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Opinion

Let’s spread the seasonal cheer

December 14, 2012 10:03
2 min read

'Tis the season, again. It might seem like only five minutes have gone by since last December, but here we are once more, with Slade on the radio crooning about how they wish it could be Christmas every day, snowy scenes in every advert (even though they were filmed in July) and Brent Cross packed with desperate present-buyers and shops full of sequined clothing. To quote Coca Cola, the holidays are coming.

Christmas might not be our festival, but many of us still benefit from the public holiday, eating mince pies and exchanging yet more gifts. As Jews, we tend to find any excuse to get together for a day of food and family. Although we have usually just spent eight days gorging on doughnuts and exchanging presents for Chanucah, many of us can't help but get caught up in the seasonal goodwill. Yet how do we reconcile this with our own religious identity?

In past centuries, our ancestors arrived on the glorious shores of the UK with little more than the clothes they were standing in. They were given the opportunity to prosper in business, were able to find homes, build communities and practise their religion in peace - and all this in a Christian country. Surely we should say thank you to the country that has welcomed us? Isn't gratitude an important part of Judaism?

We don't have to celebrate Christmas but, by choosing to live in a Christian country, we surely do have a responsibility to support those who do. Of course, not all Christians are able to celebrate their big holiday in the way that we celebrate ours. It could be because they are working in hospitals or in the emergency services, or maybe they have found themselves in difficult circumstances, ill in hospital or living on the streets.