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Christopher Hitchens Says, 'Bah, Hannukah'
American Thinker ^
| December 05, 2007
| J.R. Dunn
Posted on 12/29/2007 4:53:48 PM PST by neverdem
Christopher Hitchens has achieved for himself quite a strong position as the American center-right's favorite Trotskyite. To a large extent this is well-earned. Hitch has stood fast in his adamant support for the War on Terror in all its aspects when plenty of fainter hearts far to rightward have fallen into equivocation, second thoughts, and whining.
But there is another Hitch, one who defends his remaining hard-left convictions with a vituperation hard to match in the English-speaking media. We usually see this Hitchens when he's writing about religion.
Hitch the Rabid was in full display in "
Bah, Hannukah" in the December 3 edition of
Slate. Having given Christianity a good whipping, he's now out to give the same treatment to Judaism. All on the basis of religious belief, mind you -- Hitchens is a civilized man, with no use for anti-Semitism as such.
Hitchens' latest atheist manifesto takes the form of an attack on Rabbi Michael Lerner, the left-wing spokesman and Hillary pal who usually deserves whatever he gets, though not in this context. "Bah, Hannukah", in large part a critique of a Lerner article dealing with the origins of the Jewish winter feast, is the usual tidal wave of disinformation, error, and sheer trivia that we get whenever atheists cut loose.
Hitchens begins his argument with kind words for the Seleucid empire, one of several gimcrack imperiums founded by the Diadochi, the successors to Alexander the Great, finding it infinitely superior to the Jewish Maccabees who revolted against it
Well, the problem here is that the Seleucid emperor in question, Antiochus IV Epiphanes (which can be translated as either "the Glorious" or "Slightly Cracked") had ordered the Jews to drop their backwoods ways and start worshiping the Greek pantheon. When they refused, he set out on the sort of customary killing spree that mars much of Jewish history.
This makes the revolt of the Maccabees and the concurrent reaction against things Greek a little more comprehensible than Hitchens would have us believe. One would think that a convinced atheist -- one who has put a lot of time and wordage into attacking the Jihadis, in particular -- would have strong objections to actions of Antiochus, but you won't see a word about it here.
Hitchens also digresses to let us know that such elements of the Christmas season as the yule log, the Christmas tree, mistletoe, etc., aren't Christian at all, but actually pagan! (If there's anybody out there who truly wasn't aware of this, see me after class.) Here, Hitchens is simply revealing that he knows far less about religion than he'd like us to believe.
Christianity -- in particular the Catholic Church -- borrowed useful elements from paganism, ranging from Roman law and organization to the multitude of shrines across Europe that started out being dedicated to Diana or Hecuba, only to later honor Our Lady. (There's even a theological theory to cover this: the pagan elements are actually "forerunners" of Christianity, the numerous virginal and motherly goddesses being reflections of the Blessed Mother, and so on.)
It's for this reason that a Christian monk of my acquaintance once said that if somebody wanted to become a good pagan, they'd become a Roman Catholic, the Mother Church having absorbed all the worthwhile elements of paganism.
But Hitch's real target here is the menorah that we often see on public property around the time of Hanukkah. These seem to bother him more than mangers, shepherds, wise men, and all the other features of the standard Christmas display -- though they get a few whacks too. There's something about the menorah that really gets to him. He unleashes a torrent of nastiness against the display, and the legend it celebrates (the lamp that, thanks to divine intervention, burned for eight days unattended) of the kind he normally reserves for Saddam, Osama, and other international criminals. (And if Hitchens truly believes, as he states, that "the secularists and the civil libertarians" have had nothing to say about Menorah displays, then he has a little bit of homework to do.)
Clearly, Hitchens is missing the point. The menorah displays are not primarily religious in intent, but rather a symbol of inclusion, an expression of civic harmony. Shortly after his first election, George Washington was asked by the Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island whether Jews would be welcome in the United States. His reply is worth memorizing:
...the Government of the United States... gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance... May the children of the Stock of Abraham, who dwell in this land, continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other Inhabitants; while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and figtree, and there shall be none to make him afraid.
That's what the menorah displays are about. A symbolic fulfillment of Washington's implicit promise: that the U.S. would never fall to the level of the nations and peoples who tormented the Jews for centuries. That in this country, all are brethren under God. As a very bad Catholic, I don't find that particularly hard to take. I find it sad that Hitchens does.
Hitchens has done great work for the cause of liberty and the survival of the West, and he will continue to do so. But this is a case where he -- along with the rest of his atheist tribe -- is utterly blind. It's a blindness that causes him, as soon as religion is involved, to turn against the very values he spends so much time defending. But that is Christopher Hitchens as he is, and that is how we are going to have to take him.
J.R. Dunn is contributing editor of American Thinker.
Page Printed from: at December 29, 2007 - 07:46:02 PM EST
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: atheists; christopherhitchens; enjoythevoid; evangelicalatheists; judaism
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1
posted on
12/29/2007 4:53:51 PM PST
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
I can imagine God saying “Bah Hitchens”. (It’s ironic that his name is Christopher... he seems to carry everything else, but certainly not Christ).
2
posted on
12/29/2007 4:57:13 PM PST
by
SolidWood
(Al Gore: "I have never heard of this, but I think it is a very good idea,")
To: neverdem
“The menorah displays are not primarily religious in intent,”
I dont follow this at all - it represents divine intervention on behalf of Gods chosen people.
3
posted on
12/29/2007 5:03:24 PM PST
by
spanalot
(*)
To: spanalot
“I dont follow this at all - it represents divine intervention on behalf of Gods chosen people.”
The menorah is, the menorah display isn’t.
To: From many - one.
Huh? Is there a difference?
5
posted on
12/29/2007 5:10:13 PM PST
by
SolidWood
(Al Gore: "I have never heard of this, but I think it is a very good idea,")
To: neverdem
...the Government of the United States... gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance... May the children of the Stock of Abraham, who dwell in this land, continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other Inhabitants; while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and figtree, and there shall be none to make him afraid. Awesome quotation. Bookmarking that one for sure.
I love Hitch but there are times when I feel sorry for him. God's out there waiting for you, Chris, He really is. He's eternal and you aren't. Contemplation of God and His works are what you're looking for. Anything less is intellectual fluff.
To: neverdem
acerbic wit....the ungay Wilde
7
posted on
12/29/2007 5:15:55 PM PST
by
wardaddy
(I have come to the conclusion that even though imperfect....Thompson is my choice by far.)
To: SolidWood
To: neverdem
The meat of the article: "Along with Greek science and military prowess came a whole culture that celebrated beauty both in art and in the human body, presented the world with the triumph of rational thought in the works of Plato and Aristotle, and rejoiced in the complexities of life presented in the theater of Aeschylus, Euripides and Aristophanes. But away with all that...Let us instead celebrate the Maccabean peasants who wanted to destroy Hellenism and restore what he actually calls "oldtime religion." His excuse for preferring fundamentalist thuggery to secularism and philosophy is that Hellenism was "imperialistic," but the Hasmonean regime that resulted from the Maccabean revolt soon became exorbitantly corrupt, vicious, and divided, and encouraged the Roman annexation of Judea."
The picture Hitchens draws is somewhat incomplete as he leaves out how the Selucids forbade religious freedoms and how the Macabees were pretty brutual towards those Jews they considered as apostates.
To: KantianBurke
Christophe Hitchens is sooooo last century :-) :-)
10
posted on
12/29/2007 5:38:29 PM PST
by
katya8
To: Billthedrill
Naw, God has a place for Hitch that he’s already filling quite well ~ the crazy old village atheist who’s angry with the other villagers for going to church.
11
posted on
12/29/2007 5:40:10 PM PST
by
muawiyah
To: KantianBurke; neverdem
To: katya8
"Christopher Hitchens is sooooo last century :-)"Yeah, you're telling me. And anti-Semitism so outré as well.
I'm just so pleased that we can still beat up on the Mormons mercilessly without any fear of reproach or criticism.
Always reassuring to know that such a reservoir of religious bigotry remains so close to the surface in the Republican party.
13
posted on
12/29/2007 6:21:56 PM PST
by
billorites
(freepo ergo sum)
To: billorites
What is this! Someone is beating up on Mormons! Call the police..call the national guard!
14
posted on
12/29/2007 6:27:16 PM PST
by
Earthdweller
(The liberal MSM...Buddies of Romney F Kerry and the socialist march to China)
To: From many - one.
15
posted on
12/29/2007 6:50:56 PM PST
by
neverdem
(Call talk radio. We need a Constitutional Amendment for Congressional term limits. Let's Roll!)
To: neverdem
Christopher Hitchens is a very educated man no doubt.
But, he does not have the market on education cornered.
I wonder if Hitchens ever prayed and then God answered his prayer if he would make his confession to the public that he has been condemning for years for believing in Christ.
His atheist Audience would scatter to the wind.
Good things happens when you ask God in prayer to guide your life, it is a not a losing proposition.
16
posted on
12/29/2007 7:18:10 PM PST
by
Mojohemi
To: muawiyah
Got our own village atheist (antitheist?) right here in Springfield, South Carolina. Angry letters to the editor with lower case `god’ (mais bien sur) and protesting the ringing of Sunday church bells as `invasive of my personal space’. What a hoot!
Christabel Hitchens’ languid airy dismissiveness of revealed truth is just so totally uppercrust British.
Or wannabe, or whatever; his words won’t cause the collapse of cathedral walls anytime soon.
Not even the Luftwaffe could accomplish that!
To: neverdem
18
posted on
12/29/2007 7:26:34 PM PST
by
dennisw
To: elcid1970
"Christabel Hitchens languid airy dismissiveness of revealed truth is just so totally uppercrust British." What does a man who has never once errored need with a God anyway? LOL.
19
posted on
12/29/2007 7:29:47 PM PST
by
Earthdweller
(The liberal MSM...Buddies of Romney F Kerry and the socialist march to China)
To: Earthdweller
That is so right! Total earthly perfection never requires repentance nor forgiveness.
And Mr. Hitchens could walk his way from San Diego to Honolulu and never, ever, even get his feet wet!
;^)
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