TAKE THAT MENORAH AWAY FROM THE CHRISTMAS TREE ! (It’s that Stupid, Politically Correct Holiday Season Again)


Tomorrow night is the first night of Hanukkah, Chanukah and/or חנוכה ,the Jewish holiday that is spelled a hundred ways in English. Along with the joy of the holiday is the sadness that this minor holiday is continually hijacked by the ACLU and other liberal groups who have no idea what the holiday means.

It happens every year at this time: the battles of political correctness. When a community puts up a Christmas tree, one of two things happens. Either there is a battle to take it down, or someone fights to get a Chanukkiyah (that’s the real name, not Menorah), Kwanzaa candles, or a symbol of some other religion’s holiday placed right next to it. Then Fox News follows by running stories about the latest battle in the “war against Christmas,” and the ACLU starts suing any town whose mayor ever went to a church, mosque, and/or synagogue. Hey, ACLU: Give it up. America is a Christian country.

People who see December as an opportune time for the celebration of politically correct multiculturalism have to stop! I understand that people are trying to be fair, but it just doesn’t make sense.

I can’t speak for the other holidays, but I can tell you that as Jewish holidays go, Chanukah is among the least important, unlike the “big ones” like Passover, Sukkot, or Shavuot you can work, drive, etc. Guess what, the Books of the Maccabees weren’t even included in the Jewish canon (that’s another and longer story).

Nothing goes against the true meaning of Chanukah more than placing a Chanukkiyah near a “holiday tree” or using a “Jewish star” as a tree ornament. The true meaning of Chanukah is the exact opposite of that multicultural rubbish.

Only part of the story was the Maccabees fight for getting the Greeks out of Israel, and the cleansing and dedication of the Temple. The Chanukah Story was also about a civil war amongst the Jews. Judah and the boys were fighting other Jews who had turned away from their faith by combining it with Greek/Hellenistic practices. The resulting assimilation caused a loss of Jewish faith and tradition, and finally laws against practicing Jewish ritual.

Chanukah is a holiday about Jews fighting against assimilation, but the ACLU-types would have us celebrate it by assimilating.

Let me suggest that if Matthias and his sons were alive today, they would be fighting every Jew who wanted a six-foot menorah next to a Christmas tree, a star of David next to a cross, or even the mass attack of the multi-holiday Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanzaa, Festivus and Winter Solstice display. America is not a melting-pot its more like a gumbo where all the elements are in the same pot and existing together, but maintaining its original form. As Americans, we are all different and we must celebrate those differences, not merge them into one hodgepodge of progressive mediocrity that celebrates everything at the same time, while truly celebrating absolutely nothing.

I would also suggest that all Jewish people who celebrate both holidays “have a Christmas Tree for the kids” are also missing the meaning of Chanukah. The Maccabees were horrified when an idol was placed in the holy Temple. Rather than trying to fit with “modern” culture, they wanted to make sure that the House of God was a Jewish household. To remember the Maccabees, we should do the same with ours.

The Rabbis tell us that we are not to use the Chanukah candles for reading or seeing, as we would with a regular candle or a light bulb. The Chanukkiyah is supposed to be placed near a window so the light of God and his miracles will shine outward into the world. Mixing up Chanukah with other people’s traditions diminishes the light and message of Chanukah as well as those other traditions.

And to my Christian friends: Please don’t go get assimilated on me either. That tree in the mall is a Christmas tree, not a holiday tree. Santa is not a secular character; he is Saint Nick. You have a nice tradition. “Keep the Christ in Christmas.” Don’t try to make it politically correct by taking away its religious nature. Or as Judge Judy would say, “Don’t pee on my leg and tell me it’s raining!”

America is a great country. It is great not because everyone celebrates the same, but because we can all celebrate our differences.

Chanukah starts tomorrow night, to all my friends celebrating the holiday, may you have a joyous holiday. Or as we say in Hebrew Chag Chanukah Samayach. Happy Chanukah Holiday.

Jeff Dunetz is editor of the Political Blog The Lid, a contributor to American Thinker, Big Government,Big HollywoodBig Journalism, and Big Peace, and a Red State diarist



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4 Comments Leave a comment

Happy Chanukah to you, Jeff.

penguin2 (Diary) Tuesday, November 30th at 8:41PM EST (link)

God’s Blessing on you and yours. Your faith has lovely traditions and beliefs, and wonderful that you are holding fast in their celebration.

Bah! Humbug! on political correctness.

Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God. – Benjamin Franklin
When Good stands up to Evil, Evil blinks. – Vassar Bushmills

Conservative Education: Suggested Reading List

Activists Taking Action: Unified Patriots

 

This folks is what religious tolerance is all about

civil truth (Diary) Wednesday, December 1st at 1:20AM EST (link)

Firmly stating and standing behind your religious convictions while acknowledging and defending the right of those with different beliefs to do the same.

And society allowing these all to freely and publicly compete in the marketplace of faith – not squashing all religious expression so as not to “offend” anyone.

The response to speech should be more speech, not shutting down the speaker. The latter is the fast path to H*ll.

The greatest evil…is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed, and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voice. Hence, naturally enough, my symbol for Hell is something like the bureaucracy of a police state or the offices of a thoroughly nasty business concern. -C.S. Lewis

http://www.gmsplace.com/

 

Some history of Chanukah in America

ashland_avenue (Diary) Wednesday, December 1st at 7:29PM EST (link)

There is a story on NPR.org today reciting some of the holiday’s history in America. The link is here http://www.npr.org/2010/12/01/131695642/scholar-hanukkah-more-modest-holiday-outside-u-s

An excerpt:

“There is nearly no record of people celebrating Hanukkah just a couple of centuries ago. But it began to be an important Jewish holiday in the second half of the 19th century when two rabbis in Cincinnati noticed their Jewish children didn’t have much connection to the synagogue.

“The rabbis developed a new celebration for children during Hanukkah that was held in the synagogue and included giving presents. National newspapers publicized the new celebration, and it was soon being celebrated all around the country.

“Hanukkah was being reinvented at a time when the American culture had a booming holiday in Christmas. The Jewish community began to reshape Hanukkah as something their children and families could do when American families were doing the same thing around Christmas”

 

Yea, Christmas in the US probably put a cultural pull on it,

cactusjack Wednesday, December 1st at 10:23PM EST (link)

but no doubt it has a sound scriptural and historical basis from the point of this outsider of Judaism: especially if it is not in your faith’s version of the Bible, get a good copy of the Apochrypha and try First and Second Maccabees and First and Second Esdras. Whether it is /should be a major or minor observance I will leave to the rabbis to decide. BTW if you’re Christian and you haven’t ever seen it, have you ever seen trained rabbis debate a difference of opinion over scripture? On line or in person – make popcorn it gets good and if you went to Sunday School you’ll know just enough to follow.