From the desk of AWR Hawkins on Fri, 2011-12-30 18:32

Christmas worship in a war zone: U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Ronnie Mays sings "Silent Night" during a candlelight service Christmas Eve in the Chapel at Camp Phoenix, Kabul, Afghanistan, Dec. 24. Mays is from Macon, Ga. and serves with the 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Georgia Army...

AmmoLand Gun News
Washington DC - -(Ammoland.com)- In the not-so-distant past, Christmas was a season of “comfort and joy” throughout the West.
Encompassed by spiritual ties that bound people together, even people of different languages and varied religious outlooks, the celebration of the babe in the manger brought university in the midst of diversity and reminded us of our heritage and our common humanity.
But as the last Christmas came and went, we were reminded again that those spiritual ties, and that Western heritage, have been ruptured. As a result, historical (actual) events in our past which demonstrated our culture’s university are not even remotely possible today.
Case in the point: The Christmas Truce that took place in the trenches of World War One during the Christmas of 1914.
As Christmas Day drew near during that first year of the war, German forces crouched or sat in their trenches facing British forces doing the same in their trenches a few yards, and in some cases a few hundred yards, away. A life that was already miserable for so many of those soldiers, due to the cold that gripped them at night and the monotony that pressed upon them by day, was only going to get worse as blood, urine, feces, and disease were added to mix. Yet they fought.
With German guns facing British trenches and British guns facing German trenches, an onlooker might not be faulted for thinking the only thing these forces had in common was a desire to kill one another. But that false paradigm was shattered on one of the winter nights leading up to Christmas, as British forces heard not the sound of gunfire, but the words of “Silent Night” (“Stille Nacht”) rise from the trenches opposite them.
Thereafter, signboards in English were held up by the Germans, informing the British forces that they wanted a truce to celebrate Christmas. Nothing elaborate mind you, rather, simple messages that conveyed the Germans’ promise not to shoot if the British would promise the same. It was Christmas Eve when a German soldier emerged from his country’s trenches and began to walk toward the trenches opposite him: a brave gesture meant to solidify the start of a truce for soldiers in that that area on Christmas morning. He was met by a British soldier and then both returned to their respective trenches to wait out the night.
When Christmas morning broke, no shots were fired, no hostilities exchanged. Rather, on the land that that lay between the German and British trenches—“no man’s land”—the soldiers met and sang carols and exchanged gifts (cigarettes, sweets, etc.), and even engaged in sports (soccer). Although they were enemies on the battlefield, they shared a common denominator which greater than their aggression, and that denominator was their faith, which was intrinsic to their Western heritage.
Fast forward to this past Christmas (2011), and think of how far we’ve fallen. Over the course of decades court systems, educational curriculum, and the relentless encroachment of political correctness have all been used to rid Westerners of their faith, and as consequence, of their reason for Christmas. We have traded our faith, rich in heritage and transcendent in meaning, for a secularization which literally sucks the life not only out of the West, but out of the West’s holidays as well.
Ask yourself, if under some strange circumstance Britain and Germany were to find themselves at war, “What would happen to a soldier today, were he to lay down his gun in order to sing of the babe in the manger or the silent night on which that babe was born?” My guess is that the soldier would be reprimanded, forced to take “sensitivity training,” or maybe even worse. Moreover, I would venture to say that if the soldier tried to emerge from his trench and walk toward his enemy to celebrate Christmas, he would probably be shot dead the moment his enemy had him in their sites.
Simply put, we Westerners have lost the ties that bind. And now, in a manner completely antithetical to that witnessed in the winter of 1914, we are more apt to exchange hostilities between ourselves instead of gifts.

AWR Hawkins
About:
AWR Hawkins writes for all the BIG sites, for Pajamas Media, for RedCounty.com, for Townhall.com and now AmmoLand Shooting Sports News.
His southern drawl is frequently heard discussing his take on current events on radio shows like America’s Morning News, the G. Gordon Liddy Show, the Ken Pittman Show, and the NRA’s Cam & Company, among others. He was a Visiting Fellow at the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal (summer 2010), and he holds a PhD in military history from Texas Tech University.
If you have questions or comments, email him at awr@awrhawkins.com. You can find him on facebook at www.facebook.com/awr.hawkins.


Dan Roberts is a grassroots supporter of gun rights that has choosen AmmoLand Shooting Sports News as the perfect outlet for his insiteful articles on Guns and Gun Owner Rights.
AWR Hawkins writes for all the BIG sites, for Pajamas Media, for RedCounty.com, for Townhall.com and now AmmoLand Shooting Sports News.
Named the Gun Dean by Human Events, "the senior rights activist in Washington" by Shotgun News, a "champion of the right to self-defense" by The Washington Times, and "dean of gun lobbyists" by The Washington Post and The New York Times, John M. Snyder has spent 45 years as a proponent of the individual Second Amendment civil right to keep and bear arms.
Evan Nappen is an active criminal defense attorney who has focused on firearms and weapons law for over 23 years.
Alan Korwin is the owner of Scottsdale, Arizona based Bloomfield Press. Founded in 1988, is the largest publisher and distributor of gun-law books in the country. His website, www.gunlaws.com, features a free national directory to gun laws and relevant contacts in all states and federally, along with a unique line of related books and DVDs.
Jeff Knox is a second-generation political activist and director of The Firearms Coalition. His writing can regularly be seen in Shotgun News and Front Sight magazines as well as here on AmmoLand Shooting Sports News.
Tom McHale describes himself as a conservative gun-totin’ bible-clingin’ literary assault dude who enjoys finding humor in just about anything.
Philip Van Cleave is president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, (VCDL). The Virginia Citizens Defense League is an all-volunteer, non-partisan grassroots organization dedicated to defending the human rights of all Virginians.
Dudley Brown, Executive Director of the National Association of Gun rights and Colorado's Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, says he is never surprised to hear that President Obama is trying to unilaterally enact gun control regulations.
Kenn Blanchard is a contributer to AmmoLand Shooting Sports News and Producer of the Urban Shooter pod cast.
Anthony P. Mauro, Sr, (also known as “Ant” to friends and associates) is Chairman and co-founder of the New Jersey Outdoor Alliance, New Jersey Outdoor Alliance Conservation Foundation, and New Jersey Outdoor Alliance Environmental Projects.
Shari Spivack is a mother and firearms instructor who has a passion for shooting, teaching and continuing to educate myself with all types of firearms in a safe and responsible manner.
Mr. Markel has a diverse background both teaching and doing. Paul served in the U.S. Marine Corps and saw combat as member of the 1st Battalion, 6th Marines.
Alan Gottlieb is chairman of the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arm and founder of the Second Amendment Foundation.
Since 1985 Gary Marbut has been heavily involved in the formulation of public policy concerning civilian ownership and use of firearms in Montana.
AmmoLand contributor, Paul Driessen, is a senior fellow with the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow and Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise, nonprofit public policy institutes that focus on energy, the environment, economic development and international affairs.
Best known these days as a commentator on issues ranging from environmentalism to energy, immigration to Islam, Alan Caruba is the author of two recent books, "Right Answers: Separating Fact from Fantasy" and "Warning Signs", both collections of his commentaries since 2000 and both published by Merril Press of Bellevue, Washington.
Frank Brownell, CEO of Brownells, the Montezuma-based company is nation's largest gunsmithing and firearms accessory businesses.
Action hero and Second Amendment activist, Chuck Norris is one of the most enduringly popular actors in the world.
Chris W. Cox is the Executive Director of The National Rifle Association’s Institute for Legislative Action and serves as the organization’s chief lobbyist.
David Gonzales grew up with firearms and has many fond memories of hunting with his grandfather.
Dr. Paul Kengor is professor of political science at Grove City College and executive director of The Center for Vision & Values.