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You are here: Home / Archives for Christmas

Christmas

‘O Hush the Noise Ye Men of Strife’

December 28, 2013 by Strife Staff

by Thomas Colley

As the centenary of the start of the First World War approaches (2014), thoughts will likely turn this holiday season to the uplifting Christmas football match that supposedly occurred during a truce between Germany and the Allies on the Western front. Such a heart-warming episode provided a symbolic reminder that humanity could stand morally above the awful conflict in which Western civilisation was embroiled. That sworn enemies agreed a truce and celebrated a mutual religious festival together is one of the most emotive mythologies of war at Christmas.

Perhaps surprisingly, honouring the religious festivals of others is not as commonplace as one might think. For centuries, the Jews across the Christian world experienced persecution at Easter. Half a century before the First World War, the American Civil War saw continued fighting over Christmas, with the festival used for a major propaganda battle. At this time of joy, happiness and perhaps a little sober reflection for those who are less fortunate it may not readily occur to us that, for some, religious festivals are not sacrosanct. Instead, they are a strategic opportunity to press their agenda, be it ideological indoctrination, the incitement of fear or military victory.

Wars are fought on a physical and a symbolic level. On a physical level, religious festivals provide a strategic military opportunity to take advantage of the distraction of one’s opponent with a surprise attack. That may sound controversial. But if moral considerations are removed from the equation in line with strategic theory, the use of a religious festival to attack opponents at their moment of greatest distraction is a rational decision. The Yom Kippur War was one such example, when an Arab coalition used the holiest Jewish day of the year to launch an attack against Israel in 1973. The Tet Offensive of 1968 was another notable example, when the North Vietnamese Army and Vietcong used New Year celebrations to launch surprise attacks against the US and their allies during the Vietnam War. Militarily, whilst both offensives eventually faltered, they achieved strategic surprise, and both attackers made significant early gains that had previously eluded them. In Vietnam of course, the Tet offensive was seen as the pivotal catalyst for US public opinion to turn against the war, a spectacular success for North Vietnam in the long term.

However, it is on the symbolic level that using religious festivals for strategic gain is most significant. Of all strategies concerning the use of force to achieve political objectives, terrorism relies most on the effects of symbolism. US embassies in Yemen and elsewhere in the Arab world were closed this year due to the threat of Islamist terrorist attacks on Eid. Some commentators in the US excoriated the terrorists being so immoral as to choose their own holy day to launch attacks. Yet clearly such an attack could have great symbolic impact, potentially galvanising the support of those sympathetic to the terrorist cause. Though one speculates whether other Muslims would feel the same way about the use of their day of celebration for such ends. An Eid attack might minimise Muslim casualties as more people may be at home with their families. On the symbolic level though it might backfire, alienating more Muslims than it would attract.

As well as military and terrorist acts, Christmas has also been instrumentalised for the projection of soft power. In 2011, North Korea was fuming at South Korea’s construction of several giant Christmas trees along the border with the demilitarised zone. A Christmas tree could symbolise welcoming, celebration, family, an invitation. Yet to the North it could be seen as a cultural threat; a Christmas tree could also symbolise plenty, feasting, religious freedom (let alone a consistent power supply), all things that are rarely experienced by the people of North Korea. Indeed the North Korean government was so upset as to threaten to shoot the trees down, such were their symbolic power. Actually this could perversely be seen as cause for optimism. If North Korean elites feel that threatened by the propaganda effect of a Christmas tree, then North Korea’s cultural borders must be more open than one might think.

This sense of optimism is important at Christmas. Much of the world is not free from strife. Peace on Earth remains an ideal rather than a reality. But let us hope that, regardless of faith, this holiday season brings as many people together as possible in togetherness rather than suffering. We should not have to look back a hundred years for poignant examples of when enemies come together, even briefly, in peace and goodwill. As the popular Christmas Carol ‘It Came Upon a Midnight Clear’ proclaims: ‘O hush the noise ye men of strife and hear the angels sing.’

Filed Under: Blog Article Tagged With: Christmas, strategy, terrorism, Thomas Colley

Religious festivals as a source of community cohesion and conflict

December 25, 2013 by Strife Staff

by Revd. A.J.D. Gilbert,
Senior Chaplain, RAF Halton

And gentlemen in England now a-bed
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
And hold their manhood’s cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin’s day.
Shakespeare, Henry V, Act 4 Scene 3

It seems fashionable today in many different circles to claim that religion and religious belief are the cause of more death and suffering than anything else in the world. Such a statement tends to mistakenly assume that basically all religions are at heart the same and it fails to acknowledge the reality of how dissimilar different religions can be from each other. Even a cursory examination would demonstrate the truth of this. Therefore to try and explore the relationship between religious festivals and violence in all religions is unrealistic. That being the case this article will concentrate on the Judeo-Christian and Islamic religions.

What is undeniably true is that religion and religious belief have been inextricably involved in many unsavoury incidents in world history but can it really be true that they have been more responsible or that they instigated more of them than has any other motivating factor? I doubt very much whether that is likely to be true. There are many instances of violence that has had nothing to do with religion such as Mao Tse Tung’s Cultural Revolution, Pol Pot in Cambodia or year zero in Vietnam.

What is true is that belief systems in general, which included religious and non-religious systems such as Communism, can and do impinge on the very heart of individuals’ understanding of themselves, their place in world and the society in which they live. These systems bind societies together and define the boundaries of that society. If individuals are lead to feel that any of this is threatened in some way then they will react against the threat, possibly violently. Therefore it is hardly surprising to find that vested interests, political leaders, aspiring revolutionaries, power brokers etc realising the latent power available through manipulating religious belief have found ways of enlisting religion in support of their cause whatever it is. This technique can quite clearly be seen in the speech of Pope Urban II at Cleremont in 1095 launching the 1st crusade. [1] Arguably this same mechanism of manipulating beliefs was invoked in both the Chinese Cultural Revolution and Vietnamese year zero but in a non religious context. Interestingly Urban’s speech was not made on any particular religious festival which one might expect it to have been if such festivals were seen as motivating factors.

If religion really was the instigator of the violence in the world rather than a tool used to support it, then it would be reasonable to suppose that religious festivals would act as a focus and give focus and encouragement to that violence. There is little evidence to be found support this contention. In fact only in Mesoamerican cultures such as Aztec is it possible to find a direct causal link. Aztecs needed prisoners to sacrifice on certain festivals and they appear to have gone to war to obtain them.[2]

While not advocating war there are examples in both Christianity and Islam of festival days when if a war is to be undertaken they are regarded as good days to fight. For instance, St. James’s Day is considered auspicious in Spain. Grotius terms it, a day the Spaniards believed fortunate, and through their belief made it so. Charles V conquered Tunis on that day.[3] In Islam the 27th day of Ramadan is a particularly holy day for the Muslims as it is the “Night of Power,” when the first verses of the Koran were revealed to the Prophet Mohammed. Al Qaeda’s aspiring martyrs appear to regard this as a particularly auspicious day to die. After his victory at the Battle of Hastings, William the conqueror marched on London and received the city’s submission. On Christmas Day, 1066, he took advantage of the festival to be crowned king of England.[4]

If anything religious festivals are more likely to be used by the enemies of a particular system rather than its advocates. In Islam, Sunni terrorists often stage atrocities against Shi’ites during Ashura, a Shi’ite festival. The IRA is remembered in the UK for its Christmas bombing campaigns. Christian churches have been attacked in Sudan and Nigeria at Christmas and Easter by Islamic terrorists. Israel was attacked on the Day of Atonement in 1973 by both Syria and Egypt, remembered today as the Yom Kippur war. This makes sense because in one blow such an attack insults your enemy’s beliefs, takes advantage of minimal security at a time when adherents want to be celebrating a festival. From a terrorist point of view it is often a time when large numbers of people gather together making it both easier for a bomber to remain undiscovered whilst providing an opportunity for greater casualties.

Lastly there is plenty of evidence that religious festivals can have a dampening effect on conflict. There are numerous historic tales of Christian wars ceasing over festival periods. During the First World War much to the consternation of the Generals (particularly the French) British, German and French troops got together over Christmas in no man’s land, exchanged small presents and even played games of football.[5] Operation Desert Fox (16 - 19 Dec 1998) in which this author participated was timed not to interfere with Ramadan. Syria tried to instigate a ceasefire during the Eid-al-Adha celebrations in Oct/Nov 2012.[6]

In conclusion, there is little evidence that Religious festivals per se encourage their followers to violence. However, religions and belief systems are powerful tools which are therefore targets for manipulation. There is evidence that festivals give the enemies of a particular faith group a target to fire at whilst within a faith group festivals tend to have a dampening effect on violence.

NOTES
[1] C. Tyerman, God’s War (Penguin books, 2007), pp. 58ff; also http://www.mag.geschichte.uni-muenchen.de/downloads/strack_urban.pdf.
[2] http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/aztecs/sacrifice.htm
[3]http://www.thebookofdays.com/months/july/25.htm
[4]http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/the-battle-of-hastings
[5]http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4123107.stm
[6] http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/9636915/Syria-truce-unravels-on-first-day-with-Damascus-car-bomb.html

Filed Under: Blog Article Tagged With: Christmas, conflict, RAF, religion, Revd. Gilbert

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