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AT ISSUE: Costa Mesa Senior Center published Mabel Knowles’ poems in
its monthly newsletter, the Chronicle, for five years but the new
director now deems them inappropriately religious (“Christian poet
challenges senior center,” Jan. 6).
I strongly agree with Costa Mesa Senior Center director Aviva
Goelman’s policy that religious poetry is not appropriate in the center’s
newsletter, the Chronicle, since the center is partially funded by the
city.
However, her contention that “Hanukkah is a not a religious holiday;
it’s a festivity” to justify the lighting of a menorah in December is
technically correct but de facto wrong.
Because normal activities (work and school) are not curtailed during
the eight days of Hanukkah, it is not a religious holiday like the Jewish
New Year, Day of Atonement or Passover.
However, the festivity is mentioned in the Jewish legal commentary
the Talmud (Tractate Shabbat 21-b) and commemorates the rededication of
the temple in Jerusalem after its desecration by the Syrian Greek ruler
Antiochus IV.
Clearly, it is considered a religious holiday by Jews and non-Jews in
this country, and it should be treated as such when decisions about its
appropriateness in a public facility like the senior center are made.
BENJAMIN J. HUBBARD
Costa Mesa
Chairman, Department of Comparative Religion
Cal State Fullerton
As an American citizen, I am very concerned about Aviva Goelman’s use
of the phrase “separation of church and state” in her explanation of her
actions against Mabel Knowles and her activities in and around the Costa
Mesa Senior Center.
Such a phrase occurs nowhere in the U.S. Constitution nor in any
founding documents of our great nation.
Generally attributed to the 1st Amendment of the Constitution, the
above controversial phrase in actuality bears no resemblance to the real
thing: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
This forward-thinking statement reflected the founding fathers’
passion for freedom from tyranny in the form of a state-instituted
denomination as then existed in Great Britain.
Also embodied in the statement from the Constitution is the
determination for the federal government to avoid placing barriers upon
its citizens that would disallow them from openly (i.e., in public and
community places) exercising their faith, perhaps in song, writing,
prayer, etc.
My, how the political winds have changed! In 2001, being a Christian
means being targeted by everyone from the media to the local senior
center. Please, everyone, let’s not hide behind the myth of “separation”
when discriminatory actions are taken.
Goelman’s actions against Christianity at the senior center don’t
really seem based on some moral or legal principle but more likely on the
prevailing “we can’t offend” malaise sweeping our land.
But wait ... I believe she has just offended the Jewish members of the
center by downgrading their Hanukkah feast observance to the level of a
“festivity.” She also has offended Christians by demanding that they
cease a talk of a “Jesus” or a “savior” -- never mind that most of the
world religions recognize Jesus in some form or fashion.
My gut feeling, though, is that Goelman isn’t too worried about
offending Christians, only everyone else.
To defend this bias, she would have to debate with none other than
John Adams, perhaps the greatest of all American patriots during the
Revolutionary War, who counters: “The general principles on which the
fathers achieved independence were the general principles of
Christianity.”
It’s time for a history lesson. Religion and the state are indelibly,
wonderfully, woven together ... embrace it.
JEFF R. GEOGHAN
Costa Mesa
I think that at age 87, Mabel Knowles has the right to enjoy her
freedom and creativity in writing her poems. And I think that Aviva
Goelman is certainly limiting Knowles’ creativity.
As a senior, Knowles deserves the right to use her mind and have the
freedom to know that where she’s living there’s an appreciation for her
art work.
In the article, it mentions Goelman permitted Hanukkah festivities as
nondenominational festivities -- they weren’t religious -- and that there
were no Christian programs for Christmas, only nondenominational.
My feeling is I don’t know a person who would go to a Hanukkah program
and think it’s nondenominational. There are many Christians on the other
hand who would go to a Christmas program talking about Santa Claus or a
Christmas tree that would be nondenominational. I have friends who are
Muslims and have Christmas trees with no religious connotation.
So I think Goelman is a little off base. She might be a little too
intense in her new tenure, and I think she should be more universal and a
little more caring of the older people whom she is serving.
ARLEEN McCAFFREY
Newport Beach
This supposed “separation of church and state” by public employees has
gone too far. I am offended by the lack of diversity imposed by Aviva
Goelman on the senior citizens of our community. Who is she to tell
people to keep their faith in a box and not let it out except at church
or synagogue?
Adults are able to appreciate the faith of others, whether they agree
with it or not. Faith adds depth to peoples lives as well as our culture.
The Chronicle is not publishing religious poems; it is publishing
works of creative senior citizens, whose full, rich, long lives include
faith. Those who read them can understand and appreciate this. I sure
wish the senior center and its employees could.
MIKE BARNETT
Costa Mesa
As one who was raised in the Jewish religion -- although I became a
Christian in 1970 -- I’m very saddened that Aviva Goelman is against
Mabel Knowles putting Christian poetry into the senior center’s
newsletter.
I wonder if people know that Costa Mesa Senior Center is home to a
Christian church. No one minds taking money from a Christian church, but
yet this lady’s poems can’t be printed. That sounds like hypocrisy to me.
I’m very saddened; it’s not right. There should be freedom of
expression. This lady should be able to continue having her poems
published.
JUDITH HUNT
Costa Mesa
The greatness and success of this country are due in part to the
respect and enforcement of the law.
Aviva Goelman has done nothing [other] than to enforce the rules and
laws of her organization.
MICHAEL CHEYCK
Irvine
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