If you tell your kid that you don't celebrate Christmas because the family is Jewish, and celebrate Hannukah instead, then yes, you have a much better chance of your kid ID'ing as Jewish than if you didn't do that. |
um ... ok. |
How do you even know the girl said that? This is 2nd hand, from a child whose first language who may not even be English, to a parent whose first language is not English. I seriously doubt the Jewish girl instructed PP's daughter to make a gingerbread house for her. More likely she just said that she wouldn't be doing it. As she should -- a gingerbread house is a traditional Christmas craft. Yes, it can be secular, but a Jewish family is perfectly within their rights to decline to do traditional Christmas crafts IN SCHOOL. |
I know it from my child, that I clearly posted in my message. English is her native language, along with few others. You don't know my child, you don't know the Jewish girl, but you chose to accuse my child of lying or misinterpreting information. The girl didn't just said that she cannot do it, but clearly said that my daughter has to do it for her. We are not talking about 2nd grade children, we are talking about kids who are 12-13 years old, who can understand perfectly what has been said. I found it funny because there is nothing in Christianity about gingerbread house, so no, I don't consider it Christmas tradition at all. Maybe it is a secular tradition in some countries like Germany, but it is not a Christian tradition. We are Christian family and we never ever made a ginerbread house at all. I never said that the particular Jewish family was wrong in declining anything (they can decline any courses offered by public school, it is not my business). I think they are confused about Christian traditions. And the proper course of action for the Jewish girl would be to discuss it with the school administration, not with the other students. The girl and her parent received the school curriculum for each subject that they had to sign. If the parent don't agree with some aspects of the curriculum, they should contact a teacher or a counselor at school to discuss their issues with the ginerbread house. |
Oh shove it lady. You don't know or care anything about American Jews and yet are on here lecturing. |
Gingerbread houses might not be Christian, but they are part of the Christmas celebration. Santa is also secular, but I sure don’t want my Jewish child doing any school projects that involve him. |
Where do you come down on snowmen? |
As far as I know, it snows on everyone in our region, and it’s a human trait to recognize and create people in inanimate objects ...Snow is not something that forced assimilation. |
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As a Jew, of course I don't celebrate Christmas. Since we do not believe that a man born 2000 years ago, or any man for that matter, is anything other than a mortal, we do not celebrate his birth as a supreme being of some sort. It is the very antithesis to Judaism.
That said, I do enjoy the seeing the festive decorations out in public as well as hearing the entire array of Christmas songs. |
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Snow is not, but the snowman is. Same thing is with evergreen trees and decorated evergreen trees. So how you chose to accept a snowman, but not a decorated tree? |
Same here except we also celebrate the Jewish kid crap, like let's kill the Egyptians and the Assyrians. |
Thank you, Lady. You are very kind. I am learning a lot about American Jews from this thread indeed
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Santa is not secular. Its part of Christmas. |
The previous poster was over the top, but from your very first post to your last, it sure doesn't seem like you much of a push to choose to paint American Jews in a negative light. Let me guess, your home country has a proud history of pogroms? (Not that that would limit things too narrowly.) |