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Re: Holiday Music



Reyzl,

Thanks for your response.  I think that we agree almost entirely.

But I still think that if "Holiday Music" is the politically correct term
for Christmas music, it is an example of political correctness gone awry.
Say what you mean and mean what you say is what I think.

If the true intent were to display "Holiday Music" we could look forward to
a year-round "Holiday Music" display that would have music for Purim,
Passover, Shavuot, the Yamim Noraim, and Sukkot as part of an annual cycle
(rather than only a seasonal showcase from Thanksgiving to Christmas).

If not, the term "Holiday Music" is at best disingenuous and at worst
insulting, as though we Jews either have no other important holidays or have
no significant music recorded for them.  Our group could easily prove the
latter claim wrong.

Perhaps I am overreacting to what goes on in the super chains.  After all,
maybe the result will be more people going to Judaica shops for their
purchases and will have their eyes opened to the wealth of material
available today.

On the other hand, most Jews and non-Jews will simply assume that Jews don't
make music about being Jewish.  And if the record store owners know better
(and they certainly should), to suggest in their Christmas-only "Holiday
Music" displays that the only holiday worth singing about is Christmas does
offend me.

I think that this thread and the comments about Jews and Christian music may
not be too far apart.  We all know how important a role Jewish music can
play in one's life, but most people (again, both Jews and non-Jews) probably
think that it includes not much more than the Hora.  So they satisfy their
human need for music at this time of year with the music most readily
available, even if it is limited to Christmas elevator music, the top 100,
and Handel's Messiah.

Bob Wiener

From: Reyzl Kalifowicz-Waletzky <reyzl (at) flash(dot)net>
To: World music from a Jewish slant. <jewish-music (at) shamash(dot)org>
Date: Tuesday, December 15, 1998 1:34 PM
Subject: RE: Holiday Music


>I believe that there is
>a Jewish tradition and a Christian tradition, but no Judeo-Christian
>tradition.  That is the message of Hanukah to me.

I totally agree, but you don't need to get offended by the attempt for store
owners to be politically correct.  It's difficult for them and things get
confusing.   I have had to explain to friends that I don't send out or
reciprocate Hanukah cards we receive because that is not a Jewish tradition.
My neighbors get Christmas cards and holiday greetings, but Jews get nothing
and I don't want anything either.  My kids get/got no Hanukah gifts only a
one-time giving of Hanukah gelt unless it's a Jewish book or CD.  No ands,
buts, or ors about that.
There is the constant attempt to equalize Hanukah with Christmas in America
which is very offensive to me as a Jew, a holiday that celebrates the
refusal to assimilate.   Why don't they make a fuss about Shavuous, a
holiday that deserves a fuss, but most Americans haven't even heard of it.
Maybe that's what we can do, gather/build new repertoires for Shavuous.
Jews in Europe used to decorate the insides of their homes with greenery and
(sephardic tradition) roses the way non-Jews do their homes at Christmas
time, but this tradition seems to have been totally forgotten in America.


Reyzl





----------
From:  robert wiener[SMTP:wiener (at) mindspring(dot)com]
Sent:  Tuesday, December 15, 1998 7:27 AM
To:  World music from a Jewish slant.
Cc:  wiener, susan; wiener, jack ralph; gold, jacqueline sabina; androphy,
ronald l.; androphy, ezra
Subject:  Holiday Music

I hate going into record stores this time of year.  Even before
Thanksgiving, Tower has a display of "Holiday Music".  The label offends me.
Maybe it is an attempt to be multi-cultural, acknowledge diversity, and not
offend non-Christians.  But I don't think so, and that is not the effect on
me.

In fact, "Holiday Music" is simply the politically correct term for
"Christmas Music".  Enter the emporium, look at the CDs on the wall(even on
Manhattan's Upper West Side), and count how many Hanukah (or Kwanzaa)
recordings there are.

This is no competition (and as our discussion of Hanukah recordings shows,
general record stores carry only a tiny portion of what is available), but
these displays (and the way Hanukah is depicted in the media) makes it seem
that we're all in this holiday season together, that it is something that we
have in common.

Perhaps some Jews feel left out of the seasonal festivities.  If so, I think
that's a good thing.  Hanukah is not the Jewish Christmas.  Even to display
Hanukah recordings prominently in a Holiday Music section elevates it above
the many more important Jewish holidays and thus demeans them.   I hope that
we as Jews don't feel the need to mimic Christian practices to feel proud of
our own heritage.  (One of my students was shocked when I asserted that
giving a present each night of Hanukah is about as Jewish as a Hanukah
bush.)

Appreciate the aesthetic beauty of Christmas music, but be mindful that even
something as apparently innocuous as the red stripe of the candy cane
symbolizes the blood of Jesus.  Even if Christians claim that they are the
"new Israel" that doesn't make us the "old Israel".  I believe that there is
a Jewish tradition and a Christian tradition, but no Judeo-Christian
tradition.  That is the message of Hanukah to me.

Bob Wiener



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