Maral said:I posted this email that I received on another thread, but it seems appropriate to post it here, too.
cappuccina said:(to himself) In Yiddish, of course!
1. 'Odem yesode meofe vesofe leofe' - beyno-lveyno iz gut a trink bronfn.
2. Der mentsh trakht, un Got lakht.
3. Vos noenter tsu der shul, alts vayter fun Got.
(I tried to post the Hebrew letters, but they will not copy here...)
julianne said:Kudos to Wal-Mart for making a decision that won't go over well with some folks. I never understood the problem with "Merry Christmas" anyway. It IS Christmas, after all, and you're simply wishing for one to have a merry one. No biggie.
Happy Holidays seems so impersonal to me. I mean, Christmas isn't called "Holiday"....LOL.
spclk said::clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: Thank You PaperDoll! I am a Christian and I celebrate the holiday for what it was meant to be. If you don't, well fine....go to work, don't accept your Christmas bonus and ignore the holiday. It is a christian holiday! I am not jewish, but I respect the fact that they celebrate Hanukkah, I just choose to celebrate Christmas instead. It really gripes me that people take offense to the word Christmas.
shopper said:Great post!! If someone wished me Happy Hanukkah I would not be offended at all. I would accept it with the spirit in which it was intended. No need to turn everything into a big stink, just say "thank you" or return with your own well wish, religious or not.
windovervocalcords said:What causes this overreaction?
Last year people were mad that Walmart had "Happy Holiday" signs up instead of Merry Christmas. This year the Merry Christmas signs are back.
csds703 said:Plastic fruit?????????This cracked me up..
Seriously, I don't understand why this concept is so hard to understand for some people.
NOBODY IS TRYING TO TAKE CHRISTMAS AWAY!
Please celebrate anyway you see fit, just don't ASSUME that I share your customs or beliefs.
OY ALREADY!
Nova said:The choice of semantics seems arbitrary to me, but very well: Mr. Tybee will give Christmas presents to his employees, which they may decline if they choose. I imagine his employees understand (and appreciate) the spirit with which the gifts are given.
Mr. Nova and I have been inviting Jewish friends to share Christmas with us for years. We haven't been refused on principle yet. But these are friends. They know we aren't presuming that they *should* celebrate Christmas, we are just expressing our desire to include them in our family.
Mygirlsadie said:I will say Merry Christmas now and always. I never thought of not saying it. I will say God bless you if you sneeze even if your a muslim. I will never deny or dismiss or hide my belief in God or the true meaning of Christmas!
Dark Knight said:Wal-mart also announced that for the 2nd year they will be allowing the Salvation Army kettle workers to stand outside it's stores, after Target told them they were no longer welcome last year. Wal-mart has also matched donations made to the Salvation Army kettles.
That's fine, Animal... but you are obviously missing the point of the entire thread. What is ultimately important at Christmas time is how employees at stores greet you. And, I suppose, a close second is what they write on their sale signs.Animal04216 said:LOL I am really cracking up at this thread! I know, its not funny , but here is my belief about this whole mess. I believe that neither Christmas or Hannakah are God mandated celebrations. I also believe that God is involved in BOTH. I beleive that Jesus would have celebrated both in the spirit of FELLOWSHIP, and that Gods heart is warmed anytime we come together in His name. Christians celebrate the GIFT of Jesus birth at Christmas time and the Jewish celebrate the MIRACLE of lights. Not a big difference IMO--both are a celebration of gifts given by God! Sorry guys but the whole argument is stupid and ANY wishes at the holidays should be accepted in the spirit that they are given!
ETA: On a more personal note--I also believe that Christians are "grafted in" to the Jewish faith, so I should really be saying Happy Hannakah AND Merry Christmas to all!!!
IrishMist said:That's fine, Animal... but you are obviously missing the point of the entire thread. What is ultimately important at Christmas time is how employees at stores greet you. And, I suppose, a close second is what they write on their sale signs.
You say Jesus would have celebrated both holidays, and that may very well be true. But you can bet he wasn't searching for a "Tickle-me-Elmo" at WalMart last year. (Happy Holidays) Though darn tootin' he'd be loading up his cart at the home of low prices this year. (Merry Christmas)
Because, after all, isn't that what Christmas is all about??