U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree Pays
Homage to Obama—But Not Jesus
December 19, 2011
(CNSNews.com) - The 63-foot Sierra White Fir lighted at the U.S.
Capitol Grounds on Dec. 6 as the official 2011 Capitol Christmas Tree includes
a prominently displayed ornament paying homage to President Barack Obama, but
includes no ornament readily visible to a person standing near the
tree's base that uses the word “Christmas,” or includes an image of the
Nativity, or bears the name or image of Jesus Christ.
On the north side of the tree--at a height of about 4 feet and easily
visible to people standing near it---there is an ornament that says: “I ♥ President Obama.”
When asked whether the tree included any ornaments that mention or
depict Christmas or the birth of Jesus, the office of the Architect of the
Capitol, which is responsible for the tree, told CNSNews.com that it “does not
have a policy nor any restrictions concerning the themes for the ornaments”
that go on the tree. The office could not say, however, whether or
not this year’s Christmas tree does in fact include even a single ornament
that directly references or depicts Christmas or Christ.
The office of the Architect of the Capitol also did not directly
respond to the question of whether any other elected official—in addition to
President Obama—is mentioned on any ornament hung on the tree.
“There may be ornaments like those you describe near the top of the
tree, or they could have been obscured or moved due to wind or weather,” the
architect’s office said in a written statement to CNSNews.com.
Each year since 1964, Congress has been decorating a Christmas tree on
the Capitol Grounds. Until 1968, the decorated tree was a live tree
planted on the Grounds. Since then, the tree has been cut down—usually in a
National Forest--and brought to the Capitol from somewhere in the United
States. Since 1970, the U.S. Forest Service has been responsible for providing
the tree.
Over the years, the Capitol Christmas Tree has come from an irregular
rotation of states—including, not exclusively, West Virginia, Pennsylvania,
Michigan, Minnesota, Vermont, and California. The state that sends the tree in
any given year, according to the Architect of the Capitol, chooses the theme
for the ornaments it will bear. People from that state create the ornaments and
donate them to the government.
This year’s tree came from the Stanislaus National Forest in Tuolumne
County, Calif., which sits on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada Mountains,
due East of San Francisco.
The theme for this year’s ornaments was “California Shines.”
“Ornaments
should be designed to reflect our theme ‘California Shines’ by showing how the
rich cultural and ecological diversity of this state make it shine,” says the tree’s official website,
which was funded by corporate sponsors. ”From the Pacific Ocean to the
sparkling deserts, from the high mountain peaks to its forests, rivers and
abundant Central Valley, the diversity of nature and the people who live here
are what make the great state of California shine.”
While the website said that all Californians were invited to submit
ornaments, it put a special emphasis on getting students to participate.
“We invite participation from all Californians,” said the website.
“From individuals, artists, crafters, young and old alike, any and all are
invited to create and send in an ornament.”
But a flyer distributed
by the website said: “Although anyone can participate, a special invitation
goes out to school classes, after-school programs, home school groups, scout
troops and all other interested youth groups to create the ornaments for the
outdoor tree.”
In
keeping with this special invitation to students, the official website also
produced some environmental “lesson plans” that teachers could use in helping their
students create ornaments.
“We ask that all ornaments for the Capitol Christmas Tree be made out
of natural or recycled materials,” said the introduction to the lesson plans.
“Please share the thoughts in our mini-lesson ‘There is No Away’ with your
students when they create an ornament for the Tree.”
“Ask students where they think that trash goes when they throw it
away,” said this introduction. “Work with them until they understand that trash
eventually ends up in a landfill. Show students the image of a landfill.”
Although the Capitol Christmas Tree, as it stood on the morning of
Dec. 19, included no readily visible ornament that mentioned or depicted
Christmas or Jesus, it did include one ornament that pointed to the Bible and
Psalm 19. This ornament, made from an aluminum pie tin, shows a miner panning
for gold with a Bible behind him. There is a gold cross on the cover of
the Bible. Around the interior wall of the pie tin, these words are
written with what appears to be a blue marker: “More precious than
Gold” and “Psalm 19.”
Psalm 19 says in part: “The decrees of the Lord are firm, and all of
them are righteous. They are more precious than gold.”
The tree also includes an ornament that from a distance looks like it
could be a cross--but closer up turns out to be a road sign, pointing the direction
not to California—but 4837 miles to Hawaii.
Other prominent ornaments on the tree tout Disneyland, Hollywood , the Los
Angeles Lakers and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The tree also includes a number of ornaments representing Christmas
gift packages. The ribbons on these packages are arranged in a cross
pattern--but all of them have "Happy Holidays" ensribed on them.
The official website of the Capitol Christmas Tree has
posted 87 photos of Californians making ornaments or posing with ornaments
they have made. One of these photos shows a young girl holding an ornament that
depicts one of the missions founded in California
in the 18th century by Spanish Franciscan missionaries. It is unclear whether
this ornament was placed somewhere on the 63-foot tree.
CNSNews.com sent a series of question about the ornaments to the U.S.
Forest Service office in Tuolumne County , Calif. , that was responsible for securing the tree and
collecting the ornaments and sending them to Washington , D.C.
These questions asked if any ornaments had been excluded because of their
content and if there were any ornaments actually hung on the tree that
expressly mentioned or depicted Christmas, or the birth of Jesus, or any
Christian cultural site in California , such as
the California
missions.
Along with these questions, CNSNews.com sent the Forest Service a
photograph of the ornaments that said “I ♥ President Obama” and that quoted
Psalm 19, and asked if there were any other ornaments on the tree that
mentioned an incumbent elected official or that cited a biblical passage from
either the Old or New Testament.
The Forest Service said that it had simply sent all ornaments that had
been donated by Californians--along with the 63-foot White Sierra Fir--to Ted
Bechtol, who works under the Architect of the Capitol as the Superintendent of
the Capitol Ground. The Forest Service also said it had forwarded CNSnews.com’s
questions to Bechtol.
Separately, CNSNews.com sent the questions and photos directly to
Bechtol and Eva Malecki, communications officer for the Architect of the
Capitol. Malecki responded with this statement:
“Thank you for your
inquiry. The Office of the Architect of the Capitol (AOC) does not have a
policy nor any restrictions concerning the themes for the ornaments donated for
the Capitol Christmas Tree. Each state determines its own theme each year, and
the U.S. Forest
Service collects the ornaments from communities throughout the state from which
the tree is donated. (For more information about the types of ornaments
collected and collection process, I recommend you speak with the U.S. Forest
Service.) Thousands of ornaments are delivered by the U.S. Forest Service to the U.S. Capitol in
large boxes along with the Capitol Christmas Tree. There is no selection
process to determine which ornaments were to be placed on the Capitol Christmas
Tree and which were not based on theme or content. Rather, the Capitol
Grounds crew has to decorate a 65-foot tree in a matter of days, therefore they
place ornaments on the Capitol Christmas Tree until it is fully
decorated. Their only concern is that the ornaments stand up to the
weather (durable and waterproof). We cannot provide you with the
information you requested as to the location of specific ornaments on the
Capitol Christmas Tree. As I noted earlier, the Capitol Grounds crew
placed thousands of the hand-crafted ornaments on the 65-foot tall Capitol
Christmas Tree. There may be ornaments like those you describe near the top of
the tree, or they could have been obscured or moved due to wind or
weather. The Capitol Christmas Tree has been a wonderful tradition on Capitol
Hill for more than 45 years, and it is not the AOC’s policy or practice to
exclude the display of donated ornaments on the Capitol Christmas Tree because
of any viewpoint of those individuals who created them.”
Original Story Here
Original Story Here
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