This Season's War Cry: Commercialize Christmas, or Else
By ADAM COHEN
Religious conservatives have a cause this holiday season: the
commercialization of Christmas. They're for it.
The American Family Association is leading a boycott of Target for not using
the words "Merry Christmas" in its advertising. (Target denies it has an
anti-Merry-Christmas policy.) The Catholic League boycotted Wal-Mart in part
over the way its Web site treated searches for "Christmas." Bill O'Reilly,
the Fox anchor who last year started a "Christmas Under Siege" campaign, has
a chart on his Web site of stores that use the phrase "Happy Holidays,"
along with a poll that asks, "Will you shop at stores that do not say 'Merry
Christmas'?"
This campaign - which is being hyped on Fox and conservative talk radio - is
an odd one. Christmas remains ubiquitous, and with its celebrators in
control of the White House, Congress, the Supreme Court and every state
supreme court and legislature, it hardly lacks for powerful supporters.
There is also something perverse, when Christians are being jailed for
discussing the Bible in Saudi Arabia and slaughtered in Sudan, about
spending so much energy on stores that sell "holiday trees."
What is less obvious, though, is that Christmas's self-proclaimed defenders
are rewriting the holiday's history. They claim that the "traditional"
American Christmas is under attack by what John Gibson, another Fox anchor,
calls "professional atheists" and "Christian haters." But America has a
complicated history with Christmas, going back to the Puritans, who despised
it. What the boycotters are doing is not defending America's Christmas
traditions, but creating a new version of the holiday that fits a political
agenda.
The Puritans considered Christmas un-Christian, and hoped to keep it out of
America. They could not find Dec. 25 in the Bible, their sole source of
religious guidance, and insisted that the date derived from Saturnalia, the
Roman heathens' wintertime celebration. On their first Dec. 25 in the New
World, in 1620, the Puritans worked on building projects and ostentatiously
ignored the holiday. From 1659 to 1681 Massachusetts went further, making
celebrating Christmas "by forbearing of labor, feasting or in any other way"
a crime.
The concern that Christmas distracted from religious piety continued even
after Puritanism waned. In 1827, an Episcopal bishop lamented that the Devil
had stolen Christmas "and converted it into a day of worldly festivity,
shooting and swearing." Throughout the 1800's, many religious leaders were
still trying to hold the line. As late as 1855, New York newspapers reported
that Presbyterian, Baptist and Methodist churches were closed on Dec. 25
because "they do not accept the day as a Holy One." On the eve of the Civil
War, Christmas was recognized in just 18 states.
Christmas gained popularity when it was transformed into a domestic
celebration, after the publication of Clement Clarke Moore's "Visit from St.
Nicholas" and Thomas Nast's Harper's Weekly drawings, which created the
image of a white-bearded Santa who gave gifts to children. The new emphasis
lessened religious leaders' worries that the holiday would be given over to
drinking and swearing, but it introduced another concern: commercialism. By
the 1920's, the retail industry had adopted Christmas as its own, sponsoring
annual ceremonies to kick off the "Christmas shopping season."
Religious leaders objected strongly. The Christmas that emerged had an
inherent tension: merchants tried to make it about buying, while clergymen
tried to keep commerce out. A 1931 Times roundup of Christmas sermons
reported a common theme: "the suggestion that Christmas could not survive if
Christ were thrust into the background by materialism." A 1953 Methodist
sermon broadcast on NBC - typical of countless such sermons - lamented that
Christmas had become a "profit-seeking period." This ethic found popular
expression in "A Charlie Brown Christmas." In the 1965 TV special, Charlie
Brown ignores Lucy's advice to "get the biggest aluminum tree you can find"
and her assertion that Christmas is "a big commercial racket," and finds a
more spiritual way to observe the day.
This year's Christmas "defenders" are not just tolerating commercialization
- they're insisting on it. They are also rewriting Christmas history on
another key point: non-Christians' objection to having the holiday forced on
them.
The campaign's leaders insist this is a new phenomenon - a "liberal plot,"
in Mr. Gibson's words. But as early as 1906, the Committee on Elementary
Schools in New York City urged that Christmas hymns be banned from the
classroom, after a boycott by more than 20,000 Jewish students. In 1946, the
Rabbinical Assembly of America declared that calling on Jewish children to
sing Christmas carols was "an infringement on their rights as Americans."
Other non-Christians have long expressed similar concerns. For decades,
companies have replaced "Christmas parties" with "holiday parties," schools
have adopted "winter breaks" instead of "Christmas breaks," and TV stations
and stores have used phrases like "Happy Holidays" and "Season's Greetings"
out of respect for the nation's religious diversity.
The Christmas that Mr. O'Reilly and his allies are promoting - one closely
aligned with retailers, with a smack-down attitude toward nonobservers -
fits with their campaign to make America more like a theocracy, with
Christian displays on public property and Christian prayer in public
schools.
It does not, however, appear to be catching on with the public. That may be
because most Americans do not recognize this commercialized, mean-spirited
Christmas as their own. Of course, it's not even clear the campaign's
leaders really believe in it. Just a few days ago, Fox News's online store
was promoting its "Holiday Collection" for shoppers. Among the items offered
to put under a "holiday tree" was "The O'Reilly Factor Holiday Ornament."
After bloggers pointed this out, Fox changed the "holidays" to
"Christmases."
Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
13 Comments:
did you guysz steal chrismukah from the 0C as in the hit television comedic-drama on fox 5? on thurday at 8? i wanted to know because summer roberts might go to providence. i also own season 1 and 2 on DVD. bye. peace out.
p.s - flan is good for your toenails- it's a proven fact. my favorite sibling is connor. and my dogs name is cachi, cachi, liberachi. & i love the OC.
I'm so fiesty!! RAAARRRR!!!
i am fiestier than the fellow who wrote above me. oh yeah i like fingers. C0NNOR is NOT FIESTYY !!
peace out. I LOVE CHRISMUKAH.
ARGGGGGGGG !
Believe it or not (and I write this as a fan of The OC since episode 1, Chrismukkah has been around a lot longer than "The OC".
In Germany, circa 1880, German Jews called their holiday - a combination of Hanukkah with Christmas style trees and ornaments- Weihnukkah. Weihnukkah is the German word for Christmas - Weihnachten - and Hanukkah.
Over 100 years later (and 5 years prior to the OC) a fellow by the name of Michael Nathanson sent out a "joke" Chrismukkah press release to a few of his friends. His joke ended up making the rounds in Cyberspace, and by the following year, 1999, it was everywhere. As best we can tell, this was the true origin of the word in America.
So, no kids, we didn't "steal" Chrismukkah from the OC. If anything, we "stole" the idea from my ancestors in Germany.
uh.. i'm pretty sure the oc isnt in germany. I think its in hawaii or michigan or something. And its not called weihnukkah, its chrismukkah. Duh.
-DONALD
Editors: Chrismukkah.com is CQ
Happy/Merry Chrismukkah!
(RNS) Hanukkah starts at sundown on Christmas Day this year, and to Ron
Gompertz that means the "mother of all Chrismukkahs."
Gompertz, a Jew from New York City, and his Christian wife, Michelle,
launched Chrismukkah.com last year, offering for sale a host of cards,
T-shirts, ornaments and other items blending Christmas and Hanukkah icons.
"We got opposition from the pundits of the religious right, both
Christian and Jewish ... for what we thought was a lightweight, whimsical
tribute to harmony," Gompertz says.
But Chrismukkah.com has only increased its offerings, and Gompertz says
business so far is three times better than last year.
Chrismukkah's target audience is interfaith families. It's a market
other card companies have noted as well.
Owner Kathy Doll at Kathy's Hallmark in Lower Paxton, Pa., carries six
cards blending Christmas and Hanukkah greetings. That's more than Hallmark
made last year, she said.
"Basically we pretty much sell out of them. That's why they increase the
number," she says.
The Hallmark cards are all fairly serious. Chrismukkah.com is less
reverent. "We aim to arouse your secular senses," the Web site says. "We
pray our inspirational collection ... will do just that."
-- Mary Warner
Ron,
Love the site! My wife came across it tonight and showed it to me. We have a "blended" family with two young children, and I almost thought that I coined the term "Chrismukkah," but I obviously came after our German ancestors, and even after "The OC." It is the later that shames me...
I too will join the fight for my fellow Chrismukkah elves out there! And in the words of the Great Judah Claus: "Oy, oy, oy... Merry Chrismukkah to all, and to all laila tov!"
-- Robbie Coleman
http://robbie.robnrob.com/
I love my son, Robbie, and his Jewish wife, Robin - and I REALLY love the term Chrismukkah. My dad was a Presbyterian minister, and I always loved the religious celebration of Christmas. Since maturing and developing my own mind and self, I now enjoy the celebration of love and peace and brotherhood - and Chrismukkah pretty much sums that up. It's great to find out some of the history - both of the term and the holiday itself. I had no idea about most of that. Thanks!
This article is right on. As a devout, but not particularly conservative, Christian, I am appalled by the commercialization of Christmas by people who claim to be "protecting" the holiday. I don't like the rampant consumption that takes place at this time of year, but forcing people to say "Merry Christmas," rather than "Happy Holidays," is not going to change that.
By the way, I think Chrismukkah is a great idea. More Christians should embrace rich Jewish traditions, whether they come from blended families or not.
Sorry. I am patently against this. I find it offensive and degrading and that it simply devalues the religous traditions. I really wish that you would pick one or the other to observe because the truth is that the two beliefs are ultimately incompatible.
You can sugarcoat it all you want but a Jewish person can never accept jesus as anything other than a person, certainly not the messiah or anything greater.
There may be common values, but it just doesn't wash.
More Christians should embrace rich Jewish traditions, whether they come from blended families or not.
No, no, no. This is so very wrong.
"Sorry. I am patently against this. I find it offensive and degrading and that it simply devalues the religous traditions. I really wish that you would pick one or the other to observe because the truth is that the two beliefs are ultimately incompatible."
What are you some kind of neo-nazi or something?
I AM FEISTY... MY NEW SHO DOG IS WILSON AND HE IS SO FEISTY. I AM GONNA WATCH ENTOURAGE WITH MY DOG AND KEL's DOG IT'S GONNA BE SO COOL. I AM SO FEISTY. #1 FEISTIEST PERSON ON EARTH RARRR!!!!!!!!! WARRIOR STANCE!!!!!!!!!!
(i am like 45 times feistier than kelly.)
(i drink badger milk)
(chrismukkah is better than arbor day)
YO0 -- i am down wit da chrismukkah. yaaa knoww represent da JEWFR0S; =] & by da way * this website just increased its feistyness percent by a full 76.48791123% cause i just posted this comment & i just happen to be the the feistiest person in the world. bow to your sensay. & my dog would like everyone to know that he loves chrismukkah and please keep it kosher. OK PEACE RAWRRRRRRRRRRR
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