The old adage says 'tis better to give than to receive. Christian
Europeans
must think so, we currently dominate the "giving" market to near
monopoly. Some of us, though, are just a little reluctant to admit that
our premier holiday,
with its message of peace on earth, good will toward men, could really
induce paroxysms of agonised torment and loathing unseen since Hammer
Films
introduced Dracula to the crucifix. This year, Scrooge Inc. is urging
people
to "do the right thing" and refrain from sending Christmas cards
-- to save the planet. What cards do survive are purged of Christian
iconography,
and come out of the cultural autoclave piping hot and pasteurised to a
cloying oiliness usually confined to cheese spread. Our nativity scenes
and carolling, so excruciatingly painful, have been replaced by a lavish
smorgasbord of op-ed items reminding us that the real blessing of the
season
is exposure to a panoply of cultures and celebrations innately superior
to our own. Canada boasts the fastest growing Jewish community outside
Israel, a mushrooming North American Muslim population expected to eclipse
Jewish numbers by the millennium, and the largest (Halifax) non-Asian
Buddhist
community in the world. You may be tempted to ask, "What's the church
doing?". Several ecumenical groups are sponsoring flagellant pilgrims
on a tour of the Middle East to apologise for the Crusades. If they happen
to be grovelling near the seat of all Christendom, let them gaze in silent
awe at Bethlehem's Manger Square -- now an asphalt surfaced parking lot.
Shall we hang the holly, or each other? Christmas is difficult to
defend,
because however much we may love our traditions, the church has really
only abandoned its centuries-long persecution of "pagan" heretics
in order to cannibalise itself.. According to the Population Reference
Bureau, there are 2 billion persons in the world under the age of 18. Of
these, 85 per cent are Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist or Jewish. Thus, at an
excessively
generous estimate, a mere 378 million humans (no indication what portion
are European) may or may not perpetuate our belief system. The message
is the same as ever: we cannot defend what we do not know.
At the dawn of
history Europe was a dark forest. For men and women rooted in, and wholly
dependent upon nature's provender, the ever darker and colder days must
have made this a season of terrors. Deepening winter meant food shortages
as vegetation succumbed
to the cold and shortened days restricted the hunt. Later pastoralists
would be compelled to slaughter some of their valuable animals as pastures
were smothered under snow. What likely began as an act of sheer
desperation
(propitiation rites to coax back the waning life-giver) were formalized
when one of history's nameless
geniuses realised that the course of the sun could be not only be plotted,
but the day of it's return accurately predicted. Europe's monolithic
standing
stones and observatories bear silent witness to the power these ideas had
for our forebears. More remarkably durable, is the cultural persistence
of this legacy. For all their celebrated differences, pre-Christian Yule
and our Christmas are more like than unlike; from themes of hope and
redemption
to external trappings, the two are clearly kindred feasts.
The word Yule
comes from the Norse Jul, meaning wheel. The ancient Europeans saw time
as a cyclic, as opposed to a linear event. You can see that in merely
marking
equinox and solstice, their (apparently) "controversial" sun
wheel formed the foundations for both swastika and the (apparently)
"objectionable" Celtic cross. One of the recurrent themes in
Sir James Frazer's seminal study of mythology, The Golden
Bough, was the ritual slaying of the old king by the new. Since his great
book was originally published 1890, perhaps we can be generous (just this
once) and forgive the now unforgivable terminology. Frazer named the oak
the "pre-eminently sacred tree of the Aryans ... its worship is attested
for all the great branches of the Aryan stock in Europe." (Macmillan,
1963 p. 870). The point is that Yule represented the rebirth of the Oak
King, as much as that of the sun. Solstice was the occasion for the young
Oak King (summer) to slay the ageing Holly King (winter). Yule blended
elements of both Christmas and the New Year. Taking stock of the previous
year, swearing oaths, and making resolutions would have been as familiar
to our European forefathers as the image of the aged old year being
unceremoniously
hustled off stage to make way for the New Year's baby.
Celts, Norse and Teutons considered trees the earthly representatives
of the gods. Sacrificing a Yule log to the dying
sun was a universal practice. Local customs varied from the enormous tree
brought into the Scandinavian home, to the "heavy block of oak fitted
into the floor of the hearth, where, though it glowed under the fire, it
was hardly reduced to ashes within a year ... in the valleys of the Sieg
and Lahn" (Frazer, p. 834). The Yule log was decorated with evergreens
and ribbons, and a libation poured over it before the lighting. The
magical
properties attributed to the sacred oak can hardly be over-emphasized.
Each year a brand was rescued from the flames and reserved to rekindle
next year's Yule log. During the interim, it served as a talisman to
protect
the home from a variety of evils, including lightning. The ashes were
carefully
swept from the grate and saved to impart a magical efficacy to a variety
of nostrums.
Holly and
mistletoe were venerable plants because (as evergreens do) they remained
steadfast to triumph over the cold. Moreover, they were powerful enough
to fruit in a bleak and barren season. Holly is still affixed to the door
of our houses without our quite understanding why. It was assumed that
the "points" would snag the evil-intentioned and prevent their
entering. When holly was brought into the house, it became an object of
lively interest and speculation. It was (incorrectly) believed that the
very sharp "pointed" leaves were male, the smoother, female.
Thus, the type of holly determined who should "rule the roost"
in the coming year. Victorian merchant, Henry Mayhew estimated that London
merchants sold 250,000 bushels during the 1851 Christmas (not to imply
there was a lively trade in alternately pointed and smooth leaves).
Mistletoe
has better retained vestiges both of the folk lore and high honours once
accorded to it.
Long called
Allheal, the word "mistletoe" comes to us from the Norse. Where
the oak was a powerful symbol of God, mistletoe was regarded as having
the same dependent relationship to the oak as man's to heaven. Sacred to
both Norse and Celt, this remarkable little plant (the golden bough of
Frazer's title) has survived Christianization more successfully than most,
even to adorning the alter at York Cathedral on Christmas Eve, from which
widespread amnesties were announced. Among pre-Christianized Germans,
mistletoe
served to exorcise ghosts from houses. At this time of year, using a
golden
sickle and making certain none fell to the ground, the Druids cut
mistletoe
branches from a sacred oak, and distributed bunches to each family under
their care. Our kissing tradition was known to the Romans, but even this
likely hearkens back to mistletoe's long association with fertility.
Infusions
were given both to barren women and to those in labour, to relax
childbearing
muscles.
One of the curious features of ancient rites was the wassailing of
the trees. Here, the men of the village went out to the
orchards carrying the wassail bowl, to alternately serenade and browbeat
the apple trees. There were songs, dances and libations (for tree and man)
until finally, in frustration, the trees would be threatened with the axe
if they did not produce well in the coming year. (A temptation not
entirely
unknown to modern gardeners). A newspaper account of 1851 documents
Devonshire
men firing guns (charged only with powder) at the trees. And yet, far from
England, Romanians enacted a virtually identical rite. As the housewife
kneaded a special holiday dough in the kitchen, her husband would pass
through the house on his way to the orchard, in a vile temper. She
followed
anxiously behind as he passed from tree to tree, threatening to cut down
each barren one. She would urge him to especially spare this one or that,
saying: "Oh no, I'm sure this tree will be as heavy with fruit next
year as my hands are with dough this day."
Most of the
things we love about Christmas are old beyond reckoning. The radiant light
and warmth of our homes, the good cheer, generosity and hospitality all
predate Christianity, and are just as likely to outlive oily
commercialism.
The strands, ribbons and garlands tethering our Christmas observances to
older beliefs are an inextricably tangled lot. The Encyclopaedia
Britannica
says: "The traditional customs connected with Christmas have developed
from several sources as a result of the coincidence of the birth of Christ
with the pagan agricultural and solar observances at midwinter." (15th
edition, 1985, "Christmas") But the date assigned to Christ's
birth is no coincidence. The first reference to the date does not occur
until 354 A.D., in a Roman almanac. By then the church had apparently
conceded
that, as with Samhain, converts would bring their beloved customs with
them, and efforts to discredit or dislodge these would merely prove
futile.
Thus in the fourth-century, the first Christian Emperor, Constantine,
assigned
Christ's nativity to December 25.
Strangely unfamiliar to us, and real testimony to the power of
historical
censorship, are uncanny parallels between Christian doctrine and the great
solstice/Roman feast of dies natalis solis invicti (birth of the
invincible
sun). It is not
known whether Mithraic practice was imported from Iran (possibly as a
conduit
from Indo-European tribes further east) or, as the Congress of Mithraic
studies suggested in 1971, it was an entirely new mystery religion, merely
borrowing the name "Mithras". The cult arose in the Mediterranean
world and shared the stage for a time with Christianity, although
Mithraism
was by far the more successful of the two. It was the predominant form
of worship among Roman men of all classes, from emperor to slave. With
it's emphasis on high standards of behaviour; temperance, self-control
and compassion -- even in victory, it established a code of behaviour
congenial
to fighting men. It's curious that we are largely ignorant of this
religion
which in so many particulars, seems to have anticipated Christianity. To
save erring humanity from sin, Mithras (the Invincible Sun) was born into
the world to offer adherents salvation. He was born (dies natalis solis
invicti) in a cave, of a virgin mother on December 25 -- a date
established
well in advance of the Christian era. In his fourth-century revisions,
the emperor Constantine also "moved" Christian worship from Saturday
to Sunday, the "venerable day of the sun" of Mithraic devotions.
There is evidence of Mithraic practice from 1,400 B.C. Again like Christ,
Mithras at his death, ascended to heaven. Although in this case, it was
to wield the sun chariot and act as intermediary messenger between man
and the good god of airy light.
Even as the Christian church expanded, it remained impotent in the
face of ingrained habits of feasting and pagan merriment;
so these were routinely "purified", "consecrated" to
Christ, and assigned a higher purpose. In time, the neglected old gods
may have disappeared, but their legacy is decidedly with us to this day.
Most of our Christmas traditions were well established by the Middle Ages,
when miracle plays relied upon a single piece of scenery; the decorated
"paradise" tree. This is the most likely progenitor of our Christmas
tree. A more fanciful
source describes St. Boniface's 8th century efforts to convert the heathen
German. Happening across a group of idolaters near a venerable old oak,
he felled their sacred tree in a rage. As he did so, a small fir tree
sprang
forth. The convenient miracle (and shape of the tree) served rather nicely
for a first lesson on the nature of the Trinity. That region, Thuringia,
was to become the cradle of an enormous Christmas decorations industry.
A Christmas tree in the German home was a relative commonplace by the 16th
century. Martin Luther is credited with illuminating more than the
Protestant
world. Amazed at the brilliance of stars twinkling through fir boughs,
he attached candles to the family tree when he arrived home in an effort
to replicate the effect for his children. From Tannenbaum to tinsel (of
real silver, invented in 1610), no country has taken Christmas to heart
as Germany has, and no country has contributed to the Christmas canon with
the same infallible charm and genius. In 1841, Prince Albert and Queen
Victoria's enthusiasm for their Christmas tree gentrified what had up 'til
then, been regarded as a peculiar German eccentricity. And the British
ran with it. Two years later Charles Dickens' Christmas Carol appeared
for the first time. The first Canadian Christmas tree was introduced by
yet another German, General Von Reidesel, at Sorel, Quebec in 1781.
Christmas,
King of Feasts, has enjoyed a long and uninterrupted reign in Canada; from
the founding of the colony of New France, to this day when -- suddenly
-- all things remotely Christian are either sneered at or simply too
painful
to endure.
The suppression of Christmas is hardly a new phenomenon. It has often
been controversial to the point of prohibition. A great favourite of the
Middle Ages was the Christmas Eve Festival of the Ass, when a young girl
with a babe in arms rode a donkey into the church. Throughout the mass,
prayers ended with a braying hee-haw from priest and congregation alike.
When the church tried to proscribe the practice in the 15th century, it
discovered to its
horror that parishioners were inordinately attached to the blasphemous
liturgy which persisted over many embarrassing years. From the 11th to
17th centuries, Christmas was England's great festival . Records from 1252
show that Henry III had 600 oxen roasted for the feasting. Yet, even then,
fundamentalists were objecting that Christmas was essentially a heathen
solstice festival, only brushed with the thinnest Christian veneer. Worse,
it was quite clearly a popish Christian veneer. In 1562 John Knox outlawed
the feast in Scotland, and under the cold gaze of Oliver Cromwell, the
English Parliament hastened to follow suit in 1644. When the House of
Commons
sat on Christmas day, sheriffs were sent out to ensure businesses remained
open. Pro-Christmas and anti-Christmas factions rioted in the streets.
Thus, when Puritans, Quakers, Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, Baptists,
Methodists,
Mennonites and other "plain folk" emigrated to America, they
arrived with their distaste for the holiday intact. In 1706, a Boston mob
smashed windows in a church holding "heathen" Christmas services.
The term "Xmas"
is not an affront. X is the first letter of the Greek word for Christ
(Xristos).
Early Christians understood that this meant "Christ's mass" in
Greek. But once people were no longer educated in the classical mode, the
term took on a sinister aspect and people were (and remain) convinced that
this was a deliberate smear.For once, it isn't. Boxing Day has nothing
to do with returning gifts. St. Stephen's Day (December 26) was the
traditional
day to empty and distribute alms from church poor boxes. Unknown in the
U.S., Boxing Day is called Kwanzaa.
Another
German invention, the advent calendar dates back to at least 1851.
Beginning
December 1st, excited children open a little door to a poem and treat
every
day, right up to Christmas Eve. The twelve days of Christmas begin on
Christmas
Eve and end on Epiphany, January 6. This idea, like so many others,
predates
Christianity.
Christmas Eve was considered by many Europeans to be a Night of
Miracles.
At the stroke of midnight, farm animals were said to kneel and worship
the miracle of His birth. In a more cynical version, these same animals
acquire the gift of speech and promptly exchange gossip about their
masters
(eavesdropping led to being struck dumb).
German Christmas Eve services introduced the charming custom of cradle
rocking. To emphasize the Christ child's humanity, the alter boys would
enter the precincts of the manger scene, and rock the cradle as they sang
lullabies to the infant. After church, while anxious German children wait
in an ecstasy of torment, their parents lay out the gifts, decorate and
light the tree. When the doors are opened and the shimmering confection
is gasped over (with pails of water standing by) the presents are opened.
A tradition unique to France and Canada is Reveillon, the meal following
Christmas Eve church service. Originally a simple snack, in the Christmas
way, it has ballooned into an elaborately lavish full course dinner.
Common
in English Canada from the late 1800s, it was relatively unknown in rural
Quebec before the 1930s.
Creches seem to
be a source of special anguish to the sensitivity patrol. One suspects
that North America's church foundations are kept in plumb with the sheer
weight of Marys, Josephs, infants, kings, shepherds and animals
permanently
exiled to the basement. What we do have, to excess, are resentful dogs
in the manger. In the U.S., there are creche-bylaws: one giant candy cane
and Frosty the snowman stuffed into a nativity scene may or may not be
enough to mitigate the (apparently) intolerable presence of the Christ
child. And there's the disclaimer option: a visible notice must state that
"this creche is privately sponsored by so-and-so". Without constitutional
guarantees, the Canadian creche has simply vanished. The notable exception
is Riviere Eternite, in the Saguenay Lac Saint Jean region, north of
Quebec
City. Here, the enthusiast can revel in several hundred creche displays
of every possible description from mid-November to mid-January . The
creche
in Canada dates back to the beginning of the colony. The Ursuline nuns
made bee's wax images of the baby Jesus, wreathed in children's hair, from
the time the order first appeared in the New World. Creches have
disappeared
relatively recently, once again, succumbing to "pouting power"
and the forces of political correctitude.
Rescued from 1755 fire
Raising our
voices to sing traditional carols extolling the virtues of peace and good
will is, apparently, yet another deliberate affront, and a provocation
which can no longer be endured. The irony in this bit of reverse-tolerance
is that Canada's first Christmas carol, Jesous Ahatonhia, (Jesus is Born)
was penned at unimaginable expense. It was written in the Huron language
by the Jesuit, Saint Jean de Brebeuf in the early 1600s. A descendent of
William the Conqueror and St. Louis of France, Brebeuf arrived in Canada
with Samuel de Champlain's 1625 expedition. Far from the typecast
missionary
bully, Brebeuf appears to have been a thoughtful and intelligent man, as
evidenced in his dispatches to the Jesuit Relations. In 1649, Brebeuf and
Gabriel Lalement were taken prisoner by the Iroquois and tortured to
death.
Their martyrdoms are considered among the most horrific in Christian
history.
Brebeuf's feast day is September 26.
On July 9, 1998,
the New York Times ran an article entitled "Will the World Buy Santa's
Turkish Heritage?" As this very old card illustrates, the world has
seen kindly old semitic gentlemen before. Like everyone else, Europeans
simply prefer that their kindly old gentlemen resemble their own
grandfathers.
Born in 280 A.D., St. Nicholas was Bishop of Myra, (then part of the Holy
Roman Empire) -- now Demre, in Islamic Turkey. Given the population shifts
in this region, it's doubtful whether "Santa" was semitic at
all. But since the very idea undermines our "claim" to Christmas;
brace yourself for more speculation. Early illustrations certainly show
a St. Nicholas of European mien. During a period of famine, he established
his reputation
in restoring life to three brothers who were butchered, salted, and ready
for consumption. In another exploit, his anonymous gifts rescue three
sisters
from a pending life of prostitution. St. Nicholas' real world was hardly
the cozy North Pole confection he inhabits today. Protector of sailors,
he was among the first arrivals to the New World. Columbus named a bay
after him in 1492. The idea of the kindly old gift giver was so firmly
fixed in the European mind, that even Luther's Reformation was powerless
against this saint. Over centuries, Santa Claus has been subject to
constant
revision, and not a little propaganda. During the War between the States,
when President Lincoln asked Thomas Nast for a patriotic Christmas
picture,
Nast obliged. Some historians say that for Southerners caught up in a
vicious,
demoralising war, one of the most demoralising moments of all was in
seeing
Santa consorting with Yankees. The Santa Claus we know, is a homogenised
concoction of several European traditions, crystallised by Clement Moore's
poem (A Visit From St. Nicholas), Thomas Nast's illustrations for Harper's
Weekly, and of course, Haddon Sundblom's 1931-1964 illustrations for
Coca-Cola.
Now that you've
read this far, here's your Christmas present. An interesting article in
the November 13, 1998 Toronto Star notes this year's record breaking
attendance
at Remembrance Day services and the increase in poppy sales. Columnist
Richard Gwyn says "Remembrance Day has become a kind of tribal day
of celebration for English Canadians". We may (mistakenly) believe
that here, at last, is an unassailable holiday. Surely no one would object
to the solemn recognition of our war dead -- if we're not too "Christian"
about it? Not so. Sikh and Jewish organizations attempted to discourage
people buying poppies from Legion branches upholding the headgear ban in
1994, albeit without much success. Mr. Gwyn's intriguing "tribal"
theory doesn't go far enough. A renewed interest in Remembrance Day hardly
accounts for Hallowe'en's growing popularity, any more than it explains
the inordinately early appearance of Christmas decorations (on private
property) this year. Bullied, browbeaten and badgered Canadians are
drawing
the line, ignoring the thousand hints, refusing to scorn our traditions
on demand, and thumbing our collective noses at the sensitivity patrol.
In the time honoured way of resistance, our various holidays are not
disappearing;
on the contrary, they are being quietly expanded and extended instead.
Efforts to undermine every last vestige of Christian European culture
are all too predictable. We tend to forget that Communism was a huge
proponent
of multiculturalism -- at the expense of the host culture. "Christmas,
as an official holiday, was banned under the Soviet occupation. ...
Despite
these restrictions, Christmas was unofficially celebrated. ... This became
a nation-wide protest against Soviet ideology and atheist propaganda in
general." (Estonian Foreign Ministry, 1998) This growing resistance
may look like a small thing but, like seeds, the best things come in small
packages.
A very Merry Christmas and Good Yule to you
and yours. God bless us, everyone.