http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/86270/sh...know-what/
According to this post: http://www.kveller.com/blog/parenting/ac...f221dd6a3c
Fortunately there was a different side linked in:
http://www.kveller.com/blog/parenting/we...-hanukkah/
I feel like these arguments turn into a huge sort of No-True-Scotsman fallacy about the holidays.
Quote:Basically, no.
According to this post: http://www.kveller.com/blog/parenting/ac...f221dd6a3c
Quote:Look, you want to sing some of the carols on your own time? Okay; one time our class (private non-sectarian school) learned “Dona Nobis Pacem,” which is a beautiful song, and went around singing it door-to-door around the holiday season, and that was nice. If you’re at a Christian person’s party and there are Christmas accoutrements, be nice and ecumenical about it—you’re a guest! Drink the eggnog, suck the candy cane, have a slice of the ham (well, maybe not the ham, but you get the idea). If there’s a mistletoe and there’s a special someone you want to kiss under it, go indulge yourselves, you crazy kids, you.
Quote:But as far as celebrating Christmas religiously, or singing carols on that day with your family, or even, yes, having a tree in the home, well—and I hate to condescend or feel like I can tell you what to do despite the fact that I don’t even know you—if you’re Jewish you really shouldn’t be doing it. It’s not because it conflicts with Hanukkah, which is indeed a minor holiday. (Want to be Jewish and not celebrate Hanukkah? Go nuts.) And it’s not okay just to do the minimal, seemingly non-religious things (like the tree). Those things are just as important to avoid: they are symbols, and thus even purer expressions of how you convey yourself to yourself, your family, and the rest of the world. Christmas is a wonderful time of year because it reminds you of the blandishments of your identity, and indeed that identity is wildly flexible. But that flexibility and those blandishments depend on some limit, without which nobody has anything. That limit matters. And celebrating Christmas is beyond that limit.
Fortunately there was a different side linked in:
http://www.kveller.com/blog/parenting/we...-hanukkah/
Quote:Our mostly agnostic family celebrates both Jewish and Christian holidays, despite the fact that such cross-practice is technically anathema to both religions. We shamelessly pick and choose religio-cultural traditions and implement them willy-nilly. Here’s why, and how, and why it should be okay
I feel like these arguments turn into a huge sort of No-True-Scotsman fallacy about the holidays.