Anonymous wrote:
Why would you wait outside the temple? Just drop her off and leave.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - thank you for your responses. So what I'm getting is a cash gift is appropriate. Meaning - DD is not supposed to show up with a physical present like it's a kid's birthday or anything like that.
One other question - the invitation was for the jewish service and then the party after. I've heard from other people invited that they're just going to the party afterwards.
Just for us, I don't find that appropriate - from what I understand, DD's friend has spent a lot of time learning Hebrew and the religious verses, etc. - so I've made clear to DD she needs to show up for her friend and sit in the pews while she and her family have their moment. Admittedly, I'm not Jewish but I don't want my daughter just showing up at the after party.
The reason I raise this is because the invitation was to my daughter and the after party is in the evening. I'm just wondering - should I drop my daughter off at the synagogue and wait outside and pick her up after or is it okay if I go in and sit with her.
Obviously, I'm not proposing to attend the party itself - I'm just trying understand the protocol for the religious service.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - thank you for your responses. So what I'm getting is a cash gift is appropriate. Meaning - DD is not supposed to show up with a physical present like it's a kid's birthday or anything like that.
One other question - the invitation was for the jewish service and then the party after. I've heard from other people invited that they're just going to the party afterwards.
Just for us, I don't find that appropriate - from what I understand, DD's friend has spent a lot of time learning Hebrew and the religious verses, etc. - so I've made clear to DD she needs to show up for her friend and sit in the pews while she and her family have their moment. Admittedly, I'm not Jewish but I don't want my daughter just showing up at the after party.
The reason I raise this is because the invitation was to my daughter and the after party is in the evening. I'm just wondering - should I drop my daughter off at the synagogue and wait outside and pick her up after or is it okay if I go in and sit with her.
Obviously, I'm not proposing to attend the party itself - I'm just trying understand the protocol for the religious service.
Anonymous wrote:$36 bucks. Done. My girl/boy twins were invited to 30-40 Mitzvahs. Sometimes if it was one twin I gave $18.
Don't overthink it and it's not about the cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A check for $100 if she’s the only one in your family going.
Not $100. Cash / gift cards should be multiples of $18. So $72, $90, or $108.
Been Jewish my whole life, had a bat mitzvah, my kid had a bat mitzvah -- this whole "multiples of 18" thing feels like Cinquo de Mayo -- a legit cultural phenomenon among some groups that became wildly overblown with the internet. FYI.
Same experience and feeling here.
Oh good! Years ago, I was invited to my first bat mitzvah - the daughter of a friend from work. I put a $20 bill in a card and have wondered if I caused some sort of cultural insult all these years later.
Only giving $20 was the insult.
Why would you think/say that!
Because $20 is how much you spend on a 1st graders gift. Not on a 13 yr old who has spent years working towards this very important religious milestone.
I spend $10-15 on elementary school gifts. Stop being greedy. Its not about the gifts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A check for $100 if she’s the only one in your family going.
Not $100. Cash / gift cards should be multiples of $18. So $72, $90, or $108.
Been Jewish my whole life, had a bat mitzvah, my kid had a bat mitzvah -- this whole "multiples of 18" thing feels like Cinquo de Mayo -- a legit cultural phenomenon among some groups that became wildly overblown with the internet. FYI.
Same experience and feeling here.
Oh good! Years ago, I was invited to my first bat mitzvah - the daughter of a friend from work. I put a $20 bill in a card and have wondered if I caused some sort of cultural insult all these years later.
Only giving $20 was the insult.
Why would you think/say that!
Because $20 is how much you spend on a 1st graders gift. Not on a 13 yr old who has spent years working towards this very important religious milestone.
I spend $10-15 on elementary school gifts. Stop being greedy. Its not about the gifts.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - thank you for your responses. So what I'm getting is a cash gift is appropriate. Meaning - DD is not supposed to show up with a physical present like it's a kid's birthday or anything like that.
One other question - the invitation was for the jewish service and then the party after. I've heard from other people invited that they're just going to the party afterwards.
Just for us, I don't find that appropriate - from what I understand, DD's friend has spent a lot of time learning Hebrew and the religious verses, etc. - so I've made clear to DD she needs to show up for her friend and sit in the pews while she and her family have their moment. Admittedly, I'm not Jewish but I don't want my daughter just showing up at the after party.
The reason I raise this is because the invitation was to my daughter and the after party is in the evening. I'm just wondering - should I drop my daughter off at the synagogue and wait outside and pick her up after or is it okay if I go in and sit with her.
Obviously, I'm not proposing to attend the party itself - I'm just trying understand the protocol for the religious service.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A check for $100 if she’s the only one in your family going.
Not $100. Cash / gift cards should be multiples of $18. So $72, $90, or $108.
Been Jewish my whole life, had a bat mitzvah, my kid had a bat mitzvah -- this whole "multiples of 18" thing feels like Cinquo de Mayo -- a legit cultural phenomenon among some groups that became wildly overblown with the internet. FYI.
Same experience and feeling here.
Oh good! Years ago, I was invited to my first bat mitzvah - the daughter of a friend from work. I put a $20 bill in a card and have wondered if I caused some sort of cultural insult all these years later.
Only giving $20 was the insult.
Why would you think/say that!
Because $20 is how much you spend on a 1st graders gift. Not on a 13 yr old who has spent years working towards this very important religious milestone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids went to JDS. I love that as parents, we all contribute to a fund, and the school provides a gift from the class. It's been a few years since my kids mitzvah's but it was a nominal--maybe $100 at the high end.
For those that don't know, 18 is chai in Hebrew. Chai also means life. When you give in increments of 18 you are wishing a blessing upon the recipient. So $36 = double chai or double life blessing.
From the parent POV, my kid just wants your kid to celebrate. They want to look out from the bima and see their friends supporting them in their big day. They want to know that someone will have their back if they screw up. Yes, almost every kid stumbles no matter how much they prepared and the beauty of this is that most of the friends don't know when mistakes happen. So my kid feels great and your kid has no idea that something went wrong.
The big parties are for the adults. The kid is the reason but the party really isn't for them. If it was, it would be a kid focused party, not a ballroom extravaganza. So don't worry about the gift. I promise you the jewish parents aren't keeping track and the kid really doesn't care. Your kid took time out of their weekend to celebrate--that's the gift.
Wasn't there someone complaining here recently bitterly how their father only gave a cufflinks gift and no money? I'd not be so sure nobody cares about the gift. Looks like there are some/many who keep track all right.
Anonymous wrote:My kids went to JDS. I love that as parents, we all contribute to a fund, and the school provides a gift from the class. It's been a few years since my kids mitzvah's but it was a nominal--maybe $100 at the high end.
For those that don't know, 18 is chai in Hebrew. Chai also means life. When you give in increments of 18 you are wishing a blessing upon the recipient. So $36 = double chai or double life blessing.
From the parent POV, my kid just wants your kid to celebrate. They want to look out from the bima and see their friends supporting them in their big day. They want to know that someone will have their back if they screw up. Yes, almost every kid stumbles no matter how much they prepared and the beauty of this is that most of the friends don't know when mistakes happen. So my kid feels great and your kid has no idea that something went wrong.
The big parties are for the adults. The kid is the reason but the party really isn't for them. If it was, it would be a kid focused party, not a ballroom extravaganza. So don't worry about the gift. I promise you the jewish parents aren't keeping track and the kid really doesn't care. Your kid took time out of their weekend to celebrate--that's the gift.