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Jennifer Lipman

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

Opinion

Jews shouldn't be Christmas grinches

'Living in a Christian-majority country we should appreciate the value Christmas has — even if it’s not “our” celebration'

November 26, 2020 12:06
It's Christmas: don't be a grinch
3 min read

By the time you read this, Christmas will be less than a month away. And despite not celebrating it, I love Yuletide; the songs, the smells, the copious eating and drinking, the twinkly lights brightening a drab wintery world. At school I was always first in line to festoon the classroom with paper chains and snowflake cutouts; nowadays I make dreidel-shaped gingerbread and last year my husband even tackled a kosher turkey.

As an observant Jew, I don’t see anything wrong with that. Living in a Christian-majority country we should appreciate the value Christmas has — even if it’s not “our” celebration. It doesn’t detract from my passion for Chanukah. One is of spiritual importance, the other enjoyable in the way of a glorious summer bank holiday or a royal jubilee. Part of being British, as well as Jewish.

It’s still unclear what this festive season will bring and what the exact nature of the temporary pause to social distancing will entail. But whatever happens, I’d like to appeal to my fellow Jews: stop being disparaging about the desire to “save Christmas”. In recent weeks, I’ve heard too many people scoff to the tune of “we managed without a family Pesach — surely they can cope with a Zoom Christmas”. Which may, factually, be true, but rather misses the point.

Yes, we’ve had a host of festivals curtailed in the last nine months, especially those Jews in regions where restrictions were tighter throughout September and it wasn’t possible to salvage a shared Rosh Hashanah meal.