Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are jewish and when the extended family gets together for Hanukah, after the candle lighting and gift-opening all the cousins pile in a couple of cars and some uncles drive the kids around to see Christmas lights.
They make glasses that refract all the lights into stars of david, if you are a family who would find that entertaining. (My grandmother loved them.)
We have those glasses - fun to look at the lit up Christmas tree with them on (interfaith marriage, we celebrate Chanukah and Christmas).
For Chanukah, 8 gifts:
Something you want;
Something you need;
Something to wear;
Something to read;
One night from aunts and uncles;
One gift from grandparents (also a big-ish gift)
One big gift from us;
One night - charity - kids pick gifts for a child their age for our synagogue's toy drive (and we also donate gift cards)
For Christmas morning, they get stockings (from Santa/us) and gifts from aunts/uncles/grandparents from the Catholic side of the family. We also make monkey bread every Christmas morning
Anonymous wrote:We open gifts Christmas Eve while eating dinner of all appetizers.
We get really into advent calendars. We have puzzle ones (where you build part of the puzzle each day), one where we do a christmassy activity together each day, and then some kind of thing (this year both kids have sock advent calendars) and I have a tea calendar.
We have kind of a ritual around our tree where we pick it our Friday night, put lights on it on Saturday, and decorate it together on Sunday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are jewish and when the extended family gets together for Hanukah, after the candle lighting and gift-opening all the cousins pile in a couple of cars and some uncles drive the kids around to see Christmas lights.
They make glasses that refract all the lights into stars of david, if you are a family who would find that entertaining. (My grandmother loved them.)
Anonymous wrote:We are jewish and when the extended family gets together for Hanukah, after the candle lighting and gift-opening all the cousins pile in a couple of cars and some uncles drive the kids around to see Christmas lights.