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Holiday Cards Combine Christmas, Hanukkah

 
 
au1929
 
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2004 09:02 am
Nov 28, 3:46 PM EST
Holiday Cards Combine Christmas, Hanukkah

By MATT SEDENSKY
Associated Press Writer




KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Every December, Zack and Hilary Rudman used to send out nonsectarian cards with winter scenes and generic holiday greetings.

Now, however, Zack Rudman, a Kansas City lawyer, has found a variety that seems to better suit a Jewish man and an Episcopal woman with two young children as familiar with the menorah as with a manger scene.

These cards proclaim: "Merry Chrismukkah!"

"I'm all for holiday cards but I want to make sure when we send something it respects both sides of our family," Rudman said. "I always like to deal with religious differences with humor. These were right up my alley."

Christmas and Hanukkah, two holidays that seem to share little more than a calendar page, are increasingly being melded on greeting cards aimed at the country's estimated 2.5 million families with both Jewish and Christian members.

"It's representative of the way people live and the way they spend the holidays," said Elise Okrend, an owner of Raleigh, N.C.-based MixedBlessing, a card company devoted to interfaith holiday greetings. "And it's an expression of people understanding the people around them."

MixedBlessing was among the first to come out with holiday cards intended for Jewish-Christian families about 15 years ago and still may be the only company focusing entirely on that market segment.

In its first year, it sold about 3,000 cards. This year, Okrend projects sales of 200,000 cards off its 55-card line.

Kansas City-based Hallmark Cards Inc. says one of its most popular categories of Hanukkah cards combines Jewish and Christian themes.

"The essence of these cards is not about interfaith households as much as it is about friends and family members of different faiths acknowledging the different holidays that they all celebrate," said Shalanda Stanley, a Hallmark product manager.

American Greetings Corp. has about 10 Hanukkah-Christmas line offerings this year.

"It's an interesting market," said Kathy Krassner, editor of Greetings Inc., a trade magazine. "But it's a limited market."

The newest player is Chrismukkah. Ron Gompertz founded the company this year with his wife, inspired by an episode of the popular Fox series "The O.C." in which character Seth Cohen, whose mother is Protestant and whose father is Jewish, coins the term.

"It's a little bit of both," Gompertz explains.

As with anything addressing religion, though, card makers are careful not to offend. Chrismukkah even offers a disclaimer: "We respect people's different faiths and do not suggest combining the religious observance of Christmas and Hanukkah."

Gompertz explains: "Our intention wasn't to merge the religious aspects but rather the secular aspects of the holidays."

Cards from Chrismukkah, based in Livingston, Mont., use humor to create a hybrid holiday. Greetings include images of a Christmas tree decorated with dreidels, a menorah filled with candy canes and simpler varieties featuring messages such as "Merry Mazeltov" and "Oy Joy."

Gompertz is Jewish and from New York City. He married the daughter of a Protestant minister from the Midwest.

"It's whimsical. It's humorous," said Gompertz. "This is a way of diffusing the seriousness of it."

Most of American Greetings' Hanukkah-Christmas cards are humorous, too. One shows three snowmen - two dressed in traditional winter hats and scarves, the third wearing a yarmulke and prayer shawl. Another features a list of Hanukkah songs that never caught on, including "Shlepping Through a Winter Wonderland," "Bubbie Got Run Over by a Reindeer" and "Come On, Baby, Light My Menorah."

"We don't go over the line," said Pam Fink, who works on Jewish-themed cards for American Greetings. "We're careful to make sure it's lighthearted funny, but not too far."

Gompertz also has been floating around an "Easterover" idea, featuring a "Rabbi Rabbit."

He thinks he'll probably pass on that idea. "That threatens to push the levels of what's acceptable," he said.



IMO this is pushing the envelope to far. . The combining of two seperate religions even in jest. But when it comes to chasing the almighty buck there are no limits.
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CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2004 09:25 am
I agree, I happen to celebrate Christmas and I do wish
everyone a Merry Christmas on the 24th and 25th. Before
that I wish my jewish friends a Happy Hanukkah.

I don't like generic greetings, and as long as we don't buy collective holiday cards like these, it will fade, like any
other bad ideas before. Wink
0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2004 09:48 am
These two religions are combinded in many more ways than with a winter celebration.

And, I think you really have to ask whose fault it is that Christmas time has become such a shopping bonanza. The fact that the holiday has been stripped of religious signifigance can't be totally blamed on retailers.
0 Replies
 
au1929
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2004 09:57 am
boomerang wrote

Quote:
These two religions are combined in many more ways than with a winter celebration.

That combination ended 2000 years ago when both went their separate ways.
0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2004 10:07 am
I would say that the fact that they share the same God and most of their history is a pretty big connection.
0 Replies
 
au1929
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2004 10:25 am
boomerang
IMO Every religion shares the same God, that is if there is such a thing as a supreme being. The only difference is the method of prayer and ritual. As for the similarity between Judaism and Christianity that is inevitable since Judaism is the rock on which Christianity was built. However, any similarity passed that event of 2000 years ago is purely coincidental.
0 Replies
 
Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2004 10:37 am
I'm a neo-pagan with heavy literary overtones. I would not wish my Christian friends "Merry Christmas" or my Jewish friends, "Happy Hanukkah"--the good will of these particular holidays is not mine to bestow.

As for the Jackalope Greetings, two holidays, two venerable religions in one envelope with one $.37 stamp....

I don't think the venerable religions are demeaned or degraded. The Goddess knows there are lots of silly people out there and dubious taste can be exercised with great good will.

If I received one of these grafted greetings, I hope I'd have the charity to think, "These people remembered me at the holiday season."
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