When I'm addressing a group of people, I'm in the Happy Holidays camp. I don't like making anyone feel like a minority. But more than that, it's not only about how I make them feel. It's also about how they will think about me. Being accurate for, let's say, 80 percent of a room, an email, a letter, an advertisement, a Tweet, or a Facebook update means you're wrong for 20 percent. Wrong. Alienating. Irritating. Selfish. Uncaring. Insensitive. Lazy.
I wouldn't want anyone thinking that about me.
When I'm addressing a person and I don't know what religion they practice, I'm in the Happy Holidays camp. I don't try to guess whether it is more appropriate to say Happy Hanukkah, Happy Kwanza, or Merry Christmas. Why guess? What would I base the guess on? The way they look? Where they're from? No. Religion is not the same as race or nationality. It's a belief, a faith, a philosophy.
My holiday cards (when I send them) ask for peace and love. I just figure everyone wants peace and love. I do. When I'm talking to someone who I know is Jewish, I'll wish them a Happy Hanukkah with joy in my heart. When I'm talking to a group of friends who met each other at a Christian church, I may end the conversation by wishing them a Merry Christmas. Otherwise, I pretty much respect everyone's choice of religion by saying Happy Holidays.
Sometimes being "politically correct" is just a nice thing to do.
For me, it's the right thing. Imagine....
Hey there,,,Speaking of imagine............"no religion too".
ReplyDeleteLots of love and, well, happy something. Maybe just happy happy. xxx
DC
Happy Holidays definitely when you don't know!
ReplyDeleteand Dave "Imagine" strikes my fancy , too!
s-hak