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Ask Gil
Dear Readers: I LOVE READING YOUR EMAIL!!!! SO, if you'd like to say something about this website, the Email of the Week column or have a different Jewish issue/question on your mind please send it in. I am always looking for emails for future columns and a book I am writing (you will remain anonymous, of course). So, please email me at GilMann@BeingJewish.org just click on the blue letters. I look forward to your emails! 

Thanks,
Gil


 

Dear Readers,

These columns began on my area of America Online, called:  Judaism Today:  Where Do I Fit?   People anonymously sent me E-Mail, and I began to choose one for a public response in my Jewish E-Mail of the Week column. The column has become quite popular and is now syndicated internationally in many Jewish papers and websites.  I hope you find they help you as you think about the Ethics, Spirituality and Peoplehood components of the Jewish way of Life.  I welcome your comments... see the end of the column.

Gil

PS  Teachers and others, feel free to copy my columns and forward them or use them as you see fit.  Please see the friendly copyright notice at the end.

Merry Christmas??

 

Dear Readers:

During Thanksgiving, I wrote a response of the week called Response 11/26: Were the Pilgrims Jewish? It generated more email than any response I had ever written. The email was very thoughtful and positive and so I decided to do 2 things: first to create a new message board in my area called: Holidays: Jewish, American, Christian and others :) or :( ?! And second to write a response of the week about Christmas. I hope this week's response will also generate a lot of thought, email and also postings on the new message board. So here we go! This week's response is called:

MERRY CHRISTMAS???

Last week, I was invited to make a presentation in an east coast city that they (not me) titled: "The December Dilemma: Celebrating Hanukkah at Christmas Time." Rather than make a formal presentation, I decided to turn the evening into something of a focus group. (In many ways similar in style to what I did when I wrote my book.) I wanted to hear from the people there how they felt about Christmas, Hanukkah, and their thoughts in general about living as a Jew in this non-Jewish country at this most Christian time of the year:

The sentiment expressed was mixed. Some people loved X-mas, others strongly resented it and most felt right in the middle. When I asked people to assign a number from 1 (I hate X-mas!) to 10 (I love X-mas!) on average, I would say most people chose 5. What would you say?--I'll tell you my rating at the end of this response.

Here are some of the comments I heard that night:

"To me it is not a religious holiday--It is an American holiday."

"I agree it is an American Holiday--that excludes me! I feel left out."

"I resent how everyone just assumes that I participate. They ask me questions like: have you finished your Christmas shopping."

"I like the mood--people just seem to be nicer to each other plus the rhythm of work slows down. The last 10 days of the year there are fewer meetings and so on."

"I find it frustrating. Non-Jews just think that Hanukkah is the Jewish Christmas."

"I like the music, the lights and decorations and on Chistmas day I love watching the movies: It's a Wonderful Life, Miracle on 34th Street, and others."

While expressing all these thoughts, at the same time everybody seemed to really enjoy Hanukkah--especially the family time and attention to children.

I suggested to the group that what I was hearing was not exactly a "December dilemma," because the tone in general seemed to be more or less neutral. Christmas just did not seem to pose that big a problem for most of them.

One person then said, "for me the dilemma is being different and how different do I want to be?"

I bold face this comment, because I think this person summarized much of the experience of being a Jew living as a minority--which describes all of us Jews who live outside of Israel. Christmas being the "high holiday" of the Christian world brings out our differences in no uncertain terms--in bold face so to speak.

In response to all of the above, I want to make 2 points. First is the incredible irony that these two holidays come at the same time. The holiday of Christmas makes so many of us Jews feel so different. So different that many Jews feel compelled to borrow from Christmas--trees, stockings, decorations etc. And some might say in every society where Jews have lived for thousands of years, we have borrowed from the culture and made it part of ours.

Now comes the irony and the conflict: The story of Hanukkah is about NOT ADOPTING the dominant culture! Hanukkah is a celebration of how we as a minority (the Macabees) prevailed against a non-Jewish culture that was being forced upon us!

So how to reconcile this conflict? That brings me to my second point. Dr. Ron Wolfson of the University of Judaism says that the way to deal with this conflict is to recognize that Chistmas is "their party." It is a nice party, but not ours. We can appreciate the other party--even enjoy and learn from it, but this is simply not our party.

Joel Grishaver in his book : 40 Things You Can Do to Save The Jewish People goes a step further--He says--actively go and visit or participate in a non-Jewish friend's Christmas celebration. Have fun, but know and understand, this is not our celebration....then he says invite your non-Jewish friends to come visit and participate in our parties--a shabbat dinner, a passover seder etc. [By the way, Grishaver adds it would be a good idea during Jewish holidays to also visit other Jews (more and less traditional than you) to learn about how and why we Jews celebrate the holidays as we do.]

I will go a step beyond Grishaver, I say that while you are at your non-Jewish friends' homes or if they are in your own home you should celebrate that as a Jew you are different! This is not something to be avoided or to be ashamed of--it is something to be proud of.

Which brings me to my personal rating of Christmas that I promised to reveal. I rate Christmas very high--an 8 or maybe even a 9--I like it a lot! (Though I am certainly not trying to tell you what your rating should be!) And I have a high rating inspite of a number of years of truly terrible and humiliating experiences in public school growing up, where I was one of the few Jewish kids and where the teachers and administration were to say the least--unsympathetic. I consequently have strong feelings about keeping Christmas (and Hanukkah) out of the public schools and other places of government. I must confess, I never did understand how Christmas--the birthday of Christ--became a U.S. National holiday--if ever there was a consitutional violation of church and state this one is pretty obvious!

Still, I can enjoy Christmas as much as I do--in part because I love being Jewish so much. I don't feel conflicted over Christmas because I know where I am different and I am comfortable with the differences. In fact, I feel lucky that I can enjoy the beautiful parts of Christmas (the music, the entertainment,the good cheer of my neighbors and a day off! ) without having to put up with the less pleasant parts of Christmas that so many Christains complain about--like shopping, obligatory get togethers with people they do not like or conversely the depression of being alone etc.

As a proud Jew, I view this time of year as having the best of both worlds. So as I look forward to lighting the candles and celebrating the victory of our Jewish ancestors in their war against the pressure to assimilate I wish you all: Happy Holidays and Chag Sameach! 

Gil



A FRIENDLY COPYRIGHT NOTICE
© Copyright Gil Mann

These columns can be found at www.beingjewish.org.  Not only do I give you permissions to copy these Jewish Email columns...I HOPE YOU WILL and that you share them with others!  All I ask is that you never charge anyone for them and that you also include this little copyright notice.  Thank You!
Ask Gil
Dear Readers: I LOVE READING YOUR EMAIL!!!! SO, if you'd like to say something about this website, the Email of the Week column or have a different Jewish issue/question on your mind please send it in. I am always looking for emails for future columns and a book I am writing (you will remain anonymous, of course). So, please email me at GilMann@BeingJewish.org just click on the blue letters. I look forward to your emails! 

Thanks,
Gil

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