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Tracy-Ann Oberman

ByTracy-Ann Oberman, Tracy-Ann Oberman

Opinion

Get ready, it’s time to talk Turkey

December 23, 2012 11:18
2 min read

So Chanucah is over. The candles — shamash and all — have burnt down for the final time. The doughnuts have been consumed. The dreidels are packed away and the last of the wrapping paper has been consigned to the recycling bin. Now what?

Well, now, the Christmas season is upon us and the perennial dilemma starts. What should Jews do at Christmas? It is a minefield.

Jews can’t escape Christmas. It’s everywhere. From the adverts that start sometime in September to the jingle-jangle carols that are piped into every foyer, shopping-centre and lift across the land. From the huge boards that this year so charmingly scream that Westfield is Christmas (tell that to the church) to the Christmas lights that adorn the streets and give even Kilburn High Road a Dickensian charm. Yup, it’s unavoidable. Santa is a-coming and every child, including mine, wants to meet him.

Growing up, although well in touch with our Jewish identities and education, my friends and I were always secretly jealous of Christmas. It had a man in a red suit sneaking down a chimney leaving a sackful of presents at the foot of the bed; there was a reindeer with a red nose; a huge lunch; your favourite films; and sometimes even snow and a tree.