Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Let's celebrate politically correctly in every way.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Let's celebrate politically correctly in every way.

    Let's celebrate politically correctly in every way.

    The Free Lance-Star, VA
    Dec 18 2004


    Goodwill to men, women, kids, humanoids

    THE PIOUS FOLK who exhorted their countrymen to "put the Christ back
    in Christmas" have lost. How badly? Not only is the "Christ-" not
    there, neither is the "-mas." The very phrase "Merry Christmas!"
    seems to be disappearing from general usage. People now attend
    "holiday parties," post "season's greetings," and exchange wishes of
    "Happy holidays." This is a good start toward peaceful coexistence in
    our beloved multicultural nation, Bosnia. We mean, America.

    After all, many of us do not celebrate Christmas. This minority
    includes Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, some Unitarians, atheists, and
    agnostics. Even among Christian sects, one finds non-celebrants, such
    as the Jehovah's Witnesses, and churches that observe the feast on a
    different day than Dec. 25, such as the Armenian Orthodox, whose
    Christmas arrives on Jan. 6. So, clearly, "Christmas" is a term of
    exclusion that should be retired in our outreaching society. That, as
    we say, is a good start--but only a start.

    When deconstructed, the adjective "Merry" is also (if we may make a
    "value judgment") mean-spirited. Not everyone is merry. It's easy for
    high extroverts on the Myers-Briggs personality grid to exude
    "merriness." They could do that even if staked out on an anthill. But
    what about high introverts? Why should we bully them to be something
    they're not? Don't they have a right to be reserved and to celebrate
    the holidays without a lot of demonstrative hoopla? And when we say
    "Merry Christmas," aren't we being insensitive to the individual who
    has suffered a personal tragedy, such as the news that his spouse is
    in possession of photographs taken by a private detective outside the
    window of a Hotel 8? "Merry" indeed.

    But banishing the entire phrase "Merry Christmas" still leaves the
    holidays potentially hurtful as long as the callous shout, "Happy New
    Year!" "Happy," of course, is vulnerable to the same criticisms that
    DQ "Merry," but "New Year" is no innocent. It's laden with "cultural
    imperialism," a phrase we learned long ago in college from a
    professor who should be getting out of the pen any day now for
    burning down the ROTC building.

    Pagan-Americans, for example, typically mark their new year in the
    spring. Does anyone care about them? The Jewish new year of Rosh
    Hashana falls in the, well, fall, while Muslims use a different
    calendar than the Gregorian version--named after a pope, no less,
    which can't sit well with Lynchburg, Va.--and, because it's lunar,
    ring in the new year on many different dates. And don't go trying to
    swap "New Year" for "2005," Mr. Bigot. To traditional Chinese, it's
    the 22nd Year in the 78th Cycle.

    Now, we're not telling you all this to rob the season of spontaneity
    or good feeling (though one's feelings are certainly a private
    affair), but only to instill in you a proper respect for your fellow
    (pardon the sexist term) American. On the contrary, we shout to one
    and all:

    Unemotional Holiday and Disaffective Solstice!

    And the Cosmic Force bless us, every one.
Working...
X