Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please please please stick to your guns on this one. A Christmas tree is an overtly Christian symbol and it will only confuse your little ones, who already face enough pressure to assimilate. Your stepdaughter needs to respect your rules in your home. If she wants to celebrate Christmas, she can do it elsewhere.
The stepdaughter didn't bring it up; OP's DH did. He wants to have it in their home this Christmas and asked where they should put it, not whether they should have one. Those little ones are his children, too.
DH agreed to raise their kids a certain way. Now he's trying to change their agreement midstream. OP doesn't have to accept that.
He doesn't appear to be trying to change the way the children with OP are raised. Instead, he is honoring the beliefs of his child with his previous wife. That child is his just as much as the younger ones are.
I take it you're not jewish. Being a Jew means fighting against thousands of years of attempts to annihilate and assimilate your people into the dominant culture. That means drawing a hard line and not allowing your kids to dabble in other religions for fun and means maintaining a Jewish home. Husband is now moving the goalposts and trying to walk back his commitment to maintaining that Jewish home. That IS changing the way OP'a kids are being raised.
OP married a Christian who has kids from another marriage. Her children's sibs are Christians. If racial purity was important to her, she should have married another Jew.
And here come the anti-Semites who think that Jews are a distinct race...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally agree that the rigidity is coming from the Jewish perspective.
But, as I understand it, its stemming from a culture that is very sensitive to accommodation and assimilation as part of its history. This thread has been very interesting to me and I guess I never really got that, but part of Judaism is adamantly NOT being whatever the majority religion is. As a Christian this hasn't ever been part of my cultural past or heritage. But I can see how it very much is a part of the Jewish culture. I guess it sounds like putting up a tree to some feels like something is being taken away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally agree that the rigidity is coming from the Jewish perspective.
But, as I understand it, its stemming from a culture that is very sensitive to accommodation and assimilation as part of its history. This thread has been very interesting to me and I guess I never really got that, but part of Judaism is adamantly NOT being whatever the majority religion is. As a Christian this hasn't ever been part of my cultural past or heritage. But I can see how it very much is a part of the Jewish culture. I guess it sounds like putting up a tree to some feels like something is being taken away.
Only if you perceive it that way. My DH is Jewish and has always participated in Christmas and Easter, as I have in Passover and Hanukkah. Our children were raised observing both. He is probably more into the tree and the lights than I am! But I also take the lead in preparing the latkes and other traditional food and shop for all gifts and decorations for our family and his.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally agree that the rigidity is coming from the Jewish perspective.
But, as I understand it, its stemming from a culture that is very sensitive to accommodation and assimilation as part of its history. This thread has been very interesting to me and I guess I never really got that, but part of Judaism is adamantly NOT being whatever the majority religion is. As a Christian this hasn't ever been part of my cultural past or heritage. But I can see how it very much is a part of the Jewish culture. I guess it sounds like putting up a tree to some feels like something is being taken away.
Anonymous wrote:I totally agree that the rigidity is coming from the Jewish perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a nasty thread and I am amazed that nobody wants to call out the op.
It is your stepdaughters home for the time being as well. She knowingly married a man with a Christian daughter. Let her have a damn tree - it's not going to hurt you.
As a Christian I would never want someone under my roof to feel unloved including the celebration of their religious holidays.
I think sour op wants to pretend she doesn't have stepchildren, or worse, is afraid folks will gossip at her temple about her Christmas tree.
I feel sorry for that stepdaughter who clearly has no home. I guess she's just a shiksa though.
You just don't get it. As a Jew, I'm very worried about my children assimilating into the dominant Christian culture. You act like we can just have a tree in the house and that's fine. It isn't. For Christians, you can dabble in other people's traditions and that's fine, because you're the vast majority. Jews aren't. We have to constantly guard against assimilation. That means, among other things, keeping a Jewish home. A house with a Christmas tree isn't a Jewish home. OP cannot accommodate both the stepdaughter and her own desire to have a Jewish home. PERIOD. They're mutually exclusive.
While I agree with you, my heart breaks for the non Jewish stepdaughter who can't celebrate how she traditionally does. I spent Christmas by myself once and it was the most depressing day I can remember. It's normally a family day, but instead she'll be with a stepmother who says she can't celebrate because she isn't religious enough.
I think the stepdaughter needs to spend Christmas elsewhere.
I'm a differnent poster but still a Jew who would be uncomfortable with a tree in my household. Is a tree really going to fix this problem, though? I would think, the traditional Christmas is a family day, with the kids waking up at 6am for presents, family gathered all day, special meals, etc (all that stuff I see in the movies!) Instead stepdaughter is going to wake up to kids that are sleeping in because the day is off from school. Mom maybe getting some extra housework in because nothing is open anywhere to do errands. Maybe even going to work. (As a Jew, I always work Christmas as that allows other to take off - I'm in the medical field)
Even if there is a tree. Any even if there's some sort of presents or special dinner, how can it be at all the same as celebrating with a Christian family? It just seems like the reality is either stepdaughter celebrates at her mom's house, or, at baseline there is going to be some level of compromise. Is the tree even going to seem like largest issue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm a differnent poster but still a Jew who would be uncomfortable with a tree in my household. Is a tree really going to fix this problem, though? I would think, the traditional Christmas is a family day, with the kids waking up at 6am for presents, family gathered all day, special meals, etc (all that stuff I see in the movies!) Instead stepdaughter is going to wake up to kids that are sleeping in because the day is off from school. Mom maybe getting some extra housework in because nothing is open anywhere to do errands. Maybe even going to work. (As a Jew, I always work Christmas as that allows other to take off - I'm in the medical field)
Even if there is a tree. Any even if there's some sort of presents or special dinner, how can it be at all the same as celebrating with a Christian family? It just seems like the reality is either stepdaughter celebrates at her mom's house, or, at baseline there is going to be some level of compromise. Is the tree even going to seem like largest issue?
OP here--- I think you may have hit on the bigger issue which DH did not bring up to me. You're right. Dec 25th is not a special family day in our house. DH has always gone into the office. I spend the morning writing my employee evaluations that are due Dec 31st. The kids get up when they get up, have some cereal, and watch tv until I'm done. Then we go to the JCC for some pool time. In the late afternoon, we do some sort of community service project with the JCC. Of course, my SD is welcome to attend any and all of the events that we do--but somehow, I don't think that's what she has in mind for Christmas day. I typically make spaghetti for dinner or if I was on the ball that week, I might have picked up a rotisserie chicken. I get that Christmas is a family holiday. But even with a tree, I'm not sure I can make the house feel like Christmas.
I know a lot of jewish people on this thread are advocating no tree--but it is her home. As I've read this thread over the past few days, I've realized it's the size of the tree that is bothering me. The small tree that someone posted a picture of would be lovely. In judiasm, we just don't have any large overt symbols like the Christmas tree. The menorah fits on my windowsill. The mezzuah fits in my hand. The sedar plate is no bigger than a large turkey platter. The sukkah is rather large but since it's outside it doesn't feel that big.
DH always promised me that once the kids (she has an older brother) were 18 we could start going away for winter break. That it would be the kids choice to join us or not. He never wanted to ask them to make the choice between a winter vacation with us and spending Christmas with their mother. Maybe this year we could start going on vacation.
As for her spending Christmas with her mother---there was a falling out. But it's only July and Dec is a long way away.
Anonymous wrote:It's easy to be welcoming and open minded when we are taking about being welcoming of ones own culture. Personally, I wouldn't go so far as to call most of what's been posted antisemitic, but it is frustratingly colored by a sort of entitled majority standpoint. Many Jews have legitimate, nuanced reasons they do not want a Christmas tree in their house. There's been a lot of mockery to that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a nasty thread and I am amazed that nobody wants to call out the op.
It is your stepdaughters home for the time being as well. She knowingly married a man with a Christian daughter. Let her have a damn tree - it's not going to hurt you.
As a Christian I would never want someone under my roof to feel unloved including the celebration of their religious holidays.
I think sour op wants to pretend she doesn't have stepchildren, or worse, is afraid folks will gossip at her temple about her Christmas tree.
I feel sorry for that stepdaughter who clearly has no home. I guess she's just a shiksa though.
You just don't get it. As a Jew, I'm very worried about my children assimilating into the dominant Christian culture. You act like we can just have a tree in the house and that's fine. It isn't. For Christians, you can dabble in other people's traditions and that's fine, because you're the vast majority. Jews aren't. We have to constantly guard against assimilation. That means, among other things, keeping a Jewish home. A house with a Christmas tree isn't a Jewish home. OP cannot accommodate both the stepdaughter and her own desire to have a Jewish home. PERIOD. They're mutually exclusive.
While I agree with you, my heart breaks for the non Jewish stepdaughter who can't celebrate how she traditionally does. I spent Christmas by myself once and it was the most depressing day I can remember. It's normally a family day, but instead she'll be with a stepmother who says she can't celebrate because she isn't religious enough.
I think the stepdaughter needs to spend Christmas elsewhere.
I'm a differnent poster but still a Jew who would be uncomfortable with a tree in my household. Is a tree really going to fix this problem, though? I would think, the traditional Christmas is a family day, with the kids waking up at 6am for presents, family gathered all day, special meals, etc (all that stuff I see in the movies!) Instead stepdaughter is going to wake up to kids that are sleeping in because the day is off from school. Mom maybe getting some extra housework in because nothing is open anywhere to do errands. Maybe even going to work. (As a Jew, I always work Christmas as that allows other to take off - I'm in the medical field)
Even if there is a tree. Any even if there's some sort of presents or special dinner, how can it be at all the same as celebrating with a Christian family? It just seems like the reality is either stepdaughter celebrates at her mom's house, or, at baseline there is going to be some level of compromise. Is the tree even going to seem like largest issue?
Of course it's not going to be the same, it's going to be a compromise, which is something both sides should be doing. No one (or at least pretty much no one) on this thread is advocating for the OP hanging stockings from the mantle, stocking the tree for everyone, and cooking a big Christmas dinner. Telling the stepdaughter she either needs to leave her home for Christmas or not celebrate at all is a really hostile response to this situation.
I'm the poster you are replying to. I agree, compromise is called for. I guess, what I'm not understanding is why, from my point of view, there seems to be so much hostility to the viewpoint that many people would be uncomfortable with a traditional tree. (Large tree, prominently displayed in public area of house). If compromise is part of the baseline, why is that not a reasonable compromise. What I'm feeling most acutely from this thread, as a Jewish poster, is hostility towards the viewpoint that a tree is a Jewish household is not approrpiate.
Bingo Schlomo- it is hostility to the idea it is a Jewish household; it is in fact a mixed household.
The anti-semitism in here is unbelievable. Can I make a Catholic priest rape joke or is that frowned upon?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm a differnent poster but still a Jew who would be uncomfortable with a tree in my household. Is a tree really going to fix this problem, though? I would think, the traditional Christmas is a family day, with the kids waking up at 6am for presents, family gathered all day, special meals, etc (all that stuff I see in the movies!) Instead stepdaughter is going to wake up to kids that are sleeping in because the day is off from school. Mom maybe getting some extra housework in because nothing is open anywhere to do errands. Maybe even going to work. (As a Jew, I always work Christmas as that allows other to take off - I'm in the medical field)
Even if there is a tree. Any even if there's some sort of presents or special dinner, how can it be at all the same as celebrating with a Christian family? It just seems like the reality is either stepdaughter celebrates at her mom's house, or, at baseline there is going to be some level of compromise. Is the tree even going to seem like largest issue?
OP here--- I think you may have hit on the bigger issue which DH did not bring up to me. You're right. Dec 25th is not a special family day in our house. DH has always gone into the office. I spend the morning writing my employee evaluations that are due Dec 31st. The kids get up when they get up, have some cereal, and watch tv until I'm done. Then we go to the JCC for some pool time. In the late afternoon, we do some sort of community service project with the JCC. Of course, my SD is welcome to attend any and all of the events that we do--but somehow, I don't think that's what she has in mind for Christmas day. I typically make spaghetti for dinner or if I was on the ball that week, I might have picked up a rotisserie chicken. I get that Christmas is a family holiday. But even with a tree, I'm not sure I can make the house feel like Christmas.
I know a lot of jewish people on this thread are advocating no tree--but it is her home. As I've read this thread over the past few days, I've realized it's the size of the tree that is bothering me. The small tree that someone posted a picture of would be lovely. In judiasm, we just don't have any large overt symbols like the Christmas tree. The menorah fits on my windowsill. The mezzuah fits in my hand. The sedar plate is no bigger than a large turkey platter. The sukkah is rather large but since it's outside it doesn't feel that big.
DH always promised me that once the kids (she has an older brother) were 18 we could start going away for winter break. That it would be the kids choice to join us or not. He never wanted to ask them to make the choice between a winter vacation with us and spending Christmas with their mother. Maybe this year we could start going on vacation.
As for her spending Christmas with her mother---there was a falling out. But it's only July and Dec is a long way away.
I got cheap stockings from Bed Bath & Beyond and filled them with dollar-store trinkets. And I made his mom's recipe for cinnamon rolls on Christmas morning. We had Chinese food on Christmas Eve, as is my family's tradition.