It is a pleasing paradox and a rejoinder to those who think like Combom:
Read your history books, bonfire night is an anti-catholic, pro-parliamentary celebration - I'm not saying its right or wrong to celebrate it, my daughter isn't going to be the only child in the street with no fireworks - but you ought to realise whats going on!Festivals mean what people today make them mean. Let's not strip our culture of all enjoyment for fear of giving offence to someone.
2 comments:
I have to edge in a touch here.
Bonfire night isn't anti-catholic - it is against medeival clericism and imperial popery.
The dogmatic centralised authoritarianism which cultivated the plotters' conspiracy has place in the modern world.
But for those of us who went to the same school as Guy Fawkes, bonfires were banned as it was deemed 'bad form' to burn an old boy! http://maxatkinson.blogspot.com/2009/11/guy-fawkes-prevented-some-of-us-from.html
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