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Page 18 THE VILLADOM TIMES IV • December 24, 2008
Christmas lights and
the light of Christmas
Considering the gloom and doom all around us, it is
comforting to see the Christmas lights all over and realize
that most people have decided to make the best of things.
My wife returned from a brief shopping trip on foot
– trading one kind of energy for another, as it were, and
reported about what you would expect from some of the
friendly local merchants we have patronized for the past
30 years. In one store, she saw something heartening: three
men she identified as young fathers were eagerly learning
how to be cashiers. She assumed they had been down-sized
and were taking up the sort of honest work they would
not have considered when the economy was booming so
they could go on supporting their families. She saw this as
strong and honorable on their part. I agree.
On lawns all over Northwest Bergen County, in front of
the churches, and even in front of some municipal build-
ings we see the Nativity represented by a mother, a father,
and a child.
Some years ago, some people wanted to put a stop to
that. A number of towns knuckled under and removed
their Nativity scenes under the pressure of the American
Civil Liberties Union – an organization, be it noted, that
once dumped Ridgewood Holocaust rescuer Varian Fry
from a much-needed seat on the ACLU Board of Directors
because Fry was anti-communist. Fry is remembered for
having risked his neck for being anti-Nazi.
Wyckoff also took a risk. The members of the Wyckoff
Township Committee sat down, weighed their chances,
weighed their consciences, and let the ACLU take them to
court. The judge ruled that as long as the township was
willing to display a menorah and some secular Christmas
symbols, the Nativity scene could stay.
Wyckoff and America won twice. People who are too
wrapped up in sports or politics may not realize it, but
the menorah is an important part of the Christmas story
twice. In 146 BC, a tyrant descended from one of Alexander
the Great’s generals attempted to stamp out Judaism by
brutal and blasphemous methods. Jews who refused to pol-
lute themselves and deny their own beliefs were tortured
and killed as the tyrant attempted to turn the official reli-
gion into a cult with himself as the center of worship.
The blasphemy and the insanity involved were unac-
ceptable to religious Jews. They fought back against great
odds, and when they defeated the tyrant they found that his
troops had polluted the Temple at Jerusalem. The menorah
is said to have miraculously burned while the temple was
ritually cleansed and through the ceremonies of dedication.
This event was not just a great victory for the Jews. It was
a great victory for the entire human race. A blasphemous
cult founded by a maniac had been defeated by people who
believed in one God whose laws applied equally to every-
one, beggar and king alike.
Had the revolt that led to Chanukah failed, the New
Testament would not be as we know it today, because the
Holy Family and the Apostles and Disciples were all obser-
vant Jews who followed the laws that were restored. The
menorah and the Nativity scene are not contradictory, but
complementary. David Bolger and his son JT were recently kind enough
to send me a computer image of the restored painting of
Jesus and the elders, which was once displayed at the Pease
Library. I had my first look at the painting in perhaps 20
years, and my memories of it were confirmed. What I saw
when I looked was what one should always see: mutual
respect. We should preserve that respect.
Another importance of the menorah has to do with what
has now become a primary secular symbol: the Christmas
tree. This was not always so. Research traced the original of
the display of a lighted tree inside a church to the German
Rhineland, an area that had been Roman in ancient times,
and where Jews and other settlers had lived in the forti-
fied cities and the market towns of what was a sort of per-
manent frontier. The first example of a lighted pyramid,
shaped like a tree, looks almost like a menorah. This may
not be a coincidence.
The menorah is complementary to the Christmas story,
and so is another monotheistic religion, the belief of the
Persians in one God and a strict dichotomy between good
and evil. The Persians take a beating in European his-
tory because they fought the Greeks, seen as the exclusive
progenitors of Western culture by professors and other
people who like things in neat little boxes and ignore the
religious and legalistic influence of Judaism, the day-to-
day importance of Germanic tribal custom, and Celtic and
Chinese technology. All these groups contributed to Euro-
pean civilization while the Persians, stalled at Thermo-
pylae and defeated at Salamis, remained outside Europe,
though they are an Indo-European people. They were also
the only people in history other than the Germanic tribes
who shared a border with the Roman Empire and were not
destroyed or assimilated.
Nativity scenes often feature “the three kings” – one
blond, one black, one possibly Arab – offering gifts to
the Holy Family. The gift-bearers mentioned in the New
Testament, however, were not kings but magi – wise men,
possibly astrologers – who followed the Star of Bethlehem
because they were told the star would lead them to the King
of the Jews.
Astrology was widely practiced in the Kingdom Baby-
lon, where the Jews had once been sequestered and where
some possibly remained, and in the succeeding Per-
sian Empire. The German astronomer Johannes Kepler,
also an astrologer, discovered at the time of the Nativity
– the autumn of 4 BC, probably in September rather than
December – a constellation of three planets, rather than
stars, would have converged and been visible from Persia
and appearing over Judea. Jupiter was the planet of the
king, Venus the planet of birth, and Saturn the planet of the
Jews in Persian astrology. The message of this constella-
tion, brighter than any individual star, was that the King of
the Jews would be born.
The idea that the Christmas story is comprised of many
elements is not a new one. People in ancient times would
have understood clearly that the members of the Holy
Family were observant Jews – this is absolutely explicit in
the New Testament – and that people outside Judaism also
knew of the prophecies concerning a change in the world
order, mentioned in Roman writers of the next century long
before Christianity had become an accepted and later an
official religion.
This was not a made-up story like the Right Jolly Old
Elf who comes down the chimney to bring good little girls
and boys whatever they want. Keep in mind that the chim-
ney may be stopped up this year. A lot of people, particu-
larly the younger people who moved here for the schools,
may find themselves stuck in houses they cannot afford and
cannot sell, except at a loss.
Our sympathies should go out to these people – par-
ticularly to those who did not vent against older people or
childless people who questioned why they should have to
keep paying school taxes for a standard of education they
never expected for themselves and do not need now. The
idea that many people stay here for decades after their kids
have grown up, or if they did not have kids to begin with,
simply because the towns and most of the people are so
great, is a tough sell to people whose focus is getting ahead
and getting out.
A lot of people used to turn every holiday into an explo-
sion of spending to show how well they had done. I think
we will see less of that than in any year in the recent past,
not only because people cannot afford it, but because a look
at the neighbors may convince them that it is not in the
world’s best taste. I add that I hope people will spend what-
ever they can with local merchants who make the towns of
Northwest Bergen County as convenient as they are – and
at holiday time, as beautiful as they are.
What I hope we will see more of this year is a reflection
that the values of Christmas and Chanukah teach people
what they need to remember when the anesthetic of a bull-
ish stock market and big salaries for do-nothing jobs wears
off. There are some things you do not do to others, and
there are some things that you do not accept: attacks on
religious and family values from people with their own
agendas being a prime example. But if you learn to respect
and tolerate, and even appreciate, other people who present
no threat instead of smirking and waiting to settle up at the
first opportunity, the economic slump, while not enjoyable,
will probably prove survivable. One thing is certain – it
will definitely prove educational.
Letters to the Editor
Appreciates support
Dear Editor:
I would like to thank the student, parents, teachers and
staff of the Mahwah school district for their overwhelming
support of the Veteran’s Day fundraiser to support “Homes
for Our Troops.” “Homes for Our Troops” is an organization
dedicated to building barrier-free housing for our severely
injured servicemen and women at no cost to them. Together
with the assistance of the Allendale, Alpine, Cresskill, Hill-
sdale, Palisades Park, Pascack Hills, Pascack Valley and
South Hackensack school districts who joined the effort,
we were able to raise over $27,000 for this cause.
A special thanks goes to all of the school and district
administrators and their staff for promoting the drive and
facilitating the collection of the donations. For more infor-
mation or to make a donation please visit www.homesfo-
rourtroops.org. Kristin Koch
Mahwah Setting the record straight
Dear Editor:
In the Dec. 3 Villadom TIMES, John Koster tells us that
the traitor Harry Dexter White, working for Stalin, was
responsible for the U.S. provocation of Japan, which led to
the attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. However, this is
only partly true. According to World War II naval officer
Robert B. Stinnett’s book, “Day of Deceit: The Truth about
FDR and Pearl Harbor” (Simon & Schuster, NY, NY 2000
and 2001), the United States was provoking Japan before
Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union in late June 1941. This
included the sending of cruisers to patrol off Japan’s coast.
Furthermore, the Pearl Harbor attack was no surprise
to the highest circles in Washington, as well as to Harry
Dexter White! U.S. Naval Intelligence had broken the
Japanese naval codes years before, and were recording and
reporting the exact location, composition, and destination
of the carrier task force headed for Hawaii. But they did not
tell Admiral Kimmel and General Short! In fact – which
is even more outrageous- they told Kimmel not to take
any defensive measures, such as sending out long-range
scout planes, which might alarm the civilian population on
Oahu! FDR’s reason: Only an unexpected and “unprovoked”
attack on American soil would win a reluctant public’s
overwhelming support for the country’s entry in the war.
All this Sinnett spells out in his book, based on 14 years
of research in U.S. Naval Intelligence’s secret files, thanks
to the Freedom of Information Act.
Jonathan King
Wyckoff Happy Chanukah
from Villadom Times