Journeys of a Catholic Poster Girl

“Our faith needs to be the North Star of our lives. Our behavior needs to match our words.” –Archbishop Charles Chaput

For the love of all things holy!

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 1:54 pm on Wednesday, December 13, 2006

From today’s Dispatch

For the love of all things holy! —III
NEW ALBANY SCHOOLS Religious songs pulled from concert Wednesday, December 13, 2006David Conrad THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

After pulling two religious songs from a fifth-grade holiday concert, New Albany school officials found the program a little too short for prime time.

When Silent Night and Hayo, Haya, which celebrates Hanukkah, were removed from the program, the principal moved the show from Thursday evening to the afternoon.

The district said a Jewish parent complained that Silent Night, which contains the lyrics “Christ, the savior, is born,” was included in the program.

So officials yanked the song and then pulled Hayo, Haya, which contains the lyrics, “Oh, sing our songs and praise the Torah, praise the Torah.”

“We wanted to show respect for the religious sensibilities of all students,” said Chris Briggs, principal of New Albany Intermediate Elementary School, which serves grades 4 and 5.

Briggs said that from now on, the two grades will include only cultural songs in their holiday programs.

Three nonreligious songs are left for Thursday’s concert.

The Columbus Public Schools took a similar stance a few years ago. In 2001, the district was sued by the American Civil Liberties Union after choirs sang Christian songs at two high-school commencement ceremonies.

The school system responded the next year by passing a policy that required holiday music to be “based on sound educational principles” and not “manifest in preference of religion or particular religious beliefs.”

“I think the (New Albany) school made the safest decision that it could possibly make,” said Gary Daniels, of the ACLU of Ohio. “A winter performance is a bad time to take a wrong turn from being at a choir concert to a church assembly.” (WHAT?!)

However, Daniels also said that he doesn’t believe that schools need to do away with all religious songs.

“The key issue the courts look at it is whether the purpose of the performance was to enhance a particular religious message,” he said.

“You’re not going to find a court decision that says you can’t have any religious songs. But if every song in a 10-piece holiday concert is about a certain religion, then you have a problem.”

ME: Um, we have problems with Silent Night??? LEt’s get real! When I was in high school I sang Jewish songs and I;m not Jewish! If you don’t want your kid singing Christmas songs then just tell the director and boom, your kid doesn’t sing them. Sheesh. But if they are in a choir and there is a holiday concert, chances are pretty good you’re going to be singing Christmas songs! I know there are other holidays in December. When they have as many songs written about them as Christmas, then we’ll talk. And these are little kids! Come on now. But of course, once the ACLU is involved….

Feast of St. Lucy

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 7:54 am on Wednesday, December 13, 2006

I’ve always loved the feast of St. Lucy,probably because the idea of more light in December in Ohio is a great idea. Course if I wasn’t here in the resort I;d be home making my St. Lucia buns, which may be labor intensive (two risings!) and take hours to make, but they are quite yummy. Oh well, I’ll just have to make them for Christmas instead…I get my recipe out of an old American Girl cookbook, but if you want to try them I;m sure Yahoo! foods or whatever would have a recipe, or Google. Mine have raisins, yeast, and some sugar, which make them sweet although you wouldn’t expect it. I also think an egg wash is involved somehow.

Christmas bleg

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 7:53 am on Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Christmas questions
Stole this from Life In A Nutshell (http://lastthingonmymind.blogspot.com); also listed on the blogroll..

1. Egg nog or hot chocolate? Hot chocolate, esp. since I just bought Hot Chocolate and a Hot Chocolate pot from Williams-Sonoma! (www.williams-sonoma.com)

2. Does Santa wrap presents or just sit them under the tree? That’s Mrs. Claus and the Elfettes’ job(Yes I just invented a word :) )

3. Colored lights on tree/house or white? Colored, even though I don’t have any up personally. My parents, however, have the awful retro 1970s big, colored bubls that have been in, out, and in again….

4. Do you hang mistletoe? I would if I could find some!

5. When do you put your decorations up? Thanksgiving weekend, but usually the weekend before since we’re not here Thanksgiving weekend…what can I say? I love my tree!

6. What is your favorite holiday dish (excluding dessert)? The cinnamon rolls and sausage links mom makes for Christmas morning breakfast.

7. Favorite Holiday memory as a child: Tye year I got the Care Bears kitchen set I wanted and thought I didn’t get. I had opened everything–no set. My parents had hidden it in the basement. :) And you know, we still have parts of it that we use to store books/videos…so it’s lasted! And Pittsburgh Christmases…see below.

8. When and how did you learn the truth about Santa? I was about 8, I think…not very traumatic or anything.

9. Do you open a gift on Christmas Eve? Now we open one gift on Christmas Eve since I sing Midnight Mass and we all go to that. Opening one gift keeps us enteratined and hopefully awake. But when Iwas little Christmas was a three day extravaganza. We opened family gifts Dec. 22 or 23rd, went to my dad’s mom’s house to do Christmas with them in Pittsburgh (Corapolis) on Christmas Eve, where there would be great cooking in both kitchens (wish I had that now!) and we’d open gifts from my grandma and my two aunts. Then we’d head over to my mom’s parents’ in South Hills/Baldwin, where a few of my aunts still lived until they got married. We’d do presents there Christmas morning. Oh it was good times.

10. How do you decorate your Christmas tree? My colored lights and two strands of Target garland, one gold and one white (kind of snowflakey), and, of course, my ornaments, including Glinda in her bubble, Lucy and the wardrobe, a talking Ariel, Christmas carol ornaments, etc…it’s fun!

11. Snow? Love it or Dread it? As long as I can stay inside, love it.

12. Can you ice skate? Yup, I can even do fancy stuff.

13. Do you remember your favorite gift? The highlight reel: the Coach evening bag I got last year; American girl dolls (various years); the first edition Virginia Woolf diary; my Coco Mademoiselle perfume (mom got me the really good stuff, not just the eau de toilette, so I only use it very , very rarely).

14. What’s the most exciting thing about the Holidays for you? Seeing my cousins! And exchanging gifts with Tiff and Milia.

15. What is your favorite Holiday Dessert? My spicey cookies, the Snickerdoodle cake. The new chocolate chip cookies I made Sunday are good, too. I also like my St. Lucia buns, which are making a Christmas return this year,.

16. What is your favorite holiday tradition? Singing Midnight Mass, opening gifts with my family, the Heilmann reunion.

17. What tops your tree? An angel I got from my mom.

18. Which do you prefer – giving or receiving? Both have their joys, but I really can’t wait to see Tiff, Milia and David’s reactions to their gifts this year.

19. What is your favorite Christmas Song? The original “have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” in Judy Garland’s range! (also know as: not the really high one all the arrangers wrote so that wimpy little Sopranos could sing it. Not cool) Also: All Come, All Ye Faithful and O Holy Night.

20. Candy canes? They are enjoyable. :)

 
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