St Nicholas was from Turkey and the Eastern Orthodox Church (which includes Middle Eastern Christians) celebrates Christmas.I'm generally not that fond of Obligatory Christmas Episodes, but this one turned out well, and I was tearing up a bit during Eve's "world tour" at the end there (though I found it kind of ethnocentric that the spirit of a Western holiday was shown as responsible for motivating people in a Middle Eastern country -- but that's pretty endemic to any story built on the premise of Santa having a global effect). There was nice team bonding here, from Stone helping keep Cassandra focused to the whole gang unhesitatingly turning their Christmas celebration into a birthday party for Eve.
But the protesters were holding signs in Arabic and wearing headscarves. I doubt they were intended to be Christians.
But the protesters were holding signs in Arabic and wearing headscarves. I doubt they were intended to be Christians.
Call it literary license if you like. Honestly, I did not even see it as a Christian or Christmas thing as none of this "returning hope to the world" is part of any Christmas lore or story I know of. I simply saw it as Eve giving the gift of hope to everyone, regardless of race or religion.
Christians in Arabic countries would speak and write Arabic. They might even wear clothing similar to their Muslim neighbors. Which isn't to say the people Eve helped were Christians.But the protesters were holding signs in Arabic and wearing headscarves. I doubt they were intended to be Christians.
Call it literary license if you like. Honestly, I did not even see it as a Christian or Christmas thing as none of this "returning hope to the world" is part of any Christmas lore or story I know of. I simply saw it as Eve giving the gift of hope to everyone, regardless of race or religion.
Call it literary license if you like. Honestly, I did not even see it as a Christian or Christmas thing as none of this "returning hope to the world" is part of any Christmas lore or story I know of. I simply saw it as Eve giving the gift of hope to everyone, regardless of race or religion.
But the point is, it's taking an element of Western mythos -- Santa Claus (leaving any religious elements aside) -- and saying that the flow of goodwill and hope for everyone on the entire planet relies on this guy releasing it at the North Pole on December 25th. It's assuming that Western cultural conventions are the actual "right answers" for all humanity, rather than just one culture's interpretation of things.
Turn it around. Imagine seeing a story claiming that, say, the happiness of everyone in the world depended on Hongjun Laozu recapturing the beast Nian every Chinese New Year, and that Chinese New Year was the one day of the year when everyone -- even American Christians -- would get an infusion of cheer and goodwill that they wouldn't feel on any other day of the year, not even their own holidays. Wouldn't that seem, at the very least, somewhat incongruous?
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