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Santa Claus gets icy reception in Austria
AP/Houston Chronicle ^ | 12/14/02

Posted on 12/14/2002 9:12:51 AM PST by ppaul

HoustonChronicle.com

HoustonChronicle.com -- http://www.HoustonChronicle.com | Section: The News Bizarre


Dec. 12, 2002, 2:53PM

Santa Claus gets icy reception in Austria

Associated Press

No Santa
Associated Press
Margit Hammerl and Horst Strauss, members of the Pro-Christkind (Pro-Christ Child) Society, pose in front of a nativity scene at a Vienna Christmas market with Pro-Christkind stickers on their jackets.

VIENNA, Austria -- Ho, ho, ho? No, no, no!

Santa Claus is coming to town -- and many Austrians wish he'd just stay home. The jolly old elf is getting an icy reception in this alpine country that gave the world "Silent Night" and clings to beloved Christmas traditions.

A small but boisterous movement alarmed at the intrusion of the American-style Old Saint Nick is crusading to keep the traditional St. Nikolaus and the Christ Child as the reason for the season.

Organizers insist they're not anti-Santa. But stickers depicting Santa with a diagonal red bar across his fluffy white beard are showing up on the stalls of Vienna's outdoor Christmas markets, where bundled-up shoppers browse for gifts while holding steaming cups of hot mulled wine or spiked punch in mittened hands.

"We're not really against Santa Claus. For some people, Santa Claus has his qualities," said Phillip Tengg, 27, a former divinity student who founded the Pro-Christkind (Pro-Christ Child) Society in 1998 in the western city of Innsbruck.

"We're against the fact that Santa Claus has become an advertising symbol of almost boundless consumption. It obscures the true meaning of Christmas. He's displacing the traditional St. Nikolaus and the Christ Child."

RESOURCES
Pro-Christkind Society

To be sure, Austria's Christmas traditions can be a bit bewildering to outsiders.

The season begins on Dec. 5, when a horned, fur-clad beast known as Krampus mock-rampages through streets and malls, terrorizing small children with switches and chains and trying to scoop them into his bucket. The next day, St. Nikolaus arrives wearing a bishop's miter and delivers biscuits and sweets.

On Christmas Eve, the Christkind, or Christ Child, sneaks into homes and deposits presents under the tree. On Dec. 25 families gather for a traditional meal of baked carp.

Tengg's group, which claims about 100 members from Austria, Germany and Switzerland, is alarmed at all the Santas and reindeer popping up at Christmas markets devoted to nativity scenes and angels.

The backlash resonates among Austrians like Lydia Krebs, who take pride in the traditions observed in this overwhelmingly Roman Catholic country where priest Joseph Mohr wrote "Silent Night" -- originally "Stille Nacht! Heilige Nacht!" -- in 1816.

"Our Christmas traditions are so beautiful, and Santa takes something away from them," she said Thursday from behind her stand of glass-blown ornaments, gingerbread houses and miniature creches. "My sister lives in Atlanta, and Christmas is so awful there -- so hectic, and so many lights. It's just too commercial."

On its Web site, Pro-Christkind says it wants to encourage "critical reflection over trends like Santa Claus" and hopes Austrians "will understand that Christmas is a celebration of people and God, not a consumer frenzy."

Not surprisingly, the movement is supported by the Archdiocese of Vienna, which is struggling to woo back the 80 percent of Austrians who think of themselves as Catholics but rarely, if ever, attend Mass.

Pro-Christkind's members include Bishop Alois Kothgasser, who told Austrian radio recently that he considers himself "pro-Christ Child and anti-Santa." Kath.Net, a group of German-speaking Catholic believers, applauds "the protest against the pervasive Santa Claus."

Besides its sticker campaign ("We Believe in the Christ Child"), Pro-Christkind is urging Austrians inclined to e-mail their holiday greetings to consider its Christ Child e-cards.

The issue is hotly debated in the group's chat room. "I'll say it just once: Beat it, Santa!" wrote a woman who gave her name only as Eva. "Your pseudo-religious blah-blah is priceless," retorted a man called Jeff.

Martina Voigt, a Pro-Christkind leader, says it is signing up 20 new members every day.

"We don't have anything against Santa Claus," Voigt told the daily Tiroler Tageszeitung. "We just don't want him to control everything."



HoustonChronicle.com -- http://www.HoustonChronicle.com | Section: The News Bizarre
This article is: http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/bizarre/1699835


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: austria; christ; christchild; christkind; christmas; commercialism; consumerism; consumers; december25; holiday; holidays; jesus; jesuschrist; santa; santaclaus; shopping; stnicholas; stnick; stnikolas; vienna; yuletide
This will never fly in the US.
These "Christkind" activists would be banned from public schools and castigated for their religious "intolerance".
At best, they'd be maligned as "religious bigots", "judgmental", or, horror of horrors -
"homophobic" (I'll bet they are against homosexual marriage for sure!).
At worst, they might be arrested for committing "hate crimes".

On the Net:
Pro-Christ Child organization, www.pro-christkind.org

1 posted on 12/14/2002 9:12:52 AM PST by ppaul
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Sorry the link above does not work.

Here's a working link: www.pro-christkind.org

2 posted on 12/14/2002 9:15:36 AM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul
interesting ....
3 posted on 12/14/2002 10:32:49 AM PST by Jael
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To: ppaul
It obscures the true meaning of Christmas. He's displacing the traditional St. Nikolaus and the Christ Child."

Keeping Christ in Christmas.......What a crazy idea.

4 posted on 12/14/2002 10:37:29 AM PST by Polybius
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To: Polybius
Yes.
In the government buildings and some schools where they still allow Christmas trees, referring to them as "Cristmas trees" is verboten. They must be called "holiday trees" or "giving trees". Nuts.
5 posted on 12/14/2002 10:52:47 AM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul
"Santa Claus"--with the red suit with fur trim, etc., was invented by cartoonist Thomas Nast, a vicious anti-Catholic. He took the ancient figure of Saint Nicholas and removed all signs that Nicholas was a bishop.
6 posted on 12/14/2002 12:02:00 PM PST by Arthur McGowan
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To: ppaul
Austrians: they're like Germans, but without the impish sense of fun.
7 posted on 12/14/2002 12:38:19 PM PST by Oztrich Boy
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To: Polybius
The thought police will hunt you down for crazy ideas like that. Kids today may get more toys but we had more fun during Christmas. I wonder what our masters would do if our response to them banning mention of Christmas was to kick them in the nuts or whatever.
8 posted on 12/14/2002 1:11:30 PM PST by willyone
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