It is not my job to pay for your kids college. That's YOUR job. Sheesh, I am glad I don't get invited to many of these! |
Absolutely true if you are an Italian New Jersey family and paying for a wedding. Mama writes down how much cash each family gives so they can reciprocate when the next wedding rolls around. I had the sad task of telling a New Jersey friend who was counting on a money bag to pay for wedding costs that things like that don't happen in D.C. Don't you remember the wedding scene in GoodFellas? She was carrying a money bag. Or something cash is pinned to her dress or veil. |
Well, of course it's embarrassing. But it's also true. Haven't you seen "Keeping up with the Steins?". Hilarious, BTW. |
I completely agree with you, but I'm also the non-Jew who has gone to many of these and brings the hefty checks because I know what is expected. Until the scenario changes, the parties keep getting more and more lavish, often to ridiculous proportions as in "keeping up with the Steins" (which we watched with Jewish friends and laughed ourselves silly). I do commend the rabbis who are trying to get this under control. I do commend those parents who try to put holds on the parties. I commend those families that choose to re-route some of the excess to charity. I commend those families that take the family to Israel (family only, not destination bar mitzvah as was the topic of a recent thread - don't make me fly to Israel) instead of spending $200K on a ballroom dinner and orchestra in Potomac. But so long as those invitations keep coming in, I know what is expected of me in NYC, Miami, or Potomac. I bring a checkbook. |
Well, in 30 years of this I've never had a family return the check! Or savings bonds! You would be no. 1. |
Agree. Presbyterian/Methodist here. I've never heard of money being given. You take food to the family. You attend the service. You send flowers or money if they have designated a charity "in lieu of flowers". But I usually do both. I've never heard of money being given in any form to cover any funeral expenses. |
| I am glad I read this thread. I am going to make a mental note to decline any jewish kid 13th birthday party invitation in the future. Really, $36.00 at a minimum? Yucks! |
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21:44 Such contributions are common in some AA communities, as at least one other poster mentioned. I live in a diverse building, and on four separate occasions there's been a collection. We sign a card and give what we can. (No rules! No expectations!)
Separately, I cannot believe some of the posts in this thread. They reinforce some unfortunate stereotypes. |
But the kids think it is. Go watch "Keeping up with the Steins". The sad part of it is that once the ceremony is over and the party done with, they rarely return to Shul. At least in my experience. |
You didn't read the thread very carefully if you think it's about birthday parties. |
WTF? I'm AA and have never once given or received money at a funeral. You don't know what you're talking about. And are you saying we're not middle/upper class? |
In what AA communities (what does that even mean)? Do you mean poor communities? Cause if so, that's not an AA thing, it's a poor people thing that crosses racial boundaries. |
No, that's not what I meant. There's a typo n my sentence. I meant that I never heard of middle or upper-class African-Americans raising money for funeral. I have seen poorer African-Americans raise money for funerals, however. But I do not think it is common practice. |
| Pp. I meant for there to be an If between they and r. |
I sadly agree. They do. |