WebNote: Pat Buchanan wrote this column back in December 2001. It
is one of my favorites and is posted today as as we observe this
Christmas season of 2014.
By Patrick J. Buchanan – December 21, 2001
When I was a boy, Kensington was a village half an hour north of
Chevy Chase Circle where, inside an ice-cold armory, Catholic kids
practiced basketball. Montgomery County was a bedroom suburb of D.C.
Nothing beyond existed, except for the Rockville drive-in.
This fall, both precincts became world-famous as citadels of wacko
liberalism. The Montgomery County Council voted to fine homeowners $500
who let cigarette smoke escape into neighbors’ houses. And the
Kensington council voted to purge Santa from its 30-year-old tradition
of lighting a pine tree in front of town hall.
Why did the Kensington Taliban expel St. Nick? Says the mayor:
“Because two families felt that they would be uncomfortable with Santa
Claus being a part of the event.” Ebeneezer Scrooge felt the same way.
Now this may not be in the Christmas spirit, but it needs to be said –
as writer Tom Piatak says it so well in Chronicles. The spirit that
seeks to purge Santa, and has already purged Christ from Christmas, is
not a spirit of tolerance, but a spirit of “hatred, resentment and
envy.”
And why should a tiny few who resent Christmas prevail in America over the great joyous majority who love it?
Multiculturalists say Christmas celebrations cause “non-Christians to
feel ‘left out.’ I am skeptical, but even if the multiculturalists are
right,” says Piatak, “how much should we worry about those who feel left
out. … We cannot forever shield non-Christians from the reality that
they are a minority in America, and suppressing the observances of the
majority seems a high price to pay to allow overly sensitive souls to
live in comfortable delusion.”
Moreover, he adds, “Christmas in America was never marked by pogroms
or expressions of hatred, but by countless acts of charity and kindness.
… The public celebration of Christmas was capable of being enjoyed by
non-Christians as well as Christians, and almost everyone did enjoy at
least some of it. I know of non-Christians who enjoy Christmas specials,
Christmas movies, Christmas music.”
Under true tolerance, schoolchildren whose parents do not wish for
them to take part in Christmas carols, pageants or plays would be
exempt, but all non-Christians would be invited to join in.
But, as multiculturalists know, the result of free choice would be
the almost-universal celebration of Christmas in public. And this they
cannot abide, for their agenda is to purge from public life the
Christian faith that gave birth to Western civilization. For they
believe Western civilization was a blight upon mankind. As that great
multiculturalist Jesse Jackson put it, “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Western Civ
has got to go!”
“Europe is the faith, the faith is Europe,” asserted the Catholic
writer Hillaire Belloc. Piatak echoes Belloc. Christmas “has been the
principal holiday of the world’s most creative civilization for over a
millennium. It has inspired a profusion of art, architecture, literature
and music; a love of Christmas can lead to a deeper love of our whole
civilization. Giotto never painted a Kwanzaa scene, Bach did not write a
Hannukah oratorio, and Dickens did not pen ‘A Ramadan Carol.’ And no
one comparable to them did, either.”
Indeed, the birth of Christ has inspired more great paintings, music
and sculpture than any event in history. “Ultimately,” writes Piatak,
“we should be free to celebrate Christmas publicly and joyously, because
it is a great holiday, and because it is our holiday and one of the
crowning glories of Western culture that gave birth to America and
sustains us still.”
But why, then, are we not free to do so? Why may we not celebrate, as
we did for 200 years, the birth of our Savior, the day God became man
to open up for us the gates of heaven and bring mankind the hope of
eternal salvation?
Answer: Because our Constitution has been hijacked by bigots in black
robes, who perverted it to de-Christianize America. And we let them get
away with it. Second, because Christians have become an intimidated
lot, who will permit themselves to be pushed around and even permit
their Savior to go uncelebrated for fear of being called insensitive.
But if we do not proclaim the Son of God, will He proclaim us before the
Father in heaven?
If Jesus was truly God, and the first Christmas was the day he was
born of the Virgin Mary, and He came into the world for our salvation,
what does it say about us that we would permit a handful of unhappy
people to deny us the right to celebrate His birth in our public
squares?
But, nevertheless, “God rest ye merry gentlemen, let nothing ye dismay” – not even the ACLU on this coming Christmas Day.
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