Chrismahanukwanzadan

Happy holidays from a pluralistic world! Whenever I see the “Keep Christ in Christmas” signs that crop up this time of year, I think of the wonderful profusion of holidays that people from most faiths can share without being territorial about it. After all, the Pagans got there first—the Christian Christmas predates Jesus by centuries, it turns out. So when my daughter wished me a happy Chrismahanukwanzadan—from a mix of Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and Ramadan—I had to smile. Seems like some in the younger generation are really starting to get it. It doesn’t matter what you call it, but a holiday that celebrates people getting along is worth the effort. Being possessive of our holidays rings of hollow triumphalism—I feel happy because I have something that you don’t. Is this really the spirit of this secular season of giving wrapped in many confessional names? I’m sure shepherds and Magi didn’t exactly share a Weltanschuung.

Those who despair the lack of Christmas have not spent much time with history. As a cultural holiday the celebration of Christmas is younger than the United States, at least in this context. From the beginning Christmas was a pastiche of traditions from different religions celebrating aspects of Odin, Sol Invictus, Jesus, and Zarathustra, at the very least. Bringing these religious figures together into a season that represents the human need for light amid a dark and cold time of year, who would want to exclude others from their own holiday traditions? Having stood in the bleak fields of the Orkney Islands in a massive stone circle aligned to the winter solstice and constructed over a millennium before the birth of Christianity, I have to believe Christmas is one of the earliest expressions of human desire and certainly not limited to Christians.

What makes a holiday holy? Is it exclusive rights like those slapped on every movie you pop into the DVD player? The trademarking of an idea someone else thought of? Religions have a long history of forsaking the spirit of the law for the letter—its most familiar name is dogma. No matter who came up with the idea of doing what we can to bring a little light back into the dreary world around the time when night seems unending, it is a cause that any person of any religion, or none at all, can fully appreciate. Instead of marking territory, should not those who claim Christmas as their own be glad to share it with all? If the one who’s birth the church proclaims at this time of year in no way improves our outlook to others we might wonder if there should be cause to celebrate at all. My answer, such as it is, is Happy Chrismahanukwanzadan!

A holiday in anyone's book

A holiday in anyone’s book

5 thoughts on “Chrismahanukwanzadan

  1. I agree with your sentiments concerning plurality right up to the point of vocabulary. Diversity is great until it becomes a gray mess of nothing. I’m all for people doing their own thing as long as they don’t steal the name of my thing and pretend I’m the one doing my thing wrong.

    Those old Catholic dudes that commandeered December 25th for the birthday of Christ did one thing right. They came up with their own holiday and gave it a specific name, even if they did decide to share a single day with someone else. But they didn’t say, OK thanks for the holiday, from now on when someone says Happy Winter Solstice that means they are celebrating Christ’s birthday. In time the traditions of the day blended, but one thing has remained the same – there are people who choose December 25th to celebrate Christ’s birth and that celebration is Christmas.

    The media experts, whose priority it is to get us to shop, want to stuff as much as they can into the least amount of marketing dollars. If they can convince us that Christmas is some one size fits all celebration, then they can focus their dollars on promoting Christmas to the exclusion of other traditions. I’m all for Happy Holidays and Seasons Greetings for the purpose of inclusion, but Christmas is Christmas, Hanukkah is Hanukkah and Ramadan is Ramadan etc. etc. etc. etc.

    I’m Jane and you’re Steve. Names matter.

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  2. Ramadan moves all the way around the year, and if it’s aligned with the winter solstice now, that’s just due to moon phases. In 13 years, it will be back. My guess is that the solstice is much more important to those cultures that developed in northern climes (or who depended on agriculture). Each holiday has its own cultural significance, but they’re certainly not all the same.

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  3. Steve Wiggins

    Thanks, Norm–as always, you’re too kind. Annie, thanks for the information. My point is not that they’re all the same; I’m going for something deeper here. DJ, happy Festivus!

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