Christmasukkah, or The Miraculous Week-Long Burning of Hot Air

Reagan was right after all. Trees truly are responsible for the massive release of gas into the atmosphere. Witness the great SeaTac Christmas tree debacle, which has exploded into a national pissing match over the so-called "War on Christmas." (Oy, such a terrible burden to wield cultural dominance!)
Well, it's my town, so I couldn't resist weighing in (I held out for days, I swear) on the question of Christmas trees and religious vs. secular vs. "cultural" symbolism in the Postmodern Age -- a familiar theme in Jewish community, as we struggle to survive the rise of consumer culture. Local columnist Robert Jamieson wrote an editorial that I didn't like. Here is the letter I wrote in response:
Mr. Jamieson,
I am Jewish, and I happen to enjoy Christmas/Solstice/Festivus/Chanukah/etc. decorations. I agree with you that the Port's move to take down the trees was an unfortunate overreaction, though I think the general litigiousness of our culture is as much to blame as any decision-maker at the Port.
That said, I think it's way too easy -- and a mark of Christian privilege -- for you to say that Christmas trees are an innocuous universal symbol of "peace, hope and cheer" that everyone should just shut up and get behind. I can hear some good old boy in Georgia saying practically the same thing about the Confederate flag: its origins predate Southern slavery and it is meant to symbolize regional history and pride, so detractors are just party-poopers vying for attention.
Christmas Day was still a traditional day of pogroms in Jewish villages long after Emancipation. Unfortunately, the most generous holiday spirit of Christians today cannot erase the baggage of their cultural symbols for minorities who have legitimate reason to feel very differently about them.
We all value living in a diverse and tolerant community. The Jewish community is not protesting the celebration of Christian cultural heritage in public places. Why would you protest members of our community seeking to celebrate our heritage in kind? How would that ruin Christmas?
Respectfully,
Joel Rothschild
Seattle
I wrote the same thing into a local radio program on which a caller had expressed a view matching Jamieson's, and I attached a semantic footnote that, looking at it again, I find interesting and potentially useful:
I think it's way too easy (and a little bigoted) for secular Christians to say that the Christmas tree is a "secular" symbol while the holiday symbols of minority cultures are "religious." Both the Christmas tree and the Menorah are religious symbols. They are also both more than religious symbols: They are cultural symbols as well, and in that capacity the Supreme Court has permitted both to be celebrated in the public sphere.
I have often in years past found myself frustrated by the combative attitude of fellow Jews toward public expressions of the "Christmas spirit." I never said anything before, because I couldn't articulate my objection, other than to say it seems a petty fight to pick relative to the gravity of other concerns. (Perhaps that is just easy for me to say, not being a parent faced with the assimilationist vacuum-suck of glittery lights and heaps of new toys.)
Now I see that my uneasiness is with making a complex issue so black-and-white. How can we say that religious expression is oppressive, therefore it must remain private (tell me if this sounds familiar: "I have nothing against Christian people, but why do they have to do that in public? why are they promoting their sick agenda in my children's schools?"), whereas secular expression is somehow inherently neutral? Does it make sense to protest wreaths and lights in schools, and to not protest the equally Christian (and more powerful) English language?
It seems to me that there is a fine yet crucial line between fighting oppression, which is necessary, and fighting history, which is absurd. To return to SeaTac airport as a case in point, it is worth noting that there are religious articles on display there year-round -- local Native American art and artifacts -- to which no one (as far as I know) has ever objected. They bear annotations, museum-style, which neutralizes any implication that SeaTac airport is affiliated with or endorses the culture they represent.
I am firmly of the "Knowledge Is Power" camp, so I think that ignorance (likewise denial) is the surest mechanism of oppression. What would we accomplish by stripping Christianity's visible signs from our public sphere? Would it be easier or harder then for our children to identify Christian culture and its influence in their world?
The most pernicious sin of Christendom is the belief that its language is as universal as its desires. Therefore, the most subversive answer to Christianity's historical hegemony is to put its language in quotes.
SeaTac without Christmas trees is still the gateway to a community that is, no matter how secular, in largest part culturally Christian. Removing the trees from public spaces won't make them any less visible in all of the private stores and living room windows around the city, nor will it teach our children anything about our history and circumstances. Adding a Menorah (a Chabad Menorah, no less) to a Christmas tree display would at least signal the inclusion of other cultures in the community, but it would also risk further confusing Chanukah with Christmas.
Now imagine SeaTac with Christmas trees in a conspicuously annotated display. People who like Christmas trees would still see their beloved seasonal decor. Others would see an objectified statement of fact: that Christianity is a significant influence within this community, not the One True Faith, but one group's expression of faith, with its debatable aesthetics and historical baggage just like any other's.
If we would invest our zealous iconoclasm in forcing Christian culture to contextualize itself, rather than trying in vain to shame it into silence, we could ultimately do much more to neutralize the means of dominance. Perhaps we could also avoid offering Judaism up as the pawn between secular and religious factions of Christendom.

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i applaud your letter in general, but i think the third paragraph was unclear & assumed too much that the readers are on the same page as you.
pogrom? capital-e emancipation? i really wouldn't assume an american christian is conversant in these terms. & i think it would really put one on the defensive if it weren't explained more extensively.
i kinda come down on the side of no christmas trees, over christmas-tree-plus-menorah.... because it equates the two holidays, & it just holds up two privileged religions instead of one. but i am also in general not bothered enough by christmas trees to give christianists something to get their undies in a bunch over.
By murm, at 11:37 PM
pogrom? capital-e emancipation? i really wouldn't assume an american christian is conversant in these terms.
I probably should have written that paragraph's first sentence more like this:
Even after the Emancipation of Southern slaves, Jewish communities in Europe could still expect traditional Christmas Day pogroms.
i kinda come down on the side of no christmas trees, over christmas-tree-plus-menorah...
I am of two minds on the Menorah question. I agree with your objections -- implicit equation of Chanukah and Christmas, and validation of Christian culture's exercise of privilege. Further, I am suspicious of the impulse to take an interior, home-based ritual and thrust it into public space, which seems potentially ... crass. And I am particularly suspicious of the initiative coming from Chabad, who are all about pushing their own brand logo (which, remember, is a menorah) for political/marketing purposes within Jewish community. I really do wonder what menorah Bogomilsky had in mind when he approached the Port.
On the other hand, I support the idea of decorating public facilities with celebrations of the community's diversity; and I think it is particularly constructive to acknowledge the extent to which Festivus and the Festival of Lights do represent something that we (Jews) have in common with other communities in our midst -- that is, we all understand the spiritual significance of light in the time of darkness. Celebrating common interests in a diverse community is important. It just needs to be done fairly and honestly. Meanwhile, people are complaining that the Port shouldn't be acting as a cultural curator. I think it's sort of a silly complaint when that train left the station long ago. SeaTac airport is already full of art and artifacts of all kinds, for the purpose of beautifying the place and celebrating the community it represents. I think that is as it should be.
[..] to give christianists something to get their undies in a bunch over
Heehee! "Christianists." I love it! This is a word that should be in much wider circulation. (Maybe it is in the Islamic world and we just don't see it here?)
By Yoel Natan, at 2:34 PM
i got christianists from the lefty blog i frequent, you know, the one that is also sci-fi. the etymology is as you surmised. i also feel it is very appropriate.
& yeah, it would make me very happy if the kept track of all the holidays of local religions, all year round, & put up appropriate displays. i love seeing diwali & chinese new year stuff up around here.....
By murm, at 2:46 PM