Unlike Hitler who was happy to use the traditional “Weihnacht” to denote the winter holiday period, the SS elite preferred the more pagan “Julfest” and “Jahreswende” (solstice). They didn’t care for Christmas carols either.
I always wanted a more exciting name than Gerry Bowler. For years, I wished I had been baptised something like “Lance Sterling”. I would have settled for “Frank Manley”, the name attached to this turn-of-the-centry boy’s own hero.
Look at the short length of those hockey sticks; playing with them must have caused plenty of back ache.
This sort of link is the kind of thing Twitter is best at, but I’m no longer on Twitter so just read this article:
http://www.abc.net.au/religion/articles/2018/04/11/4828823.htm
As a former university professor, I found this article very interesting.
https://www.chronicle.com/interactives/state-of-conflict
Here is another SS Christmas oddity: a picture of a clay candle-holder, a Jullichte. The original was found in an archaeological dig and was supposed to represent the pagan Teutonic past before the Christian conversion of Germany. Replicas were given out as gifts and features in Nazi bonfire lighting ceremonies.