Mother Talkers

25th Day of Kislev

Sat Dec 01, 2007 at 04:51:51 AM PDT

A few years ago, my daughter and I were watching the local news. Thanksgiving had just passed and the station had taken a viewer’s poll to ask how people felt about Christmas decorations going up before Thanksgiving. I will never forget one viewer’s response because it brought us a good chuckle. The viewer had suggested that Thanksgiving be changed to September to allow everyone more time to shop. It seemed like forgive me, such a stupid comment. What stopped this woman from beginning her Christmas shopping before Thanksgiving? Was there something about this Christmas ritual that we didn’t understand? Or had she lost the true meaning of Christmas… and Thanksgiving for that matter?

Hanukkah begins next Tuesday, December 4. Some may wonder why it bounces around the calendar from one year to the next. Actually, it doesn’t. It begins on the same date every year on the Hebrew calendar - the 25th night in the month of Kislev. The Hebrew calendar is based on the moon, unlike the Gregorian calendar, which is based on the sun. Therefore, new moons dictate the beginning of new months and those days are always different when matched to our Gregorian calendar.

So, I need to finish my holiday shopping by Tuesday - hence the reason for a lack of postings this week. Family duty calls. Family traditions and the promise of 8 nice days of celebration, including a holiday party on Sunday, have sent my typing fingers into a frenzied state way beyond the keyboard and froze my blogging brain. Instead, I have been shopping, cleaning my house, sending gifts off to relatives, wrapping presents and thinking about ways to make this Hanukkah memorable and special for my family.

When my kids were young, their questions were relentless about why we don’t have a Christmas tree, and why Santa doesn’t visit our home, and why we don’t decorate our house with lights or put candles in the windows --- like “everybody else”. Our quaint New England town is so beautiful this time of year. As you drive down our street every house really does have candles in the windows and white lights wrapped painstakingly around trees and bushes. Our house is the only one that doesn’t and I needed to help them understand that we’re “not like everyone else”, at least during the month of December.

December is my annual reminder that I am a minority in this country. Synagogues have even coined a phrase for this phenomenon: the “December dilemma”. Rabbis run workshops to help parents deal with kids’ questions and their desire to celebrate Christmas. No matter where I go in search of Hanukkah wrapping paper, candles for the menorah or dare I ask some decorations, I am always relegated to a small corner of the store with a few token decorations, some wrapping paper (if I am lucky) and paper goods that usually are leftover rejects from the year before. Sometimes I feel like people are staring at me, even feeling sorry for such uninspiring selections when the whole rest of the store boasts aisles of festive Christmas goodies. If they do, they shouldn’t. I like it this way. But it’s taken me a while to get here.

While growing up, my family never made a huge deal about Hanukkah. We usually lit the menorah and we got some presents. But the big stuff, the good stuff was saved for Christmas. Yes, my Jewish parents celebrated Christmas. And as a kid, I loved it. But after I grew up I started thinking more about my own identity and what Judaism meant to me, and Christmas just didn’t fit into the picture.

I realize that Hanukkah is a very minor holiday and some Jews will argue that it should remain that way. All the hype about Christmas, catapults Hanukkah to the head of the pack of other more important Jewish holidays. Be that as it may, the reality is that Christmas is a really fun holiday for kids, and when you are on the outside, peering through the snow covered glass and seeing those chestnuts roasting on an open fire and Santa Claus coming to town, it’s tough being a Jewish kid this time of year. I believe that creating traditions around Hanukkah is fine. Making the holiday fun and festive and special helps kids realize that although they may be different, it is an opportunity to use this distinction to create something special.

Therein has been my challenge over the past 20 years - to help my kids feel proud of being Jewish in December. From the issue of Santa - I never told my kids he is just pretend, out of respect for their friends (believe me, it would have been so much easier if I did), which meant endless explanations as to why Santa doesn’t come to our house -- “no, it’s not because you have been bad”! Christmas trees as religious symbols -- they are called “Christmas trees, for a reason!” Christmas concerts in schools, classroom Christmas parties, stores decked out with Christmas decorations etc. My kids were bombarded.

So, it became my project. I educated teachers and went into my kids’ classrooms and cooked potato latkes and taught everyone how to play dreidel. We listened to Hanukkah music. As a family we read lots of Hanukkah stories (I have a huge collection of picture books that I collected over the years). I pull boxes down from the attic too! We’ve collected decorations over the years, have our own traditions around the eight nights and even paint and decorate a “Hanukkah box” every year to hold all our gifts. I realized that the envy doesn’t come from wanting to celebrate Christmas; it comes from wanting to celebrate something.

Families need traditions and rather than wallowing in the Christmas hype, I would much rather enjoy the season for what it is because it is part of the fabric of our community. After all, we are a nation of many cultures and it’s exactly that diversity that enriches all of our lives. I am confident that my kids don’t have any Christmas angst. I have taught them to take it all in and enjoy the Christmas splendor with Jewish eyes and then freely share their holiday with other’s. We celebrate Hanukkah with all it’s brilliance, the beauty of lighting the menorah (there is nothing more magnificent than our family standing together before all of our 6 glowing menorahs on the 8th night), celebrating with family and friends, exchanging gifts, preparing favorite holiday foods, reflecting on the meaning of the holiday and listening to beautiful traditional music.

So when most of you are running frantic in a couple of weeks, I will be recovering from my eight days of celebration with my feet up, enjoying the craziness around me, and probably posting a lot more in my blog.

Tags: Hanukkah, Family Traditions, Christmas (all tags)

Permalink | 10 comments

  • Channukah decorating (0 / 0)

    Hi Leslie

    Today's the day I'm taking the boxes out of storage to decorate our house.  I love making the house festive for Hannukah.  We pull out all of our Menorahs - new ones made each year at one craft fair or another - find the dreidels (I love finding new and unique ones to add to our collection) - and look for secret hiding places for gifts.

    In many ways, it's easier for my kids than it was for me.  I grew up in a small suburban New England town.  We also had a Christmas tree for a few years.  There were maybe 5 kids my age who were Jewish, and we hated December for making us feel different.

    One very funny December memory - on a family ski trip, we went to the movies on Christmas Eve.  It was PACKED - all the other Jewish Families in the state of NH were there I think LOL.  My mother made sure I was standing in line next to a cute, HS age boy - after all, we knew he was Jewish!

    Anyway, now we're in Queens NY - still mostly Christmas-y, but certainly many more Jews around and more awareness of all Jewish holidays.  We are active in our Temple, so my kids know lots of other kids who don't celebrate Christmas, so it's not as hard for them.  

    And, like you, I love building family traditions.  I can tell you right now that if there isn't a huge bowl of homemade applesauce and a heaping plate of Latkes on the table Tuesday night, my kids would never let me forget! LOL

  • I think the important thing is your own tradition (0 / 0)

    My family is not religious, yet we had our own very strong holiday traditions. I have struggled to create new ones, because the old traditions (going to my grandmother's house, everyone getting together) are no longer really possible, with everyone living in different places and my grandparents gone.

    We haven't had a tree for a few years, out of practicality and lazyness, though there's been one at the grandparents'. Maybe this year I'll get it done. DD is 7, old enough to help and be a part of it.

    I'm starting a new one, which is to make cookies or gingerbread houses or something similar when we do get all together.

    My Dad prefers to celebrate the Solstice.

    Happy Channukah.

  • We're doing both (0 / 0)

    I've got the house decorated both ways. No Christmas tree this year, because I am afraid that ds with pull it over, but I like that the Christmas and Hannukah stuff is about equal in the house. In future years, when we'll probably have a tree, I'll have to ratchet up the Hannukah decorations a bit :).

    December will be festive around here, although we do up the major Jewish holidays as well with major dinners, and we even went to friends who did up a sukkah (guessing spelling) for Succot. In future years, we are doing a sukkah because that is one cool holiday.

    This weekend I am doing a trial run brisket and latkes, because we're having friends over for Hannukah dinner on Friday night, and I don't dare foist my very first run brisket and latkes on friends. And giving homemade applesauce a go. I figure in a few years' time the Jewish holiday food will be as intuitive as Thanksgiving, Easter and Christmas food and general overall tradition.

    We're lucky though because stores and grocery stores are full of Hannukah stuff. We have quite a large Jewish goods store. One grocery store has a full aisle, all year round, for kosher stuff (which we don't observe) and ingredients for tons of Jewish recipes.

    Happy Hannukah.

    RachelD

  • Hag sameach hannukah! (0 / 0)

    You really captured all the feelings I've had about being Jewish in a Christmas culture. One of the things my parents did very well was instill positive joy in being Jewish, in Hannukah over Christmas and the ability to feel joy for our fellow Christmas celebrators without feeling jealous. It's a trait I hope to pass down -- as one of our family traditions.....

    One of our new traditions is collecting Hannukiot (Hannukah menorahs) and lighting them ALL -- the 8th night is truly a festival of LIGHTS!

    ds 9/01, baby R 1/07

    by brave on Sat Dec 01, 2007 at 02:52:06 PM PDT

    • We also have a collection (0 / 0)

      mostly of ones my kids have made at various craft events, and a couple we've bought.  I try to get a photo of my two kids with at least one fully lit Hannukiah each year!

      I love how you posted about the positive joy in being Jewish, I've tried to do this, too. I'm impressed that my children (8 and 16) express very little jealousy or disappointment - we have our holiday, other friends have theirs.  We started celebrating Christmas with my MIL last year, and my kids see that as her thing - they enjoy what we do with her, but don't wish it for us.

      Speaking of collections...my other one is dreidels.  After getting way too many of the plain plastic or wood ones, I started looking for creative ones - the collection grows by one or two each year.

      • i've noticed more jewish artists (0 / 0)

        'doing' dreidels....you should be able to feed that collection easily :-)

        my dh got this awful silver dreidel that spins in place (some battery-powered motor) -- just awful. when he was a jewish professional people thought they should gift him with all this stuff.

        ds 9/01, baby R 1/07

        by brave on Mon Dec 03, 2007 at 07:08:26 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  • Hanukkah (0 / 0)

    I grew up a Cashew in a Christian community.  Looking back, it was fabulous, but a little confusing.  I think it was easier because we were different, but not.  We celebrated everything.  My mother, while not saying things like "there's no such thing as Santa" made sure we understood the basis of many "Christian" traditions were based on very non-Christian traditions. (Christmas trees, Easter eggs, valentine hearts, etc.)  I married a Catholic, and we STILL celebrate everything.  My daughter loves it!  She goes to a Catholic school, (our schools are not good) and many of her friends are jealous of her, and now that she's a little older (11 years) she loves teaching her friends about where many "Christian" traditions came from, and where the Old Testament leaves off and the Torah picks up.  There are times when I think it is a little harder for her, but for the most part it makes her more accepting of the differences in people.  I think it helps her realize that the world is a much larger place than where we live.  

    Proud mama to DD Sept 1996, DS Jan 2007

    by face121 on Mon Dec 03, 2007 at 06:08:45 AM PDT

  • I feel differently.... (0 / 0)

    Hannukah is Hannukah.  A minor celebration of a military victory and a miracle of oil that lasted 8 days (and maybe a lesson about religious freedom and tolerance.)  When I grew up (in a very Catholic New England city, with a small, but close Jewish population), there was never a December dilemma.  We did not celebrate Christmas, in any way shape or form.  We went to parties at our neighbors, and even helped decorate their trees, but that was their holiday.  Hannukah was a week's worth of candle-lighting, dreidels, some songs, some chocolate, some real gelt (money), and maybe a few gifts.  No decorations, except a gleaming, recently polished Menorah. No big deal. It wasn't even my favorite holiday (that would be Passover, which was a much bigger "family" event.)

    My kids don't have a problem with Christmas, but they go to a Jewish school, so they know lots of Jewish kids and are really into the things that make it special to be Jewish.  They don't feel like they are missing anything by ignoring Christmas. They value their own identities and culture.

    I have never been comfortable with the trends to make Hannukah a big deal.  Its so much overcompensation.  I'm even somewhat offended by people who insist on wishing me a "happy Hannukah" because they don't want me to feel left out at Christmas.  If they really want to acknowledge my holidays so that I don't feel left out, then wish me a Happy New Year in September.  Hannukah is not the Jewish equivalent of Christmas, and efforts to equate the two are more offensive to me than would be the occassional misplaced "Merry Christmas."  Its the Christmas season.  There is no Hannukah season.  When the general culture acts like this is a big deal of a holiday, its almost as if they are saying they feel sorry for me since I don't celebrate Christmas, and they want me to feel better about things by making my holiday a big deal.  My holidays are a big deal.  Just not this one.

    I polished my Menorah yesterday; we'll have latkes, Sufganiyot, lots of chocolate, and we'll play dreidel.  Its a holiday, and we have a reason to celebrate.  Buts its not a big deal.  Get back to me around Passover, then you'll see real excitement.

  • Thank-you (0 / 0)

    I've enjoyed reading everyone's comments and I am glad my posting was able to encourage some dialogue around this. It's comforting to learn that people find their own levels of comfort with this issue, and there is certainly a spectrum. I agree that Hanukkah has no business competing with Christmas - and by the way, Passover is my favorite holiday as well. It's been important for me to instill a positive Jewish identity in my kids and creating family traditions throughout the year is one way that has worked... as far as some of our Hanukkah traditions go, I mentioned the painting of a box every year to put our gifts in (every year is always different from the previous) and then we have marked nights: 2 nights of gifts from relatives, Book and game night, Family gift night, sibling exchange night, charity night, and the most wanted gift night. We try to have at least one party during the eight nights at our house and we have an annual latke contest at our friends'.  

    So, have fun for the next eight nights and we'll all figure out a way to get the latke smell out of our hair and clothes next week!!

    Enjoy.

    Leslie www.minivan-diaries.blogspot.com

    by Leslie on Mon Dec 03, 2007 at 08:27:10 PM PDT

Permalink | 10 comments