Yes, Virginia

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In 1897, newspaper magic happened. An eight-year-old girl, Virginia O’Hanlon, wrote a simple three-sentence letter to The New York Sun newspaper asking if Santa exists. Her father suggested she write: “Papa says, ‘If you see it in THE SUN it’s so.’” The power of the fourth estate. What transpired has become legend. The editor who wrote the response, Francis Pharcellus Church, who had been a war correspondent during the Civil War, used it as an opportunity to not just say whether Santa exists or not, but to highlight the importance of faith and believing in something larger than yourself.

It is difficult to imagine what Francis Church must have experienced as a war correspondent and how this affected him afterwards. The Civil War ravaged our country; more than 600,000 Americans died. It was, at times, brother fighting brother as our country tore itself apart. During the four-year conflict there was extreme suffering, and we can assume that Church saw this, and that it left an imprint on him. At its conclusion, the South’s infrastructure was destroyed, and the long, hard process of Reconstruction began. Many felt that society was broken as a result and that there was a collective loss of faith. When Virginia’s letter came in, Church must have jumped at the opportunity to craft such a brilliant reply—a reply asserting that if there were no Santa, “The eternal light with which childhood fills the world would be extinguished.”

Newspapers are an interesting thing. You have the opportunity to make an impact. Church’s editorial appeared on page seven of The Sun, below a piece on the “chainless bicycle.” You would not think it would have gotten much notice, but it did. It was read and the magic began. Today it is the most reproduced editorial, in part or whole, in the English language. Its words and phrasing are both quick-paced and soothing. We like to imagine Church wrote it quickly, in a fit of passion. “Yes, VIRGINIA, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy.”

We do not begin to believe our editorials are as impactful as Church’s most famous one. However, we do have faith. We have faith not just in our paper (and faith that you are reading the editorials), but in our community and our neighbors. We believe that Santa abounds in Greenwich in large ways and small. We saw it first-hand when we watched neighbors and friends fill a police cruiser with toys on a recent Saturday. And not just one cruiser, but three! Thanks to the generosity of many, including the Greenwich Police Department, children who are less fortunate will know a little holiday cheer.

At the heart of Church’s editorial is how can you believe in something, have faith in something that you cannot see and when others tell you it does not exist? To the doubters and naysayers, he responds, “Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance can push aside that curtain and view and picture the supernal beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah, VIRGINIA, in all this world there is nothing else real and abiding.”

As you gather this weekend with family and friends, as the race to the holidays concludes with the actual holiday itself, we hope that everyone will take a moment to avoid the “skepticism of a skeptical age” and look for what we as a community can hold up with pride as meaningful accomplishments. For us, it is the recent opening of Coffee for Good in the Mead House at the 2nd Congregational Church. Deb Rogan and her team have, in a very brief time, created a “most go to” spot. Not only is the coffee great, but its mission to employ and train people with disabilities is fantastic!

It is this effort, and many others, that need faith and belief to be made real.

Yes, there is a Santa Claus.

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