Why Christmas Lights Fill This Jew With Joy — And Dread

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Dwyer

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"I’ve always had an uneasy relationship with the holiday season. Growing up in a town in Northern New Jersey that had very few Jewish families – despite being surrounded by towns that did – I always hated that I had to celebrate Hanukkah instead of Christmas. When December rolled around every year, I was inundated by reminders that I was different from just about everyone else in my class. The downtown was decked in wreaths and lanterns; in our music class we sang carols of all kinds – including religious ones; my classmates sat on Santa’s lap at Willowbrook Mall. Every year, I’d get questions about Hanukkah and how I felt about not celebrating Christmas; I felt like an exhibit at some sort of racially-insensitive museum.

But the thing that got to me the most was when I’d be in the car at night and we turned the corner onto our street. Every house was lit up, the blinking, multicolored incandescent bulbs that were prevalent in the ’70s and ’80s blazing away. Some houses were more subtle, with a string of lights hanging from the gutters, others had Santa’s sleigh landing on the roof. When I saw the homes that had their trees on display in big picture windows, I thought of the warmth of the crackling fire, stockings hanging over the mantle, wrapped gifts under the tree and envisioned opening gifts on Christmas morning . . .

But we also can’t go full-on Christmas in our house. There’s just too much family history that would be betrayed if we put up a tree or put an Elf on the Shelf. Even if I called it an “American Non-Denominational Christmas” and not the celebration of baby Jesus, it just wouldn’t feel right. Even the notion of a twig-shaped, Charlie Brown-style tree would make my mother-in-law’s heart break and my grandmother turn in her grave. So that’s out of the question."
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Read more: https://forward.com/life/faith/390382/why-christmas-lights-fill-this-jew-with-joy-and-dread/]( Read more: https://forward.com/life/faith/390382/why-christmas-lights-fill-this-jew-with-joy-and-dread/)

I thought we were all living in a Great Benthamite Utilitarian Society, where every individual is free to pursue their individualistic concept of pleasure or happiness (i.e., to do his or her “own thing”), and it is absolutely none of my concern or care how my neighbor pursues his own life but apparently that theory does not often correspond with the human reality.🤔

“The rights of conscience we never submitted, we could not submit. We are answerable for them to our God. The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg. … Reason and free enquiry are the only effectual agents against error.”

—Thomas Jefferson: “Notes on the State of Virginia”
 
It sounds like this author’s real problem is that he had an unhappy home life growing up, with parents who not only didn’t do any celebrating for the holiday season, but weren’t getting along in general. I know Jewish people who have a pretty good Hanukkah celebration, and New Years Eve/ Day can be celebrated as a non-denominational fun holiday. There’s even a Jewish equivalent to Elf on the Shelf called “Mensch on a Bench” with a doll that looks kind of like an updated Tevye from “Fiddler on the Roof”.

I’m glad he is getting past his own history to give his daughter a fun time for the holiday.
 
I gave my sis the “Mensch on a Bench” last year and the companion Jewish Grandma this year for Hanukkah. She enjoyed them. The house is decorated with both Hanukkah and Christmas stuff. The outdoor lights will stay lit until Jan 6. Indoor ones too.
 
You might surf on over to the Association of Hebrew Catholics and browse around. It was clear ever since the Incarnation that salvation would be of the Jews. However, it became increasingly clear that the Jews would have great difficulty with that particular manifestation of the Messiah - against expectations.

Have a read of some of the conversion stories, as they were accomplished at tremendous personal cost. My favorite conversion story is that of Fr. Peter Sabbath. He notes that to become Jewish, one must renounce all other faiths and beliefs. For him to become Catholic, he had to renounce nothing.

He very deeply senses the fulfillment of Judaism in Christ.
 
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I bought a Mensch last year after New Years, marked down at a drugstore in Manhattan. I prefer the nice Jewish grandpa figure to that creepy peeper of an Elf.
 
At most it would be religious insensitive museum, Jews can be Christians.
 
Me too–the Mensch sits under the tree during Hanukkah.
I liked the little book that came with it.
The Elf is evil and he rules through fear (scares the carp outta me, anyway)
 
We find ignoring the great festival of the god Mammon quite easy.
 
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