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You have the Achilles heel of very smart people and don't see that your experience is not everyone's. Your experience is not theirs. >>
>>Jeez, Mike if last week was "flirting", I'd hate to know what this is :)
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>>I understand where Tamar is coming from. But the reality is that the U.S. recognizes certain days as National Holidays and doesn't recognize others. So it's become sort of the "de facto" standard.
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>>My wife and her mother's family are conservative Jewish, but they don't do anything differently on Yom Kippur. They actually celebrate Christmas. And I've come to learn that many from Jewish backgrounds celebrate Christmas - though not in the religious sense. And that's the way most of us think of it anyway - after all, we say "Merry Christmas" and exchange gifts and go to holiday parties and drive through neighborhoods checking out Christmas lights, as opposed to saying, "Weep and Repent". I don't have a single religious bone in my body, but I love Christmas.
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>Well, that's certainly a case of different experience. I don't know any Jews who celebrate Christmas unless they're in intermarried families.
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>As for your wife's family, it's hard to characterize them as Conservative Jews (note the capital "C") if Yom Kippur is just another day for them. Culturally Jewish, sure, but Conservative Jews at least fast on Yom Kippur (if they're physically able).
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>Tamar
I'm surprised to hear that some Jews don't observe Yom Kippur.
While in college I was caddymaster at an all Jewish golf club on Long Island.
The members were widely divergent in their religious observance the rest of the year but absolutely no one played golf on Yom Kippur.
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.