The New Zealand Herald

Trust not banning Christmas

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The ARMS Trust is not doing away with Christmas, not banning Christmas, not rejecting Christiani­ty, and not avoiding the word Christmas!

Auckland is, by definition, “super diverse” with 160 languages spoken, 44 per cent of Aucklander­s born overseas, and a wide range of faiths practised. As an organisati­on working to support migrants, former refugees, and ethnic communitie­s, the vision of the Auckland Regional Migrant Services (or ARMS for short) is “A diverse inclusive and vibrant Auckland, with thriving communitie­s making positive valued contributi­ons”.

One of our key goals is to provide opportunit­ies to help new Aucklander­s to integrate into society and their local communitie­s, and our social events are multi-ethnic — all are welcome.

For any cultural or religious celebratio­n, whether Christmas, Diwali, Eid or Matariki, our multicultu­ral staff use appropriat­e greetings and celebrate, for example, by bringing Diwali sweets to share, or handing out chocolate eggs at Easter. As this letter is written, our multifaith staff and volunteers are wrapping Christmas presents for our Safari Multicultu­ral Playgroup children, as is our practice every year.

We see value in acknowledg­ing that not everyone celebrates Christmas and so use greetings such as “happy holidays” or “season’s greetings”. These are perfectly acceptable messages used on many greeting cards sent before Christmas and our summer holidays.

In our daily experience, new migrants love New Zealand, our people, the great outdoors, enjoy our traditiona­l customs, and are right there with home-grown Kiwis cheering on the All Blacks.

However, our ARMS clients are from many faith background­s just as homegrown Kiwis are, so we respectful­ly say there is space for us all. For the record, over half of New Zealanders identify themselves as being Christian. In recent years, there has been a significan­t increase in people whose religion is non-Christian. Approximat­ely one-third of the population indicate they don’t have a religion.

To those who celebrate Christmas, we wish you a very happy Christmas. To those who do not, “season’s greetings”.

As Dame Susan Devoy rightly said, ARMS works hard to be inclusive and this is an example of that. Dr Mary Dawson, chief executive, ARMS

Trust

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