyranny of hyper-sensitivity.

The increasingly successful effort to purge Christmas from our culture (correctly called the War on Christmas) proceeds apace – municipal Christmas trees are re-christened (no pun intended) “holiday trees,” schools ban Christmas decorations and the singing of Christmas carols during holiday programs. Christmas – excuse me -- holiday parades are excluding Santa Claus, and, everywhere, stores (which derive 20% of their annual revenue from Christmas sales) are in Grinch overdrive.

This year, Lowe’s employees are permitted to say “Merry Christmas,” but only in response to a customer initiating the greeting. On its website, Barnes & Noble offers a “Gift Guide” which includes “Holiday gift baskets,” “holiday sleds” and “holiday delivery.” FYI, the “holiday” celebrated by 95% of the American people at this time of the year is called Christmas.

The Best Buy website offers “unique gifts for the season.” According to Liberty Counsel (a Christian legal action group), a company spokesman claims the use of the word “Christmas” is disrespectful. Disrespectful to who? The 5% of the American people who don’t celebrate Christmas? But how many of them actually care? (For years, people said “Merry Christmas” to me, without inflicting severe emotional harm.) Would it be disrespectful for a clerk in Tel Aviv to wish someone a “Happy Hanukkah”?

Eddie Bauer’s customer service department doesn’t acknowledge Christmas because, says a spokesman, the retailer doesn’t “want to offend Jews, those who celebrate Kwanza, and those who have no religious preference.” And what about the Christians whose holiday is intentionally ignored? The retail giant isn’t concerned about offending them.

The no-religious-preference crowd, who nonetheless are into decking the halls, will be relieved to learn that, once again this year, K-Mart is selling “Holiday trees” – under which “holiday presents” may be placed and around which the family can gather on holiday eve to sing “um-um-um, um-um, um-um-um um” – until that too is banned as somehow disrespectful.

The refusal of retailers to wish 95% of the American people a “Merry Christmas,” is but a seasonal manifestation of the secularist jihad.

But the unholy war is most apparent at this time of the year:

The City of Chicago pressured organizers of the annual Cristkindlmarket (literally: Christ candle market) to drop New Line Cinema as a co-sponsor. The studio was going to show clips from its just-released film “The Nativity Story,” at its booth. A city official determined it would be terribly “insensitive to the many people of the many faiths who come to enjoy the market for its good and unique gifts” to encounter a booth showing clips from a movie about Jesus – at a Christmas fair. Might spoil their shopping experience, don’t you know. (And if someone went to a Hanukah party they might – oh no! – see a menorah. And wouldn’t that be just too awful for words.) By the by, Chicago always gives a warm municipal welcome to the annual Gay Pride Week (including “Mr. Leather"). Again, religious people apparently have no sensibilities. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to review a lower court ruling that New York public schools can refuse to display crèches at Christmas, while putting up menorahs at Hanukah and crescents at Ramadan. Celebrating minority religions is cool, multicultural and sensitive. Acknowledging the religion of the overwhelming majority is callous, not inclusive – hence, un-cool. There’s an ongoing game of pc one-upsmanship. Employee “holiday parties” are no longer permitted at the University of Colorado. (Christmas parties were ditched last year.) Obsessive administrators decided that during a holiday party someone might be thinking about that holiday which is the focus of the season. Henceforth, the school will have “staff appreciation parties” or “good-will functions” -- as long as the good will referenced in no way relates to (you, know) peace on earth, good will toward men.

The War on Christmas is one front in the War on Christianity -- which itself is part of the War on Religion and religious-based values.

The same ideologues who want to take Christmas out of Christmas, also want to take God out of the Pledge of Allegiance, “In God We Trust” off our currency and bibles out of presidential inaugurations. They want to pretend that the Ten Commandments had no more to do with the founding of this country than the Koran, The Humanist Manifesto II or “The Earth In Balance.”

The foregoing should matter to Jews principally for two reasons:

The religious Jew's mission is to spread God-based morality.

This has been true since the time of Abraham. God expects Jews to spread knowledge of Him and his commandments. We are told to stand against a morality of convenience. (We are expected not to change with the times, but to change the times – as we did in the ancient Near East.) Judaism was the first religion to embrace a universal moral code – one for all people, at all times, in all places.

Just as in the 19th century most American Jews opposed slavery and in the early 20th century, Jewish reformers supported child-labor laws, today, morality-from-Sinai requires us to support the family and oppose sexual license and the destruction of innocent human life (including abortion-on-demand, cloning to kill and euthanasia).

Serious Christians – whose morality comes from our Bible – recognize the same ethical injunctions. That’s why they’re under relentless attack by the cultural elite. The secular Left wants to extinguish God-based morality. The only way to do that is to drive Christianity underground. Hence, the War on Christianity. Hence, the War on Christmas.

How well the Left has done its work of deconstructing marriage, the American family and traditional morality may be seen in three statistics. In the 1930s, married couples comprised 84% all households. Today, the figure is just under 50%. Since 2000, the number of cohabitating couples increased by 14%.

That’s why, Jews -- as Jews -- must oppose revisionist efforts to deny our nation’s Christian heritage, must stand against the drive to decouple our laws from Judeo-Christian ethics and must counter attacks on public expressions of the religion of most Americans – Christianity.

Jews are safer in a Christian America than in a secular America (or Europe).

Look at the fate of Jews in post-Christian Europe.

Stephen Steinlight, former director of the U.S. Holocaust Museum, says there are an average of 12 assaults a day on Parisian Jews – comparable to Nazi attacks on Jews in the dying days of the Weimar Republic. In recent years, synagogues, Jewish day schools and kosher restaurants have been targeted by Europeans of the jihad persuasion.

In a commentary in the October 17th Jerusalem Post, David Meyer (a French-born rabbi serving a synagogue in Brussels) writes: “I am frightened not just by the anti-Semitism (resurgent in Europe) but by the collective European response of indifference and appeasement. Today, Europe worships compromise. It is ‘fanatical’ in its non-violence. It is a Europe that, in the face of Islamist fanaticism, is ready to stay silent.”

Nature abhors a spiritual vacuum. In a Europe where churches are empty, mosques are filling and new ones are being built every day.

Muslims are having children, while child-like Europeans embrace childless lifestyles. If Christianity fails on the Continent, it won’t be replaced by secular nothingness, but by a creed that both Jews and Christians should fear.

It’s no surprise that the nation with the highest church attendance in the industrialized world (30% to 40%) is the strongest in its support for Israel. In general, support for Israel in the U.S. population can be predicted by frequency of church attendance, with Evangelicals, -- whose faith is deep-rooted -- most devoted to the Jewish state.

And, please don’t tell me about the Spanish Inquisition and the expulsions of 1492. That was half a millennium ago. The principal threats to Jews in the mid-20th century were creeds which which sought to replace God with secular ideologies, based on evolutionary race theory or a maniacal class consciousness.

While Christmas isn’t part of my religion, I’m all for public acknowledgements of a religious holiday celebrated by 95% of the American people.

What’s the alternative -- an America dominated by the twisted theories of Planned Parenthood, the ACLU, Michael Moore and George Clooney? Instead of the red and green of Christmas, how about an America where burka black is the dominant color?

So, what do you prefer to say: “Merry Christmas”? “Workers of the world unite?” Or “Allah Akbar”?


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: christianity; donfeder; ethicalmonotheism; frontpagemag; hanukkah; islam; islamofascism; jews; judeochristianethic; left; merrychristmas; moralabsolutes; moralrelativism; postmodernism; secularjihad
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There IS a Jewish case for "Merry Christmas." Jews are commanded to spread ethical monotheism. And second, Jews are much safer in Christian America than they are in post-Christian (and increasingly Islamified) Europe. The alternative pushed by the Left, is the future of post-modern moral relativism and at a later date, "Allahu Akbar." Neither are very friendly to the prospects of Jewish survival. This is the exactly why Jews should welcome living in the one nation that still says "Merry Christmas."

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus

1 posted on 12/07/2006 1:01:47 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: goldstategop
A good Christmas carol from my Lutheran childhood:

O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum,
wie treu sind deine Blätter!
Du grünst nicht nur zur Sommerzeit,
Nein auch im Winter, wenn es schneit.
O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum,
wie treu sind deine Blätter!

O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Du kannst mir sehr gefallen!
Wie oft hat nicht zur Weihnachtszeit
Ein Baum von dir mich hoch erfreut!
O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Du kannst mir sehr gefallen!

O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Dein Kleid will mich was lehren:
Die Hoffnung und Beständigkeit
Gibt Trost und Kraft zu jeder Zeit.
O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Das soll dein Kleid mich lehren.

2 posted on 12/07/2006 1:26:03 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop; Salem; SJackson; Alouette; GMMAC; fanfan; Clive; Convert from ECUSA; ...

Very glad you posted this, goldstategop.

Ping!


3 posted on 12/07/2006 3:56:18 AM PST by Alexander Rubin (Octavius - You make my heart glad building thus, as if Rome is to be eternal.)
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To: goldstategop
Would it be disrespectful for a clerk in Tel Aviv to wish someone a “Happy Hanukkah”?

The usual greeting is Hag Sameach ("Happy Holidays!") The only holiday that has a unique traditional greeting is Rosh Hashana.

4 posted on 12/07/2006 4:28:47 AM PST by Alouette (Psalms of the Day: 79-82)
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To: 1st-P-In-The-Pod; A_Conservative_in_Cambridge; af_vet_rr; agrace; albyjimc2; Alexander Rubin; ...
FRmail me to be added or removed from this Judaic/pro-Israel/Russian Jewry ping list.

Warning! This is a high-volume ping list.

5 posted on 12/07/2006 4:29:41 AM PST by Alouette (Psalms of the Day: 79-82)
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To: goldstategop
By the way, Barbra Streisand and Barry Manilow both have Christmas (not "Holiday") albums. And Babs doesn't stick to "Winter Wonderland" -- she goes straight for "Ave Maria!"

And whatever you think of her politics or her talent, you have to admit that she's one of the few that has the voice to do justice to that hymn. (And few of the others who can will ever be household names.)

Anyway, I don't own those albums, but my wife (check my tagline) does, and had there ever been a problem with my playing Christmas CDs in the office, they would've shown up the next day.

6 posted on 12/07/2006 5:30:58 AM PST by Tanniker Smith (I didn't know she was a liberal when I married her.)
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To: goldstategop

This reminds me of an incident at a school south of me about 20 years ago. The school had a tradition of celebrating the outstanding artwork of its students by exhibiting it throughout the school building. One student's painting was of the Crucifixion. This artwork had been hanging on the wall for a number of years. A Jewish couple moved to the school district with their child. Within a very short time after enrolling their child at the school, they had filed a lawsuit against the school saying that their child was made uncomfortable by this particular painting. After a year of raging debate, the school removed the painting.

This was my personal introduction to the War on Christianity. Ironically, our own elementary school principal was Jewish, and not only did he organize Christmas caroling, he strolled through the neighborhood, singing carols with us, both secular and religious. No one does that anymore. You can't even hear kids sing religious carols at a Christmas concert anymore.

The awesome spirituality is gone from the public arena.


7 posted on 12/07/2006 5:33:56 AM PST by sageb1 (This is the Final Crusade. There are only 2 sides. Pick one.)
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To: goldstategop; fanfan; Pikamax; Former Proud Canadian; Great Dane; Alberta's Child; headsonpikes; ...
Thanks for posting!
Pretty amazing Don Feder could actually top himself this late in the year !!!

PING!
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

8 posted on 12/07/2006 5:36:39 AM PST by GMMAC (Discover Canada governed by Conservatives: www.CanadianAlly.com)
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To: Tanniker Smith
****Barbra Streisand ... goes straight for "Ave Maria!". And whatever you think of her politics or her talent, you have to admit that she's one of the few that has the voice to do justice to that hymn. (And few of the others who can will ever be household names.)***

Luciano Pavarotti - nobody does it better.
It literally chokes me up every time I play his Christmas album [ yep, still usin' vinyl :-) ]

(IMO Ave Maria has to be sung by a Tenor.)

9 posted on 12/07/2006 5:52:48 AM PST by Condor51 (Tagline Under Construction - Kindly Wear Your Hardhat)
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To: goldstategop
"Cristkindlmarket (literally: Christ candle market"

Actually, Christkindlmarket means Christ Child Market. So, the City of Chicago bans the movie "The Nativity" about the birth of the Christ child from the Christ Child Market festival. I'm not making this up.

10 posted on 12/07/2006 5:55:04 AM PST by Jabba the Nutt (Jabba the Hutt's bigger, meaner, uglier brother.)
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To: sageb1

I'm Jewish, and my elementary school music teacher was Jewish, and he organized Christmas caroling and taught the school choir Christmas songs, and one or two Hannukah songs and organized a Christmas concert. So much for the good old days.


11 posted on 12/07/2006 6:19:51 AM PST by Alexander Rubin (Octavius - You make my heart glad building thus, as if Rome is to be eternal.)
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To: Alexander Rubin; goldstategop

Thanks for the ping, Alexander. I second your thumbs up to goldstategop for posting this.


12 posted on 12/07/2006 6:43:41 AM PST by Convert from ECUSA (Memo to Olmerde: "GET THE HELL OUT OF BIBI's HOUSE!")
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To: Tanniker Smith

I remember when Celine Dion sang "God Bless America" during the TV concert for 9/11, right after 9/11. She did an *amazing* job! One of the most moving songs I've ever heard, but boy was I frustrated that it was sung by a French Canadian! The "My home sweet home" part wasn't quite right...


13 posted on 12/07/2006 7:58:37 AM PST by To Hell With Poverty
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To: GMMAC; goldstategop; sageb1; Alouette
Great Don Feder column. The "public symbolism" issue is actually more important than most people realize.

The leader of the Catholic Church in Bavaria in the 1930s-40s, Cardinal Faulhaber, was anti-Hitler. When the Nazis ordered that the Jews had to wear arm bands, Cardinal Faulhaber had embroidered yellow Star of David arm bands put on the all the statues of Christ, the Virgin Mary, St. Joseph, St. Anne, St. John the Baptist, in the whole archdiocese of Munich.

Faulhaber's books were banned, and in 1934 and 1938 attempts were made to assassinate him. He continued to say and do things that demonstrated resistance to the Nazis, for instance he encouraged choral singing of classics from Bach and Handel. Why was this important? Hear me out: because it was virtually the only that young German Christians exposed to, and could publically celebrate, Old Testament (Jewish) Scriptures.

Connecting the dots, I learned that several of the heroic White Rose group --- ultimately bneheaded for trying to organize resistance to the Nazis in wartime Munich--- had met each other singing about such subversive things as "God's promises to Abraham and his seed forever..."

14 posted on 12/07/2006 8:38:39 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o ("Stand firm and hold to the Traditions"--- 2 Thess. 2:15--- because the Bible tells me so.)
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To: GMMAC; goldstategop; sageb1; Alouette
Great Don Feder column. The "public symbolism" issue is actually more important than most people realize.

The leader of the Catholic Church in Bavaria in the 1930s-40s, Cardinal Faulhaber, was anti-Hitler. When the Nazis ordered that the Jews had to wear arm bands, Cardinal Faulhaber had embroidered yellow Star of David arm bands put on the all the statues of Christ, the Virgin Mary, St. Joseph, St. Anne, St. John the Baptist, in the whole archdiocese of Munich.

Faulhaber's books were banned, and in 1934 and 1938 attempts were made to assassinate him. He continued to say and do things that demonstrated resistance to the Nazis, for instance he encouraged choral singing of classics from Bach and Handel. Why was this important? Hear me out: because it was virtually the only that young German Christians exposed to, and could publically celebrate, Old Testament (Jewish) Scriptures.

Connecting the dots, I learned that several of the heroic White Rose group --- ultimately bneheaded for trying to organize resistance to the Nazis in wartime Munich--- had met each other singing about such subversive things as "God's promises to Abraham and his seed forever..."

15 posted on 12/07/2006 8:38:50 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o ("Stand firm and hold to the Traditions"--- 2 Thess. 2:15--- because the Bible tells me so.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

"White Rose" rebels were BEHEADED? I always thought they were shot.


16 posted on 12/07/2006 8:42:08 AM PST by Alouette (Psalms of the Day: 79-82)
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To: goldstategop

My daughter took German in school.

Every year I try to remember this song, but cant seem to get past the first line.

Sigh. Must be getting old.


17 posted on 12/07/2006 8:46:26 AM PST by Lijahsbubbe
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To: Alexander Rubin
I'm not Jewish but I seem to have fewer problems with observant Jews than do my secular (read "Liberal") Jewish acquaintances do.

Perhaps that's because observant Jews tend to be conservative politically too, and secular Jews tend not to be.

18 posted on 12/07/2006 8:46:54 AM PST by kellynch ("Our only freedom is the freedom to discipline ourselves." -- Bernard Baruch)
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To: Tanniker Smith
Don't forget the Neil Diamond Christmas specials.


19 posted on 12/07/2006 8:53:05 AM PST by Lijahsbubbe
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To: goldstategop
Krusty's cool with it


20 posted on 12/07/2006 8:55:42 AM PST by Lijahsbubbe
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