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I've had a lot of other kids at school tell me that Santa is fake I was wondering if this was true or not because my parents always tell me that he brings the gifts on Christmas eve and he always eats the milk and cookies that I leave out for him.

2006-12-19 17:05:03 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Holidays Other - Holidays

8 answers

It depends on how old you are. If you are 5 Santa is real. If you are 35, not so much. Santa is only there if you want him to be. It's like... magic. I'm not going to say he lives at the North Ole with happy little elves, but I will say, if you try hard enough and have lots of faith in him, you will know he is there. Maybe not as a person, but more as a spirit. He doesn't bring gifts to nice little boys and girls presents and bad ones coal, but he does brighten up the holidays. I hope this made since. He's real if you want him to be, but not in a way that he is a human; in a way that he is holiday spirit.

♥Nikki

2006-12-19 17:20:04 · answer #1 · answered by LUVxLIKExWINTR 2 · 0 0

Definitely real! There is a little bit of Santa Claus in all of us who believe! Do your part to spread Christmas Cheer to those less fortunate.

2006-12-20 01:22:44 · answer #2 · answered by ohsgal 2 · 0 0

Yes~

Santa is real!

Yes, Virgina there is a santa claus!

If he wasn't real..would he have mail at the post office....(that would be a federal offense if he wasn't real)..don't believe everything you hear!

2006-12-20 01:08:37 · answer #3 · answered by sleddinginthesnow 4 · 0 0

Sorry to disillusion you, but Santa is a man-made product. This is how he came into existance:

In ancient times our ancestors found it difficult to deal with the harsh Winter season... obviously with out the modern comforts we all enjoy. A mild Winter was always something they longed for, and often tried to appears the forces of Nature with various religious activities. The Pagan Vikings would dress someone up to represent Old Man Winter, and then make him as welcome as possible. The British eventually adopted this custom, and after the advent of Christianity, called him Old Father Christmas. He was welcomed into each household to enjoy all the Feasting and festivities. He was plied with Mead and food to try and keep him in a good mood. It was hoped that these activities would make for a mild Winter and a good Spring. Much later, this ancient Pagan figure, was confused with Santa Claus, and today most think of them as one in the same. Actually "Santa Claus", as he is most commonly known, started out as a Christian Monk who died in 345 CE. and who eventually gained sainthood. Needless to say, he eventually became more popular than "the Christ" and was burned in effigy by the French clergy, in the middle part of the 20th century! Finally, in 1969 CE, Pope Paul VI demoted him in non-saint status! Today, the fat, jolly, red suited Old Man is actually an invention of the Coca-Cola Company. Strange, but true! In 1931, Coca-Cola hired an artist to redesign Santa Claus for their Winter advertising campaign.. Red and white are the official colours of Coca-Cola, hence the Old Man's new outfit. Since that time, the look of Santa Claus has been carved in stone.
Years ago Father Christmas or Old Man Winter, would appear in green, purple, blue, blue-black or even brown, often trimmed with brown, black or white furs. Sometimes even covered head to toe in fur skins. But no more! True to Corporate America's goal's, now all see him as the fat jolly man in the red suit, with lots of goodies for everyone.

Before Clement Moore write his famous poem in 1822, Father Christmas travelled by foot or by giant White horse (Sleiper? - Odin's eight legged horse). But Moore, a very learned man and professor of Literature, changed all of that forever when he introduced the idea of reindeer pulling Santa's sleigh. This was not done on a casual whim, but came from an ancient Finnish legend about "Old Man Winter". The Ancient Finns belied that Old Man Winter drove the reindeer down the mountains, into the lowlands each year with the coming of the cold (food source?). Moore grafted part of this Finnish legend onto the existing Farther Christmas. Why eight reindeer? Some scholars have speculated that the professor was having some fun with the general populace by perking up his tale with a scholarly reference to Odin, who rides an eight legged horse. As well known author, Desmond Morris has stated:

"Odin's horse carried the god around when, clad in a large cloak and hat, he set out to meet his people, dispensing rewards and punishments as they were due. There are clearly elements there suggesting that Odin was a precursor of the Farther Christmas-Santa Claus figure, and it may have amused Moore to incorporate at least one Odin feature in his new creation". So again we find that much of what we consider to be strictly a Christian phenomenon... is again, based in Pagan reality.

2006-12-20 05:10:02 · answer #4 · answered by Ymmo the Heathen 7 · 0 0

i dont care what others say...what i believe is all that matters to me. i believe that santa claus is real... i believe that he is the one who fills my stocking on christmas eve...

2006-12-20 02:37:15 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

he is only real as you want to make him real.

2006-12-20 01:10:23 · answer #6 · answered by kspq7652 3 · 0 0

How old are you?

2006-12-20 01:08:35 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

no.

2006-12-20 01:07:56 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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