Airport
Christmas Trees Gone After Rabbi's Request
'Tis
the Season No More at Seattle-Tacoma Airport
By
LINDSAY HAMILTON - ABC News
Dec.
10, 2006 There is a damper on Christmas cheer at Seattle-Tacoma International
Airport: A rabbi's complaint led to the removal this weekend of synthetic Christmas
trees that have decorated the entrances every holiday season for the last 25 years.
The
man behind their disappearance, Rabbi Elazar Bogomilsky, told a Seattle newspaper
he's "appalled" that the airport officials removed the trees. His goal
was not to clear out Christmas, but rather to add a celebration of Hanukah. He
asked the port of Seattle, which runs the airport, to build an eight-foot menorah
and hold a lighting ceremony.
"Everyone
should have their spirit of the holiday," he told the Seattle Times. "For
many people, the trees are the spirit of the holidays, and adding a menorah adds
light to the season."
Port
officials apparently found it easier to remove the 15 Christmas trees.
Bogomilsky's
attorney, Harvey Grad, told the paper, "They've darkened the hall instead
of turning the lights up. There is a concern here that the Jewish community will
be portrayed as the Grinch."
Patricia
Davis, president of the Seattle Port Commission, called the tree-clearing "regrettable."
"We
tried to come to some accommodation or some resolution and could not," she
said. "They issued us several ultimatums and finally said they would sue
is in federal court.
The time deadline was 10 a.m. Friday.
We were
faced with the choice of spending unknown amounts of the public's money on litigation,
or, in the next few days, trying to figure out how to accommodate all the cultures
in our society."
In
1989, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Christmas trees and menorahs were sufficiently
secular that they could be displayed in a government building without constituting
an endorsement of a particular religion.
The
tree debate surprised many travelers and airport staff.
"It's
a Christmas tree. It's not like they were displaying crucifixes," one airport
worker told ABC News affiliate KOMO-TV in Seattle. "Christmas trees have
been around here for years."
Passenger
Lisa Jones told KOMO, "Why lose the Christmas spirit? Christmas is for kids."
The
airport left some "holiday" decorations in place, including poinsettias,
lights, wreaths and snowflakes. Individual airlines were not included in the tree
removal, and many still had small trees on their desks and counters.
Davis
said the airport's decor policy will be reviewed when things slow down.
"We
will talk about all the options trees, involving many cultures, or doing
nothing at all," she said.