Anonymous wrote:If u want to fund a College fund, have the ceremony and then do a simple party at your house. Bank the money you would have spent on a fancy show off keep up with the joneses party. Don't waste tens of thousands on a party and expect guests to give enough to cover the party plus your kids college! Wow......
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$18 is cheap. This is not a regular party. This is a huge, huge deal, that the child spent MONTHS preparing for, that the parents spent THOUSANDS of dollars on (even for a less expensive bar mitzvah). $18 is an insult and not just fine at all.
I really hope this is a joke. If not and you are Jewish, you give the rest of us a bad name. I agree that a Bar/Bat Mitzvah is a big deal, but really the party is not. The ceremony is the important part.
I'm not sure what you mean by joke, but $18.00 is not appropriate. At least cover the cost of your (or child's) dinner, dancing, table favors, etc. The money is supposed to go into a trust fund for college. BTW, savings bonds are also an xlnt way to go. I've bought them many times for bar mitzvahs.
Anonymous wrote:of they are looking to recoup the expense then they should scale down the cost of the event. I wouldn't spend that on a wedding, let alone a child's party. Good grief that's excessive.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the boy a present. Let his relatives and adults give him money. It's inappropriate for his friends to give him money.
Wrong.
I disagree. Give the boy AT LEAST $50 or $100 for goodness sakes - his parents probably spent $25,000 to $100,000+ for this thing. It's a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$18 is cheap. This is not a regular party. This is a huge, huge deal, that the child spent MONTHS preparing for, that the parents spent THOUSANDS of dollars on (even for a less expensive bar mitzvah). $18 is an insult and not just fine at all.
I really hope this is a joke. If not and you are Jewish, you give the rest of us a bad name. I agree that a Bar/Bat Mitzvah is a big deal, but really the party is not. The ceremony is the important part.
Anonymous wrote:$18 is cheap. This is not a regular party. This is a huge, huge deal, that the child spent MONTHS preparing for, that the parents spent THOUSANDS of dollars on (even for a less expensive bar mitzvah). $18 is an insult and not just fine at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the boy a present. Let his relatives and adults give him money. It's inappropriate for his friends to give him money.
Wrong.
I disagree. Give the boy AT LEAST $50 or $100 for goodness sakes - his parents probably spent $25,000 to $100,000+ for this thing. It's a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jewish parents set up a bank account well before their child turns 13. Jews save money, and give money as gifts for the living. This is why when someone Jewish says their parent died, you do not give them money. In other religions, money is given to pay for the funeral. Jews are savers, and have no problem paying for funerals because they plan ahead. Don't give cash, OP.
So, no one else but Jews open bank accounts or save money? Really?
Not at ALL what was said. Not even close.
of they are looking to recoup the expense then they should scale down the cost of the event. I wouldn't spend that on a wedding, let alone a child's party. Good grief that's excessive.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the boy a present. Let his relatives and adults give him money. It's inappropriate for his friends to give him money.
Wrong.
I disagree. Give the boy AT LEAST $50 or $100 for goodness sakes - his parents probably spent $25,000 to $100,000+ for this thing. It's a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the boy a present. Let his relatives and adults give him money. It's inappropriate for his friends to give him money.
Wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify - it is a MULTIPLIER of $18. Not just $18. If it's family, we would give $640 or so, in check form so you can salvage the situation if lost. If a very close friend, then $270 or break $300. And so on. Ideally, this goes into a college fund so checks are best. Remember the family is laying out thousands of dollars for the event so your cash gift should, at a minimum, cover the cost of your child attending the party, food, etc. Just $18.00 won't cover it. And, yes, checks are best, not gift cards.
Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify - it is a MULTIPLIER of $18. Not just $18. If it's family, we would give $640 or so, in check form so you can salvage the situation if lost. If a very close friend, then $270 or break $300. And so on. Ideally, this goes into a college fund so checks are best. Remember the family is laying out thousands of dollars for the event so your cash gift should, at a minimum, cover the cost of your child attending the party, food, etc. Just $18.00 won't cover it. And, yes, checks are best, not gift cards.