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- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Path: sparky!uunet!newsflash.concordia.ca!nstn.ns.ca!psinntp!psinntp!newstand.syr.edu!rodan.acs.syr.edu!kgatling
- From: kgatling@rodan.acs.syr.edu (Keith E Gatling)
- Subject: Re: Celebrating Xmas and Hannakuh
- Message-ID: <1992Dec27.175845.5561@newstand.syr.edu>
- Organization: Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY
- References: <1992Dec15.072607.22478@newstand.syr.edu> <168BF9B5E.M18611@MBVM.Mitre.Org> <1h7qopINNkv5@life.ai.mit.edu>
- Date: Sun, 27 Dec 92 17:58:45 EST
- Lines: 57
-
- Lynn, you wrote a lot of excellent stuff about the Zorkfest, and from some
- of your Christian references, I just have to ask if there's an Episcopalian
- in your life somewhere (Whitsunday is such a denomination specific reference
- that I had to ask).
-
- As far as the commericalization of Christmas goes, this has been a theme for
- quite some time, but if you really go back far enough, you'll find that
- there was already a holiday in the Roman Empire around the Winter Solstice
- that included gift giving and general merry making as part of it...the
- Saturnalia...and we Christians just sort of tacked our celebration onto it
- as a way of not being conspicuous for *not* celebrating when everyone else
- was. So if you really want to get picky (and I don't really) one could
- argue that it's not Christmas that's become commericalized, but a
- commericial celebration that's become Christianized.
-
- The problems with friends of mixed cultures and religions is one of the
- reasons I really wish we would do something like what's done in Japan. From
- what I've read (and my sources may be wrong), the big occasion for gift
- giving is New Year's (of course, in the spirit of overdoing things, this is
- also the big occassion for scouring the garbage to find stuff that's
- perfectly usable, but a few years old, that was replaced with a better model
- during the gift giving). Boy would that make things a lot easier! First of
- all, you wouldn't be tripping over anyone's religious holiday and
- trivializing it (are there any people out there for whom New Year's is a
- religious holiday?), second, it's a holiday that just about everyone (with
- the exception of a few people in religions that don't celebrate Christmas or
- Chanukah anyway) celebrates, third, it would allow those of us who celebrate
- Chanukah and Christmas to celebrate them as religious holidays and not as
- major gift giving days where we get to watch the kids plow through presents
- like Sherman through Atlanta, totally at odds with the spirits of both
- holidays.
-
- Ah...but the chances of seeing this done are slim to none. The idea of
- Christmas as a time for giving and getting presents are too well ingrained
- in our society, and New Year's is pretty much still seen as the time to go
- out to parties. On the other hand, it did take quite a number of years for
- the idea of giving small presents on Christmas to escalate into the Toys R
- Us bonanza, so maybe if a few of us start now, we can change things for the
- future.
-
- Since you did mention the Zorkfest happening in late Spring, I have to ask
- this question of other members of the newsgroup. Of those of you who do
- Santa and the whole bit, how many of you also give presents for Easter and
- do the Easter Bunny routine? I seem to recall that while we intended to
- give presents for Christmas and Santa was negotiable, we both agreed that we
- were not going to turn Easter into sort of the K-Mart Christmas that I
- remembered as a kid, and that one religious holiday turned into a gift
- giving celebration was definitely enough.
-
- Well I've gone on long enough here, and who knows...there might be other
- posts for me to add my 2c to, so I'll call it quits here.
-
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- * Keith E Gatling kgatling@mailbox.syr.edu *
- * Opinions? I've got plenty of them. Just ask my wife! *
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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