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Vanity: Does ANYBODY actually celebrate Kwanzaa?
Posted on 12/19/2003 12:07:23 AM PST by Junior_G
Politically correct lefties like to mention Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa all in the same breath, implying that they are equally legitimate holiday celebrations enjoyed by different groups. Christmas and Hanukkah both have rich histories to back them up, and millions of people celebrate these holidays worldwide; but does anybody actually celebrate Kwanzaa? Liberals are absolutely in love with the concept of Kwanzaa as the Black Americans' alternative to Christmas; but do any Black Americans actually celebrate it?
Kwanzaa is a holiday that was invented by a left-wing activist college professor in 1966 as a holiday for Black Americans to celebrate African culture and practice the tenets of socialism. How many black families were actually willing to abandon their Christmas traditions in favor of this new holiday, made up willy-nilly by a radical campus nutjob? If anybody on this forum has ever actually met somebody that celebrates this holiday, I'd love to hear about it. I have a sneaking suspicion that next to nobody celebrates it.
If you'll recall, some number of years ago a Texaco executive was canned after being recorded making a disparaging comment about Kwanzaa. Today, to make a joke about Kwanzaa is considered no better than delivering a racial slur; but shouldn't bogus socialist holidays----as a general rule----be soundly ridiculed? I'm curious what people's thoughts are on this one...particularly black contributors to this forum. Liberals act like all black people celebrate Kwanzaa, but all the black people I know celebrate Christmas.
TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: culture; kwanzaa
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To: Lazamataz; Bacon Man
I just LOVE Glenn Beck. Pat Gray, who does a morning AM talk show here, used to be Glenn's partner, and they have very similar senses of humor. Hey, Bacon, RamaHanaKwanzaMas ping!
161
posted on
12/19/2003 2:46:34 PM PST
by
Xenalyte
(I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
To: Xenalyte
I couldn't remember the lyrics so I made some of them up.
162
posted on
12/19/2003 2:47:21 PM PST
by
Lazamataz
(A poem, by Lazamataz: "What do we do with Saddam, Now that we gottim?")
To: Junior_G
Remember in 'Miracle on 34th Street' where the lawyer dumped the mail on the judge's desk addressed to Santa Claus, and the judge declared Santa was real because the United States Postal Service recognized him as such?
Well, my dear friends, our present day United States Postal Service has issued a Kwanzaa stamp. Ergo, it must be a real holiday! (out damn sarcasm, out I say)
163
posted on
12/19/2003 2:50:44 PM PST
by
hardhead
("Curly, if you say its a fine morning, I'll shoot you." John Wayne, 'McLintock, 1963')
To: Junior_G
Sure they do...we call it Thanksgiving. Kwanzaa is just a late comer to the harvest festival tradition with a bit of African twang to it.
If you go to Britain they don't have Thanksgiving but something very much like it.In Britain churches celebrate harvest festivals when the wheat has been cut and the apples have been picked. The churches are decorated in flowers and greenery. Fruit and vegetables are also put on display, with a loaf of bread in the middle. Sometimes a plough might be bought into the church for blessing so as the next years harvesting will be plentiful.
In Britain a corn dolly is created by plaiting the wheat stalks to create a straw figure. The corn dolly is kept until the Spring. This was done as people believed that the corn spirit lived in the wheat and as the wheat was harvested, the spirit fled to the wheat which remained. By creating the dolly the spirit is kept alive for the next year and for the new crop. Sometimes these dollies are hung up in the barn or sometimes in the farmhouse or even in the church. In Spring the dolly would be ploughed back into the soil. There are many types of corn dolly. Kwanzaa merely echoes the harvest festival.
It underscores the pagan roots to all our religious rituals.
164
posted on
12/19/2003 2:51:43 PM PST
by
tcuoohjohn
(Follow The Money)
To: mafree
Why celebrate something made up for reasons that are completely against this country's principles? It's very communist in essence. You're welcome to do whatever you want, but there are better things to do.
165
posted on
12/19/2003 3:04:56 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: nopardons
I bet you hollered back :-)
166
posted on
12/19/2003 3:11:46 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: tcuoohjohn
But what is harvested in late December? That's no "first fruits" - in Britain that comes right after the reaping, usually in October (but earlier the farther north you go).
Aside from any supposed "pagan" associations, we have direct evidence that ol' Ronnie Karenga made this up out of whole cloth. Doubtless he used any pagan stuff that he heard about or read of, just like that fraud Gardner made up Wicca . . . but at least Gardner was just trying to get a date, not foment Marxist nonsense ...
167
posted on
12/19/2003 3:18:19 PM PST
by
AnAmericanMother
(. . . sed, ut scis, quis homines huiusmodi intellegere potest?. . .)
To: AnAmericanMother
Well if you recall Most of Subsaharan Africa is a subtropical or tropical region and the harvests occur somewhat later than temperate regions.
As to the political agenda of Kwanzaa I leave that to your judgement. The harvest festival is a ubiquitous phenomenon among most cultures and I make no distinctions among them. I have seen them in Korea, Vietnam, Europe, South America and elsewhere. I see little harm in them and they are quasi-religious in nature. There is little correlation between harvest festivals and robbing banks or engaging in rape and pillage that I know of. Though I would gladly entertain any compelling data that you have on the matter.
While Karenga may have made his Kwanza festival out of whole cloth the tradition of harvest festivals is as prevalent in Africa as it is everywhere else. Whatever Karenga's political objective is or was has been subsumed by the general notion of a harvest festival that is particular to those of African heritage.
I don't begrudge any culture or people their Harvest rituals, however contrived or preposterous in my view,simply because they aren't my view and my culture.
I see no harm in it.. I have my own harvest festival called Thanksgiving. As a mackeral snapper of long lineage we add our twang to the event. That is as it should be.
168
posted on
12/19/2003 4:28:50 PM PST
by
tcuoohjohn
(Follow The Money)
To: AnAmericanMother
Well if you recall Most of Subsaharan Africa is a subtropical or tropical region and the harvests occur somewhat later than temperate regions.
As to the political agenda of Kwanzaa I leave that to your judgement. The harvest festival is a ubiquitous phenomenon among most cultures and I make no distinctions among them. I have seen them in Korea, Vietnam, Europe, South America and elsewhere. I see little harm in them and they are quasi-religious in nature. There is little correlation between harvest festivals and robbing banks or engaging in rape and pillage that I know of. Though I would gladly entertain any compelling data that you have on the matter.
While Karenga may have made his Kwanza festival out of whole cloth the tradition of harvest festivals is as prevalent in Africa as it is everywhere else. Whatever Karenga's political objective is or was has been subsumed by the general notion of a harvest festival that is particular to those of African heritage.
I don't begrudge any culture or people their Harvest rituals, however contrived or preposterous in my view,simply because they aren't my view and my culture.
I see no harm in it.. I have my own harvest festival called Thanksgiving. As a mackeral snapper of long lineage we add our twang to the event. That is as it should be.
169
posted on
12/19/2003 4:30:07 PM PST
by
tcuoohjohn
(Follow The Money)
To: tcuoohjohn
If it were just a harvest festival I would absolutely agree with you, and place it with the vicar and the ladies in white gloves lugging vegetable marrows and sheaves of damp wheat into the narthex.
But the "harvest festival" aspect is simply a stick upon which much frankly Marxist and collectivist doctrine is hung, and that was plainly Karenga's motivation in creating the holiday. THAT is not harmless, and not something that should be encouraged.
170
posted on
12/19/2003 4:39:22 PM PST
by
AnAmericanMother
(. . . sed, ut scis, quis homines huiusmodi intellegere potest?. . .)
To: AnAmericanMother
Karenga's motivation and the end result are very different however. As to collectivism the same charge could be levelled at Christmas or Thanksqiving and will little or no real impact. Kindness and the spirit of giving and sharing could always be deemed " collectivist" and " Marxist" if one chooses. The distinction is the voluntariness of the acts. I see no coercion in Kwanzaa and if I did I would most assuredly oppose it. It is a voluntary festival/ ritual little different from any other harvest festival activities.
I just looked up the quasi-liturgical aspects of the Kwanzaa festival and see no compelling "marxist or collectivist" reasoning anymore than I see it in the "blessing of the animals" at Saint Matthews Parish In Jacksonville. I can tell you that my dog isn't annoyed at it..just a bit bewildered.
171
posted on
12/19/2003 4:50:10 PM PST
by
tcuoohjohn
(Follow The Money)
To: tcuoohjohn
How about "The Pledge" - straight from Marcus Garvey, BTW:
WE PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE TO THE RED, BLACK, AND GREEN, OUR FLAG, THE SYMBOL OF OUR ETERNAL STRUGGLE, AND TO THE LAND WE MUST OBTAIN; ONE NATION OF BLACK PEOPLE, WITH ONE GOD OF US ALL, TOTALLY UNITED IN THE STRUGGLE, FOR BLACK LOVE, BLACK FREEDOM, AND BLACK SELF-DETERMINATION
If that's a "harvest festival", I'm the Queen of Sheba.
172
posted on
12/19/2003 4:55:32 PM PST
by
AnAmericanMother
(. . . sed, ut scis, quis homines huiusmodi intellegere potest?. . .)
To: mcspur
I just signed up for FR after lurking for years. Welcome aboard. You're doomed.
173
posted on
12/19/2003 5:03:32 PM PST
by
Focault's Pendulum
(I just lost my cable connection.....Where's Enzo Stuarti when you need him??)
To: AnAmericanMother
Well...Ya Know..That may have been Karenga's desire but he failed. I have attended Kwanzaa festivals on three occasions and never heard such a Marcus Garvey Pledge. Now perhaps my hosts, an civil engineer and a school teacher cleverly deleted the diabolical marxist-collectivist rant from the rituals with the intent of later dancing arround a tricolor flag with AK-47's and machetes but I kinda doubt it. The current Kwanzaa liturgical forms don't contain that either. Now I suspect that there may be those who would wish to turn Kwanzaa into a political ritual both on the right and the left. They have both failed fortunately.
174
posted on
12/19/2003 5:07:27 PM PST
by
tcuoohjohn
(Follow The Money)
To: AnAmericanMother
Some people just don't get it do they?
175
posted on
12/19/2003 5:07:49 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: mcspur
I just signed up for FR after lurking for years. Sheesh, I don't know how you lurkers do it. I found this forum in October of 2000. I held out for, oh, maybe three whole days before I started posting.
Welcome aboard.
To: hellinahandcart
Five minutes, and I was already in a fight.
177
posted on
12/19/2003 5:17:00 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: cyborg
I signed up right before Election 2000 and this place was way intimidating back then. I'd never seen flame wars like that,before or since (apparently there were still a lot of hurt feelings from the Republican primary).
And the funny thing is, according to the old timers, I missed the really BIG flame wars in '98 or '99. Hoo boy, I can't imagine.
But it was the election after all, and I felt like the only conservative in New York City, and I had plenty to say. I couldn't help myself. Then came election day, and we were all in hell together for about 36 days...I don't think people had the presence of mind to notice I was a newbie, that's how grim things were here...
To: hellinahandcart
I missed those too. I wasn't on FR either when FR wasn't that moderated, and the whole situation with Klintoon. The closest thing I've seen was the CA Recall with Ah-noldites and Tombots.
179
posted on
12/19/2003 5:30:16 PM PST
by
cyborg
To: radiohead
Yep. The only blacks I've ever seen celebrating Kwaanza have been on the human interest part of the TV news. I was under the impression that most Kwanzaa celebrations were arranged by stocky white lesbians at Unitarian churches. ;D
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