Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Christmas in Dixie

First of all, you need to scroll down to the bottom of our playlist and select "Christmas in Dixie" by Alabama while you read this...seriously.

Even though we have no snow (I actually used my air conditioner in the car today), it feels like Christmas. We went to Leah's school today for lunch. They invited the families to come eat with the students. We had a nice turkey dinner cafeteria style, and they had a live band for entertainment. The BEST part was the carols they were singing. They did the standard "Rudolph", and "Santa Claus is Coming to Town", etc. Then, I almost teared up as the whole cafeteria sang "Angels We Have Heard on High" at the top of their voices. There's nothing quite like a cafeteria full of kids and adults blaring, "Glooooo-Ooooo-Ooooo-Oria" to make you feel quite happy to be in the midst of a community that celebrates Christmas. Jared's sister can't even sing "Rudolph" with her music classes in Colorado because of the line, "Then one foggy Christmas Eve" and here we are publicly and collectively singing hymns! I'll trade the snow for this atmosphere of Christmas in Dixie!

3 comments:

Megan said...

That is great! If you haven't heard about our Capitol rumpus with the nativities & the anti-religion sign, suffice it to say that hymn-singing would NEVER be allowed to happen here at public school!!
We have had 3 snow days so far, though, so at least it feels like Christmas. :)

Jenni said...

Wow. That's fabulous. Really.

I was just thinking this morning about how sad it is that the kids here don't get a chance to celebrate Christmas at all in school because they spend the entire time learning about Hannukah and Kwanza. Y'know...lest they be all self-absorbed or something like that. I'm sure glad the schools are teaching my kids to be tolerant. (Insert eye roll here.)

Jessica 7 said...

That's fabulous! At our school here in CT they had a Holiday sing where kids sang songs about Christmas, Hannukah, and Kwanza. It was really nice.