Become a Member
Opinion

I love Chrismukkah and I’m not afraid to admit it

Chanukah begins on Christmas Day this year, which is perfect if you adore both of them

November 14, 2024 09:33
1357088120
Christmas tree in Trafalgar Square (Getty Images)
2 min read

Let me tell you a secret: I really love Christmas. I blame my parents. I may be a nice Jewish girl who attended shul and cheder and celebrated the chagim, but every December, a large and lavishly decorated Christmas tree would grace our living room. Letters to Santa would be penned and full stockings delivered to our bedsides.

Meanwhile, Chanukah would happily coexist. Although, if I’m honest, the Chanukiah was always somewhat outshone by the tree, and the promise of Santa’s impending arrival on a sparkling sleigh accompanied by reindeer had the extra magic factor. As I didn’t go to a Jewish school, there was nobody to tell me that this was incompatible with my Jewishness or that Santa did not in fact exist.

Later on, after leaving home, my Jewish flatmates were horrified by the prospect of a Christmas tree and vetoed it. But at just that time, The OC’s Jewish character Seth Cohen, played by none other than hot-rabbi-from-Nobody-Wants-This Adam Brody, brought “Chrismukkah” to existence, happily making it cool to celebrate both.

Next month we will have a true Chrismukkah. Because this year, the sunset of Christmas Day coincides with 25 Kislev, the first night of Chanukah. The last time this happened was almost 20 years ago (though in 2016, the first night of Chanukah coincided with Christmas Eve, which was just as good).