Anonymous wrote:No more holidays. Religious or otherwise. Including emancipation day. They rarely have a full week.
Anonymous wrote:
And Easter Holidays are a mess. [b]Apparently Emancipation Day is more important that the death and resurrection of a certain person beloved by 2 billion people.

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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Catholic dad here too: Lent Fridays and meat for the kids make me totally sympathize as well.
I feel like it’d be easy to have a panel to check in with on this. And a lot of it is public information. Taking a little care would be enough. Maybe even like a checklist would be enough. Check religious calendars for days off, for student dietary restrictions, when to place testing . . . Not sure what else but it feels like we should be beyond amateur hour here.
And Easter Holidays are a mess. Apparently Emancipation Day is more important that the death and resurrection of a certain person beloved by 2 billion people.
How disrespectful to the slaves and the ADOS (American DESCENDANTS OF sALVRS) who contributed to the economic growth of this country which has turned it into the powerhouse that it is today. It is from the blood, sweat, and tears of those people and of their backs which institutions such as Georgetown University and many others were built.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Catholic dad here too: Lent Fridays and meat for the kids make me totally sympathize as well.
I feel like it’d be easy to have a panel to check in with on this. And a lot of it is public information. Taking a little care would be enough. Maybe even like a checklist would be enough. Check religious calendars for days off, for student dietary restrictions, when to place testing . . . Not sure what else but it feels like we should be beyond amateur hour here.
And Easter Holidays are a mess. Apparently Emancipation Day is more important that the death and resurrection of a certain person beloved by 2 billion people.
How disrespectful to the slaves and the ADOS (American DESCENDANTS OF sALVRS) who contributed to the economic growth of this country which has turned it into the powerhouse that it is today. It is from the blood, sweat, and tears of those people and of their backs which institutions such as Georgetown University and many others were built. Anonymous wrote:Christmas trees are actually a pagan tradition, FYI. The Bible thumpers just co-opted it.
So feel free to do a bush, a tree, wreath, whatever. It's not really Christian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Calling BS on Jewish friends raising kids as practicing Jews with trees. Mixed households, sure. Culturally Jewish but not practicing households, Maybe. But none of these are people pulling kids out of schools for Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, Passover, Sukkot, etc. I hate tree fundraisers because I spend all my time explaining why I am not buying a tree and how I won't volunteer for a religious based activity at a public school.
some fundraisers will include Hanukkah candles too, but I get your point. A Hanukkah bush and oberserving Yom Kippur were not compatible activities among the Jewish families I knew growing up. Now as a parent most of my Jewish peers have some mixed practicing households so I see more cultural overlap than I did as a kid.
Growing up I knew people who had a Hanukkah bush and celebrated Yom Kippur.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Calling BS on Jewish friends raising kids as practicing Jews with trees. Mixed households, sure. Culturally Jewish but not practicing households, Maybe. But none of these are people pulling kids out of schools for Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, Passover, Sukkot, etc. I hate tree fundraisers because I spend all my time explaining why I am not buying a tree and how I won't volunteer for a religious based activity at a public school.
So if you won't volunteer how do you know you spend all of your time explaining?
I've worked the tree sale at my local school over a dozen times and no one has ever noticed whether I bought a tree, and certainly I would never have had to explain if I didn't.