April 11, 2009 The Fulford File, By James FulfordSave The Easter Bunny! (And America)Tyra Damm, a
Dallas Morning
News columnist, has recently
admitted that she flinched when a manager
complimented her on her Easter Bunny socks.
“They’re my
spring rabbit socks,” Damm says she hastily
explained. (April 10, 2009). Damm (email
her) now says she was wrong to flinch. But she also
feels obliged to turn what might once have been an
“Easter”
column into a pious celebration of the need for
“tolerance” of those with
“different faith vocabularies”, whatever that means. The same ideas that drive the
War On Christmas affect
Thanksgiving and Easter. In 2005, Peter Brimelow
wrote "Fans of our ever-popular annual competition to determine the most
egregious attempt to
abolish Christmas will not be surprised that Easter
is being abolished too, even in its most inoffensive
furry form."
Yes,
it's War On The Easter Bunny. It's been going on for
some time. This is from the Catholic League back in June
1996:
“There appears to be a growing trend to secularize
Easter. More and more greeting cards and gifts are
centered around bunnies, not Christ. And when
it
comes to Christ, attempts to debunk his divinity are
given broad coverage. The three major weeklies,
Time, Newsweek
and U.S. News and World Report, all featured cover
stories at Easter that
questioned the historical Jesus.
“One of the most
significant changes occurred when New York’s Radio City
Music Hall announced that its annual ‘Easter Show’ would
now be dubbed the ‘Spring Spectacular.’ In 1995 the
‘Easter Show’ was renamed the ‘Easter Extravaganza’ (an
acceptable change), but this year the closest
association with Easter was found in the small print
below ‘Spring Spectacular,’ which read: ‘The Glory of
Easter.’
“We got curious and
called Radio City and the ad agency that handles its
business. What we were told was that the change in name
was done in the interest of broadening the appeal of the
program.
“The
reason we called was because someone in Catholic circles
had given us a tip. It seems that when he called the
person in the ad agency that handles the account for
Radio City, he was told that the reason for the
change of names was, ‘We’re trying to take the
Christianity out of Easter.’” There's been a lot more like that
since. See the Catholic League’s 2006 roundup
here, with things like the
"Spring Bunny." Tyrone Terrill, [Email
him] the black
Human Rights Director in St. Paul, Minnesota, banned
the Easter Bunny in St. Paul's city hall, because it
might annoy non-Christians. (No one had actually
complained.) You can see his point.
Minnesota is full of
rebarbative Muslim taxi drivers, Somali
jihadists, Hmong
mass murderers,
Mexican
illegals, and other
multicultural types who may
act out if they get offended.
(Who
let all these people in, anyway?) So this year there are
"Spring
Egg Hunts" springing up (hopping up?) across the
nation, and anything that might look like it's too
Christian or
too
American will be pushed to the back.
But multiculturalism or no, some 77 percent of Americans
are
still Christians. Although Obama
recently told the Turks
that “We
do not consider ourselves a Christian nation”,
some
71
percent of
Americans still do think that
they belong to Christian nation. Which is why Good
Friday was a public holiday. So Easter remains part of America's
public life for another few years. But it will still
have to be defended, like other traditions, against
people who will start by claiming
we're imagining the whole thing, and end by claiming
that the whole thing is
a relic of America's racist past.
But
until then—Happy Easter!
Easter Columns from this year:
From
previous years:
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