Catholic World News News Feature

Chicago mayor named for "Ebenezer Award" December 20, 2006

The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty has given its annual “Ebenezer Award” to Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley, for removing the film The Nativity Story from the list of sponsors of the city’s annual Christkindlmarket festival.

Shortly after being named for the annual mock-award, Mayor Daley announced that he was reversing a previous decision announced by his office, and scenes from The Nativity Story would be allowed to play at the festival.

The Ebenezer Award-- a stocking full of coal-- is offered each year by the Becket Fund for “the most ridiculous affront on the Christmas and Hanukkah season.” The group observed that the fair from which the Nativity film was barred is named for the Christkindl, or Christ-child. “Apparently this was lost on the mayor and his staff,” the Becket Fund statement observed.

“Banning Christ from a Christmas festival is like banning the Irish from the St. Patrick’s Day parade,” said Kevin Hasson, the president of the Becket Fund. “It just doesn’t make sense.”

In announcing the annual award, the Becket Fund said that Daley had close competition from a Florida school principal who ruled that “A Penguin Christmas” was too religious; the airport managers in Seattle who removed Christmas trees; and Best Buy store for excising the word “Christmas” from all advertising.

Ways to
Get
Involved

Get involved today...