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Because the holiday being celebrated is Christmas, not the winter solstice or Chanukah. It's not any more offensive than Jewish majority areas celebrating the latter, or Islamic areas celebrating Eid Al Fitr. It's a traditional European holiday and schools have every right to celebrate it if they want. Those other kids aren't forced to join if they don't desire to. Christians celebrating Christian holidays in Christian areas is called tradition, not exceptionalism, and it's not hurting anyone.It seems that renaming it a winter solstice or holiday recital wasn't acceptable to the school. If so, that smacks of Christian exceptionalism - the idea that one religion or tradition should enjoy more privilege than the others.
It seems that renaming it a winter solstice or holiday recital wasn't acceptable to the school. If so, that smacks of Christian exceptionalism - the idea that one religion or tradition should enjoy more privilege than the others.
And the so called "offended parties" should be learning to accept the cultural and religious differences of each other.
Often it is some PC do-gooder who decides other people will be offended, rather than the people who are supposed to be offended themselves who instigate such actions. The people who are being 'protected' from offence usually have no problem with the majority celebrating their cultural traditions as they have cultural traditions of their own that they also value.
Because the holiday being celebrated is Christmas, not the winter solstice or Chanukah. It's not any more offensive than Jewish majority areas celebrating the latter, or Islamic areas celebrating Eid Al Fitr. It's a traditional European holiday and schools have every right to celebrate it if they want. Those other kids aren't forced to join if they don't desire to. Christians celebrating Christian holidays in Christian areas is called tradition, not exceptionalism, and it's not hurting anyone.
If the spirit of Christmas is to bring people together
. If so, that smacks of Christian exceptionalism - the idea that one religion or tradition should enjoy more privilege than the others.
Because the holiday being celebrated is Christmas
It's a traditional European holiday and schools have every right to celebrate it if they want.
Christians celebrating Christian holidays in Christian areas is called tradition, not exceptionalism, and it's not hurting anyone.
If the spirit of Christmas is to bring people together it's these yahoos that are destroying it.
If that's what you want to take from it, that's fine, and telling people what Christmas is about to you, is also good, but don't exclude what Christmas means to other people, that very thought process is one of the major issues that is causing this regression.But it's not. It's to celebrate the birth of the J-guy.
There is no reason why the recital needs to include other religions. Italy is a Catholic country and celebrates Catholic traditions and holidays. It has nothing to do with where the money comes from, but the culture and the background, the tradition and the familiarity. Inclusivity waters it down and makes it no longer Christmas, which, as I said before, is what is being celebrated. This is how majority religious countries work. Christian countries celebrate Christian festivals and non-Christian ones don't. It doesn't matter how people feel about that. I can also turn to some people and say, Well, this is a Christian country, so you ought to celebrate your non-Christian festivals in private.Apparently, others think that the recital should be more inclusive. The article wasn't clear about whether the school in question received public funds, but if it did, then those others have a say in how that money is spent.
Many people including some Christians believe that if Christians want to celebrate Christmas exclusively, they should do so in private spaces on their own dime, not using public funds.
This is how democracies and free markets work. For as long as the church could impose Christian-only values onto society, it did. Apparently, now the counter-forces are powerful enough to impose their wills enough to force the school in question to offer an inclusive event or incur potential social and economic repercussions.
The problem was they were afraid of offending a non-existent party because nobody claimed to be offended.Agreed. And the school opted out. They made a choice. What's the problem?
Celebrating Christmas in a majority Christian country is not a problem. Sure, it's a privilege for Christians, but it's because their faith is dominant in that country so that's just how it works. Other people just need to get over that. Channukah is upcoming soon and because I live in England, I won't be finding menorahs or dreidels anytime soon, nor will I be hearing local children singing Jewish hymns. That's not oppression, that's called living in a Christian country.Hurting others isn't the issue, and traditions change. Remember when Christmas was a desert holiday featuring camels and mangers? Well, now its an ice holiday featuring decorated evergreens, and tinsel and flocking to simulate ice and snow. Bethlehem became the North Pole, and the Magi, Baby Jesus, Joseph and Mary were replaced by Santa, elves, Frosty and Rudolph.
Regarding exceptionalism,
Isn't that what's happening here?
- "The problem with being privileged your whole life is that because you have had that privilege for so long, equality starts to look like oppression." - Mark Caddo
Nothing is being destroyed. Society is evolving and being transformed in the process.
Also, the spirit of Christmas is not meaningful to non-Christians just as Christians probably don't have much interest in the spirit of Kwanzaa or Festivus.
Nor is unity an exclusively Christian value, and probably not a Christian value at all, which is likely the reason that if the school can't honor an exclusively Christian holiday, then it would rather cancel the event. What is the message there?
Well, this is a Christian country, so you ought to celebrate your non-Christian festivals in private.