T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
240.1 | ? Fievel <--> Sixel ? | TAV02::LEVI | | Tue Dec 02 1986 13:36 | 9 |
| Pardon my ignorance. I know about Spielberg...but who is
Fievel Mousekowitz...honestly? I am guessing it is a
character from Spielbergs's latest movie.
It may be showing, but I admit I've seen only one movie
in the last year. "Back to the Future". My excuse is
that our babysitter moved.
Fred or whoever, please do let us know what this is all about.
|
240.2 | You ain't seen nothing yet | PHOBOS::SCHORR | | Tue Dec 02 1986 13:45 | 7 |
| Does anyone know what the story line in the film is?
As for McDonalds, you should see what Sears has in Fievel items.
How about Fievel Mousekowitz Christmas stockings.
WS
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240.3 | The plot | GRAMPS::LISS | ESD&P Shrewsbury | Tue Dec 02 1986 13:51 | 7 |
| I haven't seen the movie yet, so perhaps someone who has can
explain it better. The movie is a full length cartoon called
"Fievel Mousekowitz, An American Tale". The main character is a
Jewish mouse who leaves Russia to escape the Czar's tyranny. From
what I understand, it's a good family movie.
Fred
|
240.4 | A jewish mouse for XMAS | TAV02::LEVI | | Tue Dec 02 1986 14:11 | 9 |
| Interesting...but...
Is this Mousekowitz character the successor to Smurfs
and CabbagePatch people. If so, then this Xmas will be very
exciting...
BTW:
This year Chanuka aleph is 'Kaf-Hay-Cheshvan' or 16 December.
So the intersection between the two holidays is quite close.
|
240.5 | Tis the season again(ughh!) | NONODE::CHERSON | Life SHOULD be a beach! | Tue Dec 02 1986 14:37 | 12 |
| Yes Fred, Spielberg's latest character seems to be attempting to
be the latest commercial hit of the "holiday" season. By the way,
the story line of the movie is that Fievel and his family escape
to America, a land where there are no cats.
Spielberg is only following the societal line that seems to try
to mesh the two holidays together
McDreck's is supposedly frying their fries in vegetable oil(or is
that Burger King?).
David
|
240.6 | Streets Paved With Gold | GRAMPS::LISS | ESD&P Shrewsbury | Tue Dec 02 1986 14:52 | 9 |
| Re .5
Of course! I should have known there are no cats in America. I'm sure
some of our grand parents thought the streets were paved with gold. :-)
Several months ago AP news reported that McDonalds was using LARD and
other animal fats to cook their fries. McDonalds would not comment.
Fred
|
240.7 | A mouse fried in vegetable oil is still treif. | ULTRA::OFSEVIT | David Ofsevit | Tue Dec 02 1986 15:27 | 16 |
| McDonalds uses a combination animal/vegetable shortening for
frying. I once got a pamphlet in which they extol the goodness
of their ingredients, and they were quite proud of that. (Their
buns also use animal fat.) I believe it is Burger King that uses
vegetable oil for frying, though I doubt that would satisfy anybody
who is serious about kashrut.
Now, about the movie, I am no fan of Spielberg, but I don't
think he is primarily responsible for the commercial Xmas ripoffs
that it has spawned. Any movie's producer must attempt to maximize
the income it generates, and I'm not sure how much control he (or
whoever the producer is) would retain once they sold the right to use
the characters to McDonalds or whoever. I personally think the ad
campaign is just plain silly.
David
|
240.8 | Truly Distressing | USWAV1::DAVIS | | Tue Dec 02 1986 15:32 | 7 |
| Re: .4
I believe that the first night of Chanukah is December 26th NOT December 16th,
(no ill-intent implied). This places the intersection of the holidays at an
even closer date, thereby making the issue even more poignant.
Andrew
|
240.9 | | NONODE::CHERSON | Life SHOULD be a beach! | Tue Dec 02 1986 16:06 | 6 |
| re: the coinciding of the dates of Chanukah & Xmouse (:-)
I remember once I had to go to Miluim(reserves) on Dec.25, which
also was the 1st day of Chanukah that year.
David
|
240.10 | Are mice the next big trend? | RICKS::KRAVITZ | Terrapin | Tue Dec 02 1986 18:34 | 10 |
| I wonder if the idea of using a mouse to tell the story of Feivel
was based on the book _Maus_, by Art Spiegelman, which uses mice
to represent Jews, cats as Nazis, and pigs as Christian Poles to
tell the story of a Holocaust survivor and his son.
Plug: I read the book (in the format of a comic book) while home
for Thanksgiving. It's a very good book, and should be indispensible
for introducing children to the events of the Holocaust.
Dave
|
240.11 | Call it Chanumas? | CSCMA::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Tue Dec 02 1986 18:58 | 19 |
| RE: < Note 240.0 by GRAMPS::LISS "ESD&P Shrewsbury" >
> First he is giving
> the erroneous image that Chanuka and Christmas are some how
> related.
Although I share some of feelings about the tendency toward a
Chanumas/Christnuka holiday, the fact is they probably are related.
Historically, there is no good evidence that a) the rededication of the
Temple took place on the 25th of Kislev or that b)Jesus was born on the
25th of December. There was a popular winter solstice holiday (Saturnalia?)
that was celebrated in the Roman empire and I suspect that both the
rabbis and the church fathers were concerned that too many people were
celebrating it. If they were going to insist on having a holiday, better
they should...(etc.).
Aaron
|
240.12 | I am not the culture penguin | SYSENG::VANSICLEN | Garrett, LSEE - Maynard, MA | Wed Dec 03 1986 12:08 | 31 |
|
.11 - Good point! This is pretty much believed with Xmas but never
thought that the same could be applied to Chanuka.
On the movie -
Not that this is the MOVIES conference, but a little more on 'A
Christmas Tale' (Tail?) by Speilberg. I haven't seen it but those
to Chicago Movie Critics ('At the Movies?') gave it a "thumbs down"
for a varity of reasons, which were (as I remember) -
- The leading mouse was from a Russian Jewish family. I beleive
the family was running from the Bolshviks (sp?). The movie never
really states why their house was burnt down, why the family was
running away (besides that America didn't have any cats) and never
touch on the fact that it was a Jewish family.
- The movie stereotyped almost every other ethnic group - The dishonest
Irish politican, an Italian thug (a rat). I forgot what the cockroach
was. There were some other examples.
- The movie wasn't happy. They said it was full of sappy sad songs
and this mouse running around tring to find his parents while ervyone
was taking advantage of him. The only funny part was Dom DeLuses
(sorry, a speller I am not) playing a vegitarian cat.
I may go. The animation is suppose to be the best in years (who
else can afford it?), but my expectations are low.
garrett
|
240.13 | | WFOVX3::KLEINBERGER | misery IS optional | Wed Dec 03 1986 14:27 | 21 |
| Well, my three girls have been bugging me for weeks to take them,
so off to the movies we go this weekend...
I did not know the mouse was Jewish (and probably never would have
known) had I not read it here. Not that I am on the ignorant side
of the house, but if I don't know, there are probably millions of
Americans who don't know.
I guess Micky D's (or Mac and Dons steak house, depending on how
rich you feel today :-)...) decided to cash in on the children of
today wanting to get the mouse in the movies. I mean, Burger King
has Thunder Cats, why not Micky D's having the mouse????? After
all, the care-bears, the popples, the furskin bears, and heaven
forbid the Cabbage Patch kids have already been taken.
I don't see the co-orlation between it and Christmas or Hanukkah...
excaept that if you buy the $5.00 gift certificates from Micky D's
you get a stocking with the mouse on it, and a five dollar cents
off coupon for the mouse at Sears....
GLK
|
240.14 | Winter solstice | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Dec 04 1986 09:19 | 23 |
| The way *I* understand the different relationships to Saturnalia
is this:
Saturnalia is a festival to celebrate the return of the sun, and
to account for those few days which cause a difference of opinion
between lunar and solar calendars.
Mithra[s] was the most popular/familiar dying and rising god of
the Roman Empire. He was born with the rebirth of the sun (the
winter solstice); his birthday was celebrated on December 25th.
Chanukah's form was *deliberately* made with reference to Saturnalia,
as a way for the Jews to thumb their noses at the Romans.
Although Jesus was the sort of d&r god who was born with the rebirth
of growth (the vernal equinox), the early Christians found the
worship of Mithra too strong to ignore, so they pre-empted his
day for their own.
So, yes, the two celebrations are related -- via the solstice --
but the motivations were different. (At least that's my impression.)
Ann B.
|
240.15 | Motivations were similar | CSCMA::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Thu Dec 04 1986 13:56 | 19 |
| re: 240.14
> So, yes, the two celebrations are related -- via the solstice --
> but the motivations were different.
I agree, that the circumstances differed somewhat, but I think
that your description (thanks, I learned something) confirms
that the motivation was pretty similar -- to make a Roman holiday
into a Jewish/Christian holiday.
(If you are saying that the Jews patterned Chanukah on Saturnalia
in the _absence_ of observance of the latter by Jews, I would be
skeptical; there are many things that we have adopted from
surrounding cultures without acknowledging source or reason.
Given the antagonism between Pharisees/Rabbis and the Hasmoneans,
I doubt if Chanukah would have been given legitimacy unless it
were needed for other reasons.)
Aaron
|
240.16 | Xmouse/Hasmousaim/Mousra | TAV02::LEVI | | Fri Dec 05 1986 03:38 | 18 |
| re: -~n There's a *MOVIE* conference?
re: -~m (The correlation Chanukka/Xmas/Pagan-worship)
But wasn't Mithra (Mousra :-) a Persian figure?
Pagan is relative. The Church worried that
the celebration of Mithra's birthday was so
popular that Christian values would erode.
That is why they simply made JC's birthday
coincide with Mithra's birthday.
As far as the Hasmonean (Hasmousean :-) incident
(it was in Ma'ariv wasn't it?) I find it hard to believe
that this was fudged. But I'm willing to hear an
argument.
re: Fievel and plot. Thanks for filling in some details for us
foreigners.
|
240.17 | Chanuka 1987 is 16 December | TAV02::LEVI | | Fri Dec 05 1986 04:04 | 3 |
|
Re: .8 by USWAV1::DAVIS about Chanuka is December 26th and not
December 16th. My mistake. The date I gave is for next year.
|
240.18 | such vision | TAVENG::GOLDMAN | | Sun Dec 07 1986 01:47 | 3 |
| re .17:
I always said that you were a man ahead of your time :-)
|
240.19 | Never say Never | WFOVX3::KLEINBERGER | misery IS optional | Sun Dec 07 1986 20:08 | 26 |
| Well, Bob, the girls and I attended the American Tail on Saturday..
it was a "cute" movie, and you could tell Steinberg (or whoever
that guy is) did the movie, because of the work with lights.
I "missed" all of the jewish overtones in the movie, not being Jewish,
but Bob saw them and pointed them out to me, starting with Feivel
in Jewish meaning Phillip in English...
I say for any who have worries there are really none. The movie
is just a cute movie for kids, about a mouse washed aboard a ship,
how he arrives in NY in a bottle, how he is be-friended by another
mouse, how he helps "outsmart" the cats in NY (There are NO cats
in America is a cute song), and how a cat (played by Dom Deloise
[name and spelling???]) helped his parents find him.
I even heard a brooklyn accent for the first time in my life in
the movie - had Bob not been by me, I would have missed knowing
it was a brooklyn accent.
It was cute though...
and remember:
Never say never!
GLK
|
240.20 | No one knows the exact date | SWATT::POLIKOFF | My apple trees have no peers. | Fri Dec 19 1986 12:27 | 3 |
| Christmas IS directly associated with Chanukah. December 25
is the day the 3 wise men brought Chanukah gifts to baby Jesus
and the Christians have been celebrating Chanukah ever since.
|
240.21 | Hanuka Gelt .ne. Christmas presents | LSMVAX::ROSENBLUH | | Fri Dec 19 1986 12:47 | 25 |
| re .-1
>by SWATT::POLIKOFF "My apple trees have no peers." >
> -< No one knows the exact date >-
> Christmas IS directly associated with Chanukah. December 25
> is the day the 3 wise men brought Chanukah gifts to baby Jesus
> and the Christians have been celebrating Chanukah ever since.
Where do you get this stuff from? Was there supposed to be a smiley
face at the bottom of your posting? Do you have some evidence for
this or is it merely (you should pardon the expression) your opinion?
My understanding of the current non-American Jewish custom for Hanuka,
is that we give presents of money (preferrably coins, silver dollars
for example) to little kids, whence the expression "Hanuka gelt".
In America, I suppose in order to prevent their kids from being overly
envious of the haul that their non-Jewish peers receive from Sam the
Claws, many Jewish parents give their kids major material goods.
I will probably get flamed for being anti-progress and a wet blanket,
but the concept of institutionalized major gift-giving to all the
important people in your life in conjunction with Hanuka just is not
a Jewish thing.
|
240.22 | Does anyone have video tapes of the event 8) | SWATT::POLIKOFF | My apple trees have no peers. | Fri Dec 19 1986 13:03 | 6 |
| In my childhood I was told that all the gift giving to baby
Jesus was because it was Chanukah. Like I said in the title, who
knows the exact date or the exact circumstances.
Also Easter is associated with Passover because Jesus plus his
deciples were at the Seder table and the early Christians still celebrated
the Jewish holidays.
|
240.23 | Do you still believe in the tooth fairy, too? | SQM::GREENBERG | The Human Bean Machine | Fri Dec 19 1986 13:37 | 24 |
|
re: .22
> In my childhood I was told that all the gift giving to baby Jesus
> was because it was Chanukah.
You were very seriously misled as a child. Giving gifts at Chanukah
is a fairly recent (i.e. 20th century) custom developed by American
Jews to keep the Jewish children from becoming jealous during the
Christmas season.
Your association of Easter with Passover is correct, though. Keep
in mind, however, that Passover was around long before Easter existed.
I've been reading the other responses to this note, also, and I
think many of you are trying to mix apples and oranges. Chanukah
is the celebration of the rededication of the temple after the
Maccabee's (sp?) defeated the Syrians in the war, while Christmas
is the celebration of the birth of Christ. While the fact that the
two holidays fall at almost the exactly same time of year may not
be totally conincidental, the two holidays are completely different
and are celebrated for completely different reasons.
Mike
|
240.24 | Lighten up! | NONODE::CHERSON | More_Science | Fri Dec 19 1986 15:29 | 21 |
| Let's lighten up a bit here people! This has turned into debate
as to who is a bigger assimilationist.
Needless to say that I am one Jew who when he is in this country
at Christmastime, usually can be found in a mildly agitated state.
As a rule I don't come out of this state until the night of the
25th when most of the propaganda has ceased.
When I started to visit my then future in-laws, I found that they
have a tradition of having a goose, and then exchanging presents.
Well I flipped out when I first experienced this, found it extremely
weird that Jews would do such a thing. But then my in-laws are
Yekkies (German Jews), and I suppose it's natural to them. Through
the years I've learned to accept it as an innocuous ritual, and
I don't think that it has affected my consciousness as a Jew in
the least.
No, the baby jesus was not brought Chanukah gifts, that theory is
a lot of bull feathers.
David
|
240.25 | they call me Ebenezer, though | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Dear Friends, | Fri Dec 19 1986 17:05 | 10 |
| One of my Russian Jewish co-workers reports that when he came over,
he missed the tree. In Russia, it's a secular New Year's thing,
so Jews have them too. (Of course everything is supposed to be
secular over there...)
It would have been hard for "Baby Jesus" to have received Hanuka
presents when he was born, since he was born in October (according
to historical evidence). I don't know when the Maccabean war ended,
but I wouldn't be surprised if it wasn't even close to Saturnalia,
but the holiday (like Christmas) got shifted.
|
240.26 | hanukah gelt question | AQUA::SAMBERG | | Mon Dec 22 1986 11:12 | 5 |
| A question about hanukah gelt -- Why is there any gift giving
at all, including gelt? When did the hanukah gelt (not
the american gift giving) custom get started?
Eileen Samberg
|
240.27 | Seasons greetings from the Tooth Fairy | SWATT::POLIKOFF | My apple trees have no peers. | Mon Dec 22 1986 12:03 | 3 |
| re .23
Oh my god!!! Do you mean the the tooth fairy is not real. I'm
devastated.
|
240.28 | A Chanuka question | DECNA::GOLDBERG | | Mon Dec 22 1986 12:46 | 10 |
| This seems to be the conference and this seems to be the time for
asking an important question:
Where can I obtain, in the Acton-Boston area, a six-pack of
Maccabee beer?
Thanks,
Herb
|
240.29 | You sure showed me | SQM::GREENBERG | The Human Bean Machine | Mon Dec 22 1986 13:58 | 4 |
|
re .27
Good comeback!!!
|
240.30 | Try Savenor's | NONODE::CHERSON | More_Science | Mon Dec 22 1986 14:58 | 9 |
| Isn't it great how these notes can go meandering off in any number
of tangents?
re:.28
Maccabee beer can be had at Savenor's on the Cambridge-Somerville
line. Kappy's liquors was also stocking it for a while.
David
|
240.31 | | ZEPPO::MAHLER | In the basement? Go up and check! - M.C. Escher | Mon Dec 22 1986 16:44 | 8 |
|
Gelt is given so as to keep the money
in the family line. This is why children
never give any back to parents because they
would die with it.
|
240.32 | but why on hanukah? | AQUA::SAMBERG | | Tue Dec 23 1986 08:22 | 10 |
| <Gelt is given so as to keep the money >
<in the family line. This is why children >
<never give any back to parents because they >
<would die with it. >
But why on hanukah? I was guessing it also was
connecting to giving charity on holidays.
|
240.33 | Gelt is for Gambling | YOUNG::YOUNG | | Tue Dec 23 1986 14:09 | 7 |
| I thought that gelt was given on Chanukah so the kids would have
something to play dreidel with. I'm used to thinking of Chanukah
gelt as foil covered chocolate "coins". The game goes on until
everyone's eaten their winnings (or is too full to do so).
Paul
|
240.34 | History Repeats Itself | GRAMPS::LISS | ESD&P Shrewsbury | Mon Dec 29 1986 13:58 | 5 |
| Y'a know, this is the second time we've discussed this subject.
The only difference is the names of the participants. See note
53.0 for Mike's scholarly dissertation on Chanuka.
Fred
|