EU Europe Is Canceling Christmas - Little did you know the Grinch is a Marxist

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An artwork by French street artist James Colomina, depicting a Santa Claus lying on the ground, his head and torso crushed by a huge white gift box adorned with a red ribbon, on the Place de la Republique in Paris, on Dec. 19, 2024

Christmas is a holiday of peace and goodwill. Families come together, angry friends forgive each other, everyone celebrates with a combination of happiness, champagne, and melancholy, and all those things we see in Frank Capra movies. It is difficult for anyone of any religion, or even an agnostic, to be offended by this celebration. But what I find puzzling is that celebrating the holiday with lights and Christmas motifs is now becoming frowned upon not, as one might expect, in Karachi or Mogadishu, but in the heart of Old Europe.
The gradual cancellation of Christmas in countries such as France, Spain, the United Kingdom or Germany is perhaps the most worrying symptom of the West’s renunciation of its Judeo-Christian cultural identity. It is happening at all levels: from governments and city councils to schools and associations. As ever, it’s the secularists of the socialist left, behind the facade of “inclusivity,” who are the most determined to cancel Christmas, which for centuries has been celebrated in style throughout the continent. Indeed, it has been celebrated as a festivity of the union, not segregation, between different peoples. What Ronald Reagan explained simply and in his own unique way, that “Christmas is a holiday that we celebrate not as individuals nor as a nation, but as a human family,” now appears entirely incomprehensible.

Let’s look at some examples of what is happening in Europe. In November, the head teacher of Wherwell Primary School, in Andover, England, informed parents that there would be no reference to Christmas in the school’s traditional festive pantomime, in order to be “inclusive.” Since “Christmas songs were included in the performance,” and some parents usually prevent their children from attending on religious grounds, the head teacher wrote, “We have requested that the show contain no reference to Christmas.” According to the 2021 census, 62.4% of Andover’s then-50,887 residents identified as Christian, compared with 0.6% who are Muslim.

The trend of canceling Christmas in European schools didn’t start this year, it simply spreads from one December to the next like an oil slick at sea. The first major controversy occurred in 2011, when kindergartens and schools in Denmark canceled their traditional Christmas celebrations so as not to offend Muslims, who are already the second-largest religion in the country, and who are densely concentrated in ghettos in large cities.

France, the European country with the most immigrants of Arab origin, has also been de-Christianizing Christmas for years. After the jihadist attack against a Christmas market in Strasbourg in 2018, far from redoubling the defense of freedom and pride in their Christian traditions, political leaders intensified the secularist drift, and this year there are already a majority of French cities whose authorities have decided to eliminate Christian referencing in Christmas celebrations, sometimes going to ridiculous extremes. Nantes is now celebrating its “Winter Journey” (whatever that means), Angers is observing “Winter Suns,” Bordeaux is touting “Bordeaux in festivities,” and Saint Denis is holding a Christmas vacation called “Destination Beautiful Winter” while its mayor celebrates the holiday by shouting “Happy Winter!” The official festive brochure of this French community includes puppets, fire-eaters, craft workshops for children, and no iconic Christian Christmas imagery.

In France, the madness was best captured, ironically, by a French Muslim deliveryman in a video that went viral. In it, he relayed how, on one of his deliveries this year, he noticed that Christmas decorations and nativity scenes were absent at a town hall in the countryside. The mayor told him that the state had sent out instructions that there should be no decorations in city halls, which the Muslim man found “scandalous”: “Our friends the Christians, our brothers, they are in a Christian country. Yes, laïcité, fine. But, no. They have the right to decorate their town hall for their holiday. Mangers don’t bother me … Politicians, you are going to kill France, you are going to kill Christians! It’s crazy!” the man exclaimed.

In Spain things are not much better, perhaps because, as they say there, fish always rots from the head. The prime minister received a lot of criticism this year for his supposed Christmas greeting (“Here’s to a new year full of health, hope and prosperity. Happy holidays”) in which he expressly avoided congratulating Christians on Christmas, while a few months ago he had no qualms about congratulating Muslims by expressly referencing “Ramadan.” Also, several municipalities governed by extreme left mayors have limited to a minimum Christmas decorations in the streets and removed from their festive programs anything that might sound minimally Christian.

Paradoxically, despite the Spanish socialist government’s attempts to turn off Christmas, private life, as so often happens, marches to the beat of its own drum. So-called company Christmas dinners, gatherings where people celebrate such an important date with their work colleagues, and which often end in the wee hours of the morning, are becoming more and more popular and bigger—though not without risk, as Phyllis Diller remarked: “What I don’t like about office Christmas parties is looking for a job the next day.”
These examples of Christmas cancellation in Spain, France, the U.K., or Denmark, can similarly be found in Belgium, Germany, Sweden, and many other European countries. None of this could happen without the European left and social democrats. The same parties that have promoted mass immigration have now pioneered a strange paradox: promoting secularism to expel Christianity from all institutions, starting with the classrooms, and at the same time, attending the constant requests of Muslim communities to promote Islamic teachings and traditions, again, especially in schools.

The main problem with mass Muslim immigration in the West is their very low rate of assimilation in the host cultures. But what’s more dangerous is that native leaders are so determined to deny their own identity, and their Judeo-Christian cultural heritage which should only be a source of pride, and not the burden that seems to weigh them down now.
For years, many private organizations have also been joining in the cultural change. Despite the fact that Christmas season is the most important one of the year for large retailers, many leading European brands have been replacing in their stores any minimally Christian reference with an amalgam of lights, random messages—“hope,” “love,” “happiness”—and mountains of snow in the decoration, since cold and winter have always been the favorite alternative for those who wish to remove themselves from any religious association, for fear of a possible boycott by radical groups.

All this leads us to conclude that the main problem of the West’s cultural and identity decadence lies not so much in external aggressors as in internal betrayals and renunciations. “To the end, I will remain a child of Europe, of worry and of shame; I have no message of hope to deliver,” wrote Michel Houellebecq in Platform, “for the West, I do not feel hatred; at most I feel a great contempt. I know only that every single one of us reeks of selfishness, masochism and death. We have created a system in which it has simply become impossible to live; and what’s more, we continue to export it.”

To restore its confidence and sense of self, the West—each one of its sovereign nations—should look at the way Jews care for, respect, and take pride in their nation, their history, their religion, their traditions. Contrast Europe’s cultural clashes with the peaceful, mutually enriching cultural coexistence offered by the Jewish experience in the United States. It is no accident that some of the most beautiful and melancholy Christmas songs have come from Jewish composers and lyricists such as Irving Berlin, Mel Tormé, Bob Wells, Felix Bernard, Jay Livingston, Ralph Blane, and Johnny Marks.

No Christian would expect these songs to be a loudspeaker for religious beliefs they did not share. Still, these songwriters, immigrants or sons of immigrants desperately eager to assimilate in America and to express their love for it and for its customs, were able to help us all celebrate Christmas and the traditions that we associate with its celebration, including the importance of bringing family together, paying more attention to the disadvantaged, trying to recover lost friendships, or missing our elders, the ancestors who can no longer sit at the table with us on Christmas Eve, and to whom we owe everything we are, including what we are culturally.
Religious beliefs are integral to who we are as human beings. And in a healthy society, harmonious coexistence, and mutual respect between people of different religions of their respective holidays, should be the norm. The capitulation that so many European leaders are spearheading will only embolden radicals and forestall migrant assimilation. And when they come to demand more, the dissolved identity of our people will no longer have the strength to stand up and claim a space of freedom to celebrate the traditions of our own Judeo-Christian heritage. It will then be too late.


Merry Christmas, you degenerates! Keep fighting the good fight!

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The thing is, Christmas is not a Christian holiday. Or at least it didn’t start as one. And its pre-Christian pagan roots are objectionable to many Christians. It’s not just Muslims that don’t celebrate it.

But the half-ass attempts to be “inclusive” about Christmas by removing any mention of Christ doesn’t make it more palatable to the people who object to it. I have always said that people who do celebrate Christmas should celebrate it exactly as they wish, with every single element included, because anyone who doesn’t observe it isn’t suddenly going to be tricked into attending a “Winter Festival” on December 25 anyway. Don’t chip away at your dearly held beliefs for some imaginary “inclusion” that won’t happen anyway.

We don’t all have to celebrate Christmas. I guarantee you that (excepting perhaps extremist Muslims) people who don’t celebrate it generally aren’t the ones going around demanding that it become more inclusive for non-Christians.

In that vein, I hope everyone who is celebrating has a lovely day with their families and friends. I hope it’s the picture perfect Hallmark card of a Christmas you could ever wish for. May your gifts be well-received, may your homes be warm and full of laughter and good food, and may all your kids sleep in until at least 7:30 before they are up and ready to rip into all the wrapping underneath your trees.
 
The thing is, Christmas is not a Christian holiday. Or at least it didn’t start as one. And its pre-Christian pagan roots are objectionable to many Christians. It’s not just Muslims that don’t celebrate it.

But the half-ass attempts to be “inclusive” about Christmas by removing any mention of Christ doesn’t make it more palatable to the people who object to it. I have always said that people who do celebrate Christmas should celebrate it exactly as they wish, with every single element included, because anyone who doesn’t observe it isn’t suddenly going to be tricked into attending a “Winter Festival” on December 25 anyway. Don’t chip away at your dearly held beliefs for some imaginary “inclusion” that won’t happen anyway.

We don’t all have to celebrate Christmas. I guarantee you that (excepting perhaps extremist Muslims) people who don’t celebrate it generally aren’t the ones going around demanding that it become more inclusive for non-Christians.

In that vein, I hope everyone who is celebrating has a lovely day with their families and friends. I hope it’s the picture perfect Hallmark card of a Christmas you could ever wish for. May your gifts be well-received, may your homes be warm and full of laughter and good food, and may all your kids sleep in until at least 7:30 before they are up and ready to rip into all the wrapping underneath your trees.
It is Christian. This misunderstanding comes from a heavily anglo-germanic centric view of history and ignores that Christmas has been a fundamentally Christian holiday since the beginning.

The timing is roughly correct, Jesus' birthday would be between late December and early January. December 25 isn't exactly Jesus' birthday, but Christmas being around that time wasn't a retrofitting of Paganism. Jesus is believed to have died in 33 AD, likely on April 3rd (April 1st in the Gregorian Calendar) given it was a short time after Passover. In older Jewish tradition, a prophet/great religious figure dies on the same day they are conceived. Therefore, add 9 months and you get about January 3rd, only about a week off from Christmas.

Gift giving wasn't something Christianity stole from Saturnalia. Gift giving is just a psychological constant across cultures during winter and isn't unique to Yule or Saturnalia or whatever. Santa Claus was only partially inspired by Odin but primarily is an amalgamation of Father Christmas and the historical Saint Nicholas. Father Christmas was a personification of the Nativity who was first mentioned as "Sir Christmas" in the 14th century to announce the birth of Christ. The gift giving side of Santa was straight from the actual acts of the historical Saint Nicholas of Myra whose feast day is on December 6 and was known for giving gifts to the children and poor.

Likewise the placing of plants, candles, incense, and other home decorations is another psychologically rational constant in any winter holiday to just cheer up the home, it doesn't have to be uniquely some Pagan invention. This is a generally spiritualistic and aesthetic choice of any culture because they don't want the world to be grey, drab, and cold when they don't have to. Christmas Trees themselves were more likely to have come from Lutheran Tradition of setting up Christmas Trees which started as early as 1539, and they were likely inspired by the Catholic Paradise Plays that started in the 12th century that were done in December 24 which involved Adam and Eve and the Tree of Life.

Christmas Carols directly come from the singing of Nativity hymns like "Veni redemptor gentium."

Only does the most modern and commercialized versions of Christmas with Santa being a germanic toymaker in the north pole with elves and reindeer ever actually evoke Paganism.

Similar things can be said about Halloween and Easter. Germanic countries are so colored by how Christianity developed there, add in a pinch of Protestant ignorance of Ecclesiatic history and now everything is just a pagan ripoff.
 
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Then again, americans have been saying 'Happy Holidays' instead of 'Merry Christmas' for who knows how many years.
 
Likewise the placing of plants, candles, incense, and other home decorations is another psychologically rational constant in any winter holiday to just cheer up the home, it doesn't have to be uniquely some Pagan invention.
And it doesn't even matter, worthwhile "pagan" traditions and cultural practices were readily sanctified and modified into Christian practices because they showed the innate longing for God, beauty and truth in the era before Christ. Pretty much all of the modern opposition that comes from cults like the JWs and other radical groups who often don't even have a valid baptism (making them not even Christian, ironically enough).

Numerous pagan temples across the Roman world were consecrated and converted into churches during Late Antiquity, including the Pantheon in Rome.
 
The thing is, Christmas is not a Christian holiday. Or at least it didn’t start as one. And its pre-Christian pagan roots are objectionable to many Christians. It’s not just Muslims that don’t celebrate it.
I regret to inform you that the hubbub about Christmas and Halloween being pagan is bullshit historical revisionism and weally-linked supposition by "historians" with axes to grind.
 
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