December 13, 2004
War On Christmas Is A War On The West
By Sam Francis
December is not even half over, and already the war
on Christmas has started. Out in the Red State of
Colorado, where traditional culture supposedly
thrives, the city of Denver has waded into a little
cultural gunplay that is attracting national attention.
But Denver is not the only battlefield. Increasingly
it looks like Christmas may be pitched in the same
trashcan as the
Confederate Flag.
In Denver, local merchants have for years sponsored a
pallid festival called the "Parade of Lights,"
which sported Santa Claus but no Christian images. The
"mood," as the New York Times described it
last week, "was bouncy, commercial and determinedly
secular." The Parade "shunned politics and
anything remotely smacking of controversy, including
openly religious Christmas themes that might offend."
(Well, not entirely.) [A
Question of Faith for a Holiday Parade, By Kirk
Johnson, December 6, 2004]
It's interesting there's someone in Denver who thinks
that "openly religious themes" in a Christmas
event "might offend."
It's even more interesting to consider that someone
in Denver actually would be offended by such themes.
But perhaps most interesting of all is that nowhere
in the entire New York Times story, despite
several references to
"the controversy,"is a single person or group identified who
actually admits to being offended by religious imagery.
The people who were offended were local Christian
groups fed up with the absolute refusal of local
businessmen to mention religion at all. This year the
Faith Bible Chapel sought permission to run a float in
the Parade of Lights that carried explicit religious
themes with a choir singing hymns and carols.
Permission denied. Too controversial, you see. Can
you imagine what would happen if somebody in a Christmas
parade actually started singing "Silent Night"?
The horror, the horror.
Michael Krikorian, [Send
him
mail] a spokesman for the
Downtown Denver Partnership, which sponsors the
parade, says they don't allow "direct religious
themes," and that includes "Merry Christmas"
signs and singing or playing traditional Christmas
hymns.
"We want to avoid that specific religious message
out of respect for other religions in the region,"
Mr. Krikorian smirks. "It could be construed as
disrespectful to other people who enjoy a parade each
year."
But the horror of being misconstrued apparently
extends only to Christian themes. The Parade of Lights,
as the Rocky Mountain News reported, "includes
the
Two Spirit Society, which honors gay and lesbian
American Indians as holy people; a German folk dance
group; and performers of the Lion Dance, a Chinese New
Year tradition 'meant to chase away evil spirits and
welcome good luck and good fortune for the year.'" [Parade
prohibition puzzles preacher, By Jean Torkelson,
Rocky Mountain News, December 1, 2004]
Sounds sort of like a "specific religious
message," no?
Nevertheless, denied permission to chase away the
evil spirits of their choice, "hundreds" of
Denver area Christians showed up on the sidewalks anyway
and sang "carols about mangers, shepherds and holy
nights, handed out
hot chocolate and spoke of their faith."
There you go. The witchcraft trials can be expected
to start any day now.
In fact, nothing much happened, except the
businessspersons now say they are going to have to
"re-evaluate" the event.
"This was always just supposed to be a
cutesy parade, for the kids," says Jim Basey,
president of the Downtown Denver Partnership. "The
purpose was to get bodies downtown." No
offensiveness for Mr. Basey.
Denver is not the only city to enjoy a little
Christmas cultural warfare. The Washington Times
reports that the mayor of
Somerville, Mass. [Send
him
mail] as issued a public apology for
"mistakenly"
calling the local "holiday party" a
"Christmas party," while "School districts in
Florida and New Jersey have banned Christmas carols
altogether, and an 'all-inclusive' holiday song program
at a Chicago-area elementary school included Jewish and
Jamaican songs, but no Christmas carols."
In
Kirkland, Washington, a school banned a play of
"A Christmas Carol" because of
Tiny Tim's prayer, and neighboring libraries banned
Christmas trees.
The website
Vdare.com sponsors an annual scrutiny of the
"War Against Christmas." It has lots more
examples.
Christmas, to be fair, is not an exclusively
religious holiday, though Christians are entirely right
to insist on preserving that meaning among others. It's
a celebration that has been around so long it has
acquired non-religious meanings as well, but meanings
that go well beyond Santa Claus and
Frosty the Snowman.
It's a festival that comes from the heart of the
traditional West, which is why music, literature,
films and common social customs center around it so
much.
At least some of the people who want to abolish it
are not intentionally anti-Western. They're people who
have simply disengaged themselves from their own
civilization and are entirely indifferent as to whether
it survives or not.
Being strangers in their own land, they no longer
have a clue as to what Christmas and its symbols mean.
And it's not only Christmas that's "just supposed
to be a cutesy parade." It's everything else their
civilization has created.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here
for Sam Francis' website. Click
here to order his monograph,
Ethnopolitics: Immigration, Race, and the American
Political Future.