Anonymous wrote:So do you think Jews should remove the mezuzah from the front door, because it would offend or be a distraction to buyers?
Anonymous wrote:A little bit is probably fine -- but too much of anything will do more than distract. Anything - not just religious stuff.
We saw one house which was a shrine to Santeria. It was creepy and we left really quickly. Another house was full of rooster paraphernalia and decoration - literally every picture, knob, textile, wall paper etc had a roosters on it. We just couldn't take it seriously when touring. We were too amazed by the sellers commitment to poultry..
Best to minimize - one or two items probably aren't a big deal... But if it's thematic, buyers may not take it seriously.
Anonymous wrote:A little bit is probably fine -- but too much of anything will do more than distract. Anything - not just religious stuff.
We saw one house which was a shrine to Santeria. It was creepy and we left really quickly. Another house was full of rooster paraphernalia and decoration - literally every picture, knob, textile, wall paper etc had a roosters on it. We just couldn't take it seriously when touring. We were too amazed by the sellers commitment to poultry..
Best to minimize - one or two items probably aren't a big deal... But if it's thematic, buyers may not take it seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So do you think Jews should remove the mezuzah from the front door, because it would offend or be a distraction to buyers?
I wouldn't even notice a mezuzah on the front door, but if you were observant enough to have a mezuzah at every interior door then, yeah, that should come down too.
If you are observant enough to hang a mezuzzah on all the doors, and you do so because you believe it is halakhically required, you probably are not comfortable taking them down for purposes of selling the house.
Plus you probably live in a rum neighborhood, and you have a line of buyers out your door, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So do you think Jews should remove the mezuzah from the front door, because it would offend or be a distraction to buyers?
I wouldn't even notice a mezuzah on the front door, but if you were observant enough to have a mezuzah at every interior door then, yeah, that should come down too.
If you are observant enough to hang a mezuzzah on all the doors, and you do so because you believe it is halakhically required, you probably are not comfortable taking them down for purposes of selling the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So do you think Jews should remove the mezuzah from the front door, because it would offend or be a distraction to buyers?
I wouldn't even notice a mezuzah on the front door, but if you were observant enough to have a mezuzah at every interior door then, yeah, that should come down too.
Anonymous wrote:I'd have bad experiences with extremely religious people portraying themselves as one thing, but actually acting in another way.
This is so bad but it's true: when I see a lot of crosses in a house, I think 'child molester'. There's such a thing as overcompensation.
Anonymous wrote:The point is, you want to make it as easy as possible for potential buyers to imagine themselves in the home. By having religious icons/images of your religion in place, you make it that much harder for those who are not of your religion to imagine themselves in the home.
Anonymous wrote:Boy, not a lot of Italians or Irish on this thread! We grew up with a crucifix or small altar in every room plus often a Madonna painting or a bloody Jesus heart (referred to as the Sacrd Heart). I don't think most Catholics are hard to negotiate with in a real estate transaction.
When I was house hunting I didn't like the houses with altars where people burn incense or stuff, mainly because I felt the smell permeated.
I'm also not bothered by family pictures, though. I never understand why people don't want to buy a house unless it looks like one of those furnished corporate residences.