70k/200 people has never been normal. Maybe in your small circle of very wealthy people. |
Good idea. |
OP ignore the trolls
Lots of good ideas here. Rent out one of the soccer places fill it with blow up games and a cheap DJ. |
These are just UMC and MC families. Not "very wealthy" people. There are people who saved for years to provide that. If that's not your way, it's fine. Everyone does what works for them. |
No they were not MC families. That is over $250k in 2024 dollars. |
What happens if the bar mitzvah service takes place and there is no party? Is there any obligation to invite a lot of people? Is there an equivalent to eloping i.e. celebrating a solemn ceremony without feeling obligated to have a blow out party. |
I just went to a BM that probably cost about $250k. It was amazing and so so fun. |
Some people just have a kiddish lunch at the temple after. |
Sounds like a good idea for the OP. |
You could just have family attend a kiddush lunch at the temple (which at our temple you have to pay for regardless) and then do a Bowlero party at night for their friends. Bowlero was under $1K when we did it but we only invited about ten kids. |
And given that the PP was only 3 at the time, I'm sure that her perception of the costs are probably not reliable. |
Did you miss the part where I said some people saved for years? MY parents were middle class, living in an UMC area. They saved for almost ten years for my sister's bat mitzvah. We, as a family, sacrificed a lot for that weekend. |
In my experience as a 50-year-old Jew who has only lived in the biggest, wealthiest cities in the US, middle class Jewish people don't save for years for a party they can't afford. They save for years for educational expenses and for their homes, but not for blow-out parties. Maybe your parents were lousy financial planners, PP? I've only seen really expensive bar mitzvah parties from actually wealthy families. |
We are doing Bowlero for immediate family and kid’s friends. Ruthless with the list. It’s 55 total and it costs about $5K for our package. Also doing the kiddish at our synagogue and that’s about $3K. The key is ruthless guest list. This isn’t the time to have your first cousins attend. But maybe your kid’s first cousins. Grandparents yes. But your aunt and uncle no. Have them to the kiddish. |
My favorite part of the weekend for DS was a Friday night dinner at a restaurant for family. 40 something people. It was just nice to all be together. And then the service and Kiddush. We had a traditional bigger party, but consider just a regular bday party for the kid, in addition to a restaurant or backyard family dinner.
What does the kid like and how many friends? A fancy restaurant for 10 kids? 30 kids at a pool party? Don't worry about it looking like a hotel dance party - just do something that the kid likes. |