Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

Monday, June 19, 2023

Reading for Treasure: Learning About Juneteenth

Reading for Treasure is my list of articles (and other readings) that are worth your attention. Click here for an introduction.

Juneteenth only recently became a Federal holiday. It has been a state holiday in many places for a long time and has been celebrated by the Black community for more than a century. Here are a few articles to help people like me learn about the importance, history, and customs of Juneteenth. 

A good place to start would be Afro’s article, “The story behind Juneteenth and how it became a federal holiday” which gives a good background on the history of the holiday.

The New York Amsterdam News provides us with “A beginner’s guide to Juneteenth: What’s the best way to celebrate?” 

Two very good pieces from The Root continue our Juneteenth exploration: “Cheat Sheet: 5 Things You Must Know About Juneteenth” and “Why Juneteenth Isn’t a Black Holiday, but an American Holiday.” 

Finally, a powerful story about the importance of Juneteenth in NewsOne, “Juneteenth, Jim Crow And A Black Family Who Fought For Freedom.” 


I just finished reading, Being White Today: A Roadmap for A Positive Antiracist Life by Shelly Tochluk and Christine Saxman 


Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Reading for Treasure: Books for the Holidays!

Reading for Treasure is my list of articles that are worth your attention. Click here for an introduction!

I love books! For people like me, the best holiday gift is a book – or a book recommendation! One of the things I love about holiday travels is having the time to sit down and read, read, read. Of course, this is also one of the best things about being retired! 

Although I read all sorts of literature, my go-to genre is science fiction. However, I read just about everything. So here is a long list of book lists. A few of these are focused generally and most are of science fiction, fantasy, and genre fiction. 

Don’t know what that book lover in your life might want to read? Look at these lists and descriptions and then head to your nearest indy bookstore or library. Feel free to make some recommendations in the comments! 


Literary Hub presents “Our 38 Favorite Books of 2022”

I know it is a little old, but I don’t know the difference between a holiday read and a summer read? “WIRED’s Picks for the 15 Books You Need to Read This Summer

Lifehacker focuses on  “10 of the Most Banned Books (and What We Can Learn From Them)

The Greatest Sci-Fi Authors Of All Time, According To Ranker” - Screenrant

50 Best Sci-Fi Books of All Time - What Is The Best Science Fiction Book Ever Written?” - Esquire

The Most Influential Sci-Fi Books Of All Time” - Book Riot

100 Speculative Fiction Titles to Add to Your Reading List”-  tor.com

NPR did a really cool survey: “We Asked, You Answered: Your 50 Favorite Sci-Fi And Fantasy Books Of The Past Decade” 

2022 Locus Awards Top Ten Finalists

2021 Shirley Jackson Awards Winners” – Locus Online

“Here’s the shortlist for the first Ursula K. Le Guin Fiction Prize”  -  Literary Hub

Nebula Award finalists and winnersScience Fiction Awards Database 

2022 Hugo finalists and winners

2022 World Fantasy Award nominees and winners- tor.com


I am reading Noor By Nnedi Okorafor  


Sunday, December 5, 2021

What I Really Want to Say on our Holiday Card

I have never written a Christmas letter. This is not a Christmas letter, either. Read on and we’ll all figure out exactly what it is. Each year, finding photos for our family holiday card is not difficult, but writing the text is excruciating. The problem is more than a lack of real estate. It is trying to strike a balance between a positive holiday tone, acknowledging the big things going on in the world, acknowledging the things going on in our family, and trying to say something worth saying. Oh yeah, I also have three really discerning editors in my family. 

I want our holiday card to celebrate the friendships and connections with the many people for whom it is created. If I were to personalize each card, it would take me months to complete and I fear it would feel boilerplate anyway. I want to say to so many people, “I see you! I celebrate you! This card was created with you in mind – specifically!” 

Yet, I don’t want our holiday card to simply ignore what is happening in the world. It seems perversely ironic to send out smiling photos when children are losing their caregivers to COVID, the planet is unraveling, and people are being shot in wheelchairs and schools. But a woes-of-the-world card is not the idea, either. The balance is tricky. 

Could our holiday card be a kind of friendship card, a “we’re thinking of you and you bring us joy” card, a “your friendship is important” card? The values that the holidays represent work, just not all of them. When we get cards that seem steeped in religiosity, no matter what the religion, I always feel like the card isn’t really meant for us – or the sender doesn’t know us very well. 

We send our holiday card to a lot of people. We have been sending our holiday card via email since 2010. When we sent cards in the mail, I had to think about how many to print, get stamps, and take time to assembly everything. Things still take time, but it doesn’t cost more to send to more people. This is good; it allows us to be highly inclusive. However, it also means that our card has a larger audience – and how do you communicate well with a diverse group using such a small space? 

The photos are the important part of the card. That is why I take so many all year long: to get a few good ones! But I don’t want to be a show-off. My card is about communicating not posturing. 

I worry about those who don’t get my card. I post the card to Facebook so I can be as inclusive as possible. If we receive cards from people who were not on our list, we send them a card right away. That doesn’t happen much anymore. I know we are still missing people. Sorry about that. 

I don’t save all the cards I receive. I do save some of them, especially those that are particularly clever, powerful, or hit me in the feelies. These cards mark time, growth, and change. I may not write the Christmas letter, but I make sure that the landmarks are noted in the photos: driver's licenses, graduations, retirements, and important moments. 

Sometimes, I write a poem or short pithy statements on the card. They are never good enough. I would be a terrible greeting card writer. This year, I kept the main message to four words: Love, health, community, and family. That seemed to encapsulate 2021. 

May the year ahead be everything you hope. May you take lots of pictures that you want to save forever and share with the world. May this terrible disease pass over your family and community. And may you know that we are thinking of you, wishing you well, and sending you all our love. Think all that will fit on the card? 

Friday, March 26, 2021

Passover is not Passive

The Passover story is powerful. It is about freedom from slavery, plagues, and persecution. It asks us to do more than retell the story but to imagine that we lived it. It is a story of people who took action and transformed their world. Our world is in need of such people and transformation. 

If we are to keep Passover, we must go beyond our diet. I have written about this before


At a time when our world, our country, our families are facing so many challenges, keeping Passover means putting its lessons to use. Perhaps, at our seders, we can ask each other, what can we do to help those who are bound become free?  How can we help cure the world of the many plagues that ail it?  How can we help strangers who have left their homes, since we were once strangers? 

A simple way for those of us still sheltering in our homes is to donate to organizations that do this good work. Here are a few Passover causes that need your keeping: 

Support groups working to rid the world of human trafficking, like A21.

Help those who are struggling to feed their families during this time by donating to Feed America

Work against the plague of racism and hate by giving to groups like the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League. 

There are many suffering from COVID and other illnesses. While there are many charities that provide care, fund research or assist patients, Partners in Health is an outstanding organization that works to bring healthcare to some of the world's neediest populations. And if you haven’t read about its founder, Paul Farmer, I highly recommend the highly inspiring and challenging book Mountains Beyond Mountains by Tracey Kidder. 

Give to those who are helping the strangers at our borders and in our land by contributing to National Immigration Law Center or RAICES

There are many more; these are just examples. Passover can be more than a personal holiday, more than meals and special foods. It can be a time when we take its lessons and help change lives.

Passover is about confronting injustice, living our values, following our laws, realizing freedom, becoming a nation, and more. These are our challenges today, too. Let Passover inspire us to do more than give up bread, but to take the steps needed to create miracles that transform our world.  





Thursday, December 14, 2017

My Holiday Card Dilemma

My family sent our first holiday card shortly after our elder child was born in the winter of 1994. Although I had received cards like this, I had never sent one.

I use the term holiday card, but let’s call it what it really is: a Christmas card.  No matter which holiday (and there are several) we are celebrating, a majority of people in our world look at these as Christmas cards. It is not a “Christmas” card for me because I do not celebrate Christmas. And thus starts the dilemmas!

Our cards have never said, “Merry Christmas,” but is that what they mean? Should we send cards earlier in the year to acknowledge a Jewish holiday? Is it inauthentic or assimilatist to send these cards at this time?

Which leads to a second dilemma: to whom are we sending these cards? At first, we tried to remember who had sent us cards. We debated others to include: if we sent to one neighbor, did we have to send to everyone on the block even if we didn’t feel close to them?  

While the obvious, “why worry about such things, be inclusive and send to everyone” is where we landed, at the time, I was making the cards by hand and we spent a great deal of time and money producing, labeling, stuffing, and stamping them. It was a very labor and money intensive production. Of course, our list was imperfect and, when we received a card, we would scramble to make sure we had reciprocated. If we hadn’t, we’d produce a new card and mail it immediately.

Thus, dilemma three: what about those folks who don’t send cards? Are holiday cards like some kind of grab bag where everyone puts one in? I did remove someone from our list when I discovered that, after many years of receiving our holiday card (and real birthday cards, too,), we did not make the cut for his holiday card. Of course, we sent cards to people with whom we did not want to lose touch. Yet, we knew that simply sending a card once a year was hardly contact.

So, like wishing people happy birthday on Facebook, we decided that we would send our cards to people to whom we wanted to send cards. We didn’t need a clear rule. When our card became a digital photo sent via email, we always erred on the side of inclusion. When I am not spending weeks with the taste of envelope glue on my tongue, I feel far more generous.

Then, at some point, some member of our household looked at a very Christian card we received and asked, “Why don’t we send a Hanukkah card?” Good question. Most of the cards we receive have a Christian tone but are not overtly religious. Many, perhaps most, say, “Merry Christmas.” A few people send cards with highly religious wording, which is probably just what they send to everyone. We guessed that a few of our friends send us an alternative card instead of sending their “regular” Christmas message. That seems very kind and personal (and unnecessary, which makes it nicer). Why would we send a card that might put some people off?

Which led to another dilemma: was the card for us or for the people to whom we were sending it? As a religious minority, should we keep sending a neutral “happy holidays” or “seasons greetings” instead of something that was more reflective of how we celebrated the season? Should we create a Christian focused card for our Christian friends, and similarly tailor cards for our friends who celebrated other holidays?

The “War on Christmas” felt strangely ironic in our house. A “Happy Holidays” acknowledged that we didn’t celebrate Christmas. When someone wished us a Merry Christmas, it meant either they didn’t really know us, or the real message was different from the specific words. Or it meant something else and that made us wonder. Certainly, most (or all) of the people who send us Christmas cards know we are not Christian. So what does that mean?

Maybe nothing. Maybe the message on the card is irrelevant. It is much more about the photo of the family and the feeling of connection. If that is the case, then the war on Christmas is lost on us. Certainly, these cards were not going to change our religious views.

So if the card wasn’t a conversation invitation or a statement of our belief, then why include any religious content at all on it?  Why not send it another time? The season, of course! It is a celebratory time of year!

Sometimes, the colors of our card are blue and white. One year, working with the first and last initial of our last name, the card was built around the letter H and the background had lots of H words including Happy Holidays and Happy Hanukah (and Ho Ho Ho).

Sometimes, we have not included any statement of the season but simply wished our friends well. Other times, we include a more typical “Happy Holidays.” Sometimes the words are prominent, other times the photos are more important. One year, the card was a series of puns!

This year, for the first time, our card features the menorah used on Hanukah, the Hanukiah. The message on the card refers to light. We debated whether the card would explicitly say, “Happy Hanukah.” It does not. It also doesn’t say, “Seasons Greetings” or “Happy Holidays.” Instead, it names values that we share, and it expresses our hope for a good year.

And that, perhaps, is the resolution to all these dilemmas. As the days get shorter and colder, it is important to strengthen the bonds of friendship and community. It is good to celebrate together and in our own ways.

Sorry that my “holiday” letter was so long this year!

Saturday, November 18, 2017

Thirteen Table Talk Topics For Your Holiday Dinner Instead of Politics

Many of us dread the holidays because we are forced to speak with “those” relatives. “Those” relatives or friends or people at our holiday meals are the ones with whom we have deeply rooted disagreements about key political and social ideas. We may have additional people with whom these topics are off the table because we fear that either the discussion will become unpleasant or that it will unalterably change our relationship. We agree to disagree and talk about the weather, sports, or television. We keep it trivial.

Here is an alternative.

Here are some questions that might help us explore the other person’s point of view and find some common ground – maybe. Disclaimer up front: I am not unbiased in this discussion. I have a point of view. These questions are designed to reveal the crucial foundation of that point of view. It is my hope that it is a foundation we can share. If it is not, well, we may have to ask more questions about the basis of our beliefs.

All of these questions could be followed by “how does our current government and social structure connect to our discussion?” Perhaps you don’t want to go there. Perhaps you want to limit examples to those in fiction or from television situations. Perhaps the examples are purely hypothetical and we forbid the political.

1. Which of the ten commandments do you think is the most important? Which is the least? Why? Should any be disregarded completely? Are any in need of modernizing? Do we need to add some?

2. When thinking about important religious figures, what are their key messages? What did they stand for and how did their actions show this?

3. While most people would agree that minor white lies are okay under some circumstances (do you?), when or why is it okay to lie about important things? When families (societies) are making major decisions that have a significant effect, should all of the members of the family (society) be informed or included? Should information be fully shared? When or why should we have open information or hidden information? Is it okay for someone to ask or tell you to lie? Is it okay to lie to save face or reputation?

4. What is the value of trust in a relationship? What happens when trust is violated?

5. What does it mean to be fair? What is fairness? What is justice? What does it mean to be just?

6. What is respect? How does one show respect? Why is that important? How is respect connected to manners and being polite?

7. What is integrity? Is it something we value? How do you recognize a person of integrity? How does one repair his or her integrity?

8. What do we mean when we use the term virtue? What are virtuous characteristics? What are their opposites?

9. If you were hiring someone to care for your children, grandchildren, parents, or grandparents, what traits would you want in that person? If you were hiring someone to manage your financial affairs, what would you want? How are these similar or different?

10. What makes someone a role model? Beyond family members, who would you want your children to use as role models and why? What would make you concerned if your child picked a role model with whom you disapproved?

11. What is the meaning of duty? What is the meaning of obligation? What is the difference between them? How are they different than responsibility or loyalty? What duties, obligations, and responsibilities do we have (okay – you may not want to go here)?

12. Is it ever okay to hurt someone else? If no, why not?  If yes, why? Do your answers change if we talk about physical or emotional pain? What do we mean when we say, “hurt?”

13. What is the difference between fairness and equality? Did your parents treat you (and your siblings, if you have siblings) fairly or equally? How did you know? How did it make you feel? In a family or classroom (or country), how should people be treated? Fairly? Equally? A combination? What does that look like?

Certainly there are many more issues we could add to this list of questions. What would happen if we discussed the underlying values and beliefs before asking if we agree with specific politicians or policies? Perhaps we could open up the conversation. It might still be uncomfortable and difficult. But it might move us past partisan labels and make us see each other in more complex and meaningful ways. Maybe.

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Keeping Passover Is More Than What We Do Not Eat

People ask me if I am keeping Passover. What they really want to know is if I am eating any bread products. My usual response is, as an ethical-moral vegetarian, my eating habits are always foremost on my mind and connected to my values every day. I don’t need a holiday to remind me of the power of my food choices. But is keeping Passover just about food? Is Passover a holiday about diet? 

Passover can be a personal holiday in which people reflect on what it would have been like to be freed from slavery in Egypt. Freedom and slavery sit at the center of this holiday. The rights of an oppressed population, the costs to the oppressor, and the sacrifices and struggles that the fight for freedom requires are key themes of Passover. Yet, when we celebrate, we focus on food. They are the main symbols and the focus of the seder, but Passover is far more than what we eat or don’t eat.

The holiday is not without its problems. It is a holiday that seems to celebrate the pain of innocents and the deaths of children. Its literal historicity has been the subject of debate as well. At least one west coast rabbi created a “furor” when he openly stated that the story was not factual. What does it mean to “keep” traditions that are associated with this kind of story?  

The holiday has changed throughout the centuries. Jews from different parts of the world celebrate in their own ways and even disagree about what foods are permitted.  Given the diversity of Jewish thought, experience, and practice, it should come as no surprise that there are many ways to approach Passover. There is no one correct way to keep the holiday.

My wonderful little Humanistic congregation, Kol Hadash, has a food donation drive prior to the start of Passover. While removing certain foods from our diets is one way to keep the holiday, another is to help those for whom every day is a fast day.

Unfortunately, slavery is still with us. CNN recently reported about how the Attorney General of Missouri is fighting for freedom. Each year, I look for organizations that strive to end slavery and human trafficking. This year, I am contributing to Polaris. Fighting the plague of slavery is another way to keep Passover.

The Passover tradition is to keep the front door open, and include a glass of wine for the prophet Elijah. It is also customary to invite guests to our seder and welcome those who have no place to celebrate. In a time when national walls are rising, Passover’s story of a refugee people runs contrary to the current political mood. Do we want to lock Elijah out? Working to keep our national doors open is another way to keep the holiday.

Let us not slip into the easy answer that all Passover asks of us is the elimination of dietary fiber (which may be why the main phrase of this holiday is, “let my people GO!”).

Passover asks us for empathy. Passover asks us to repair the world. Passover asks us to include the stranger at our table. It is a powerful holiday that celebrates far more than what we do or do not eat.

Sunday, December 4, 2016

The Thanksgiving Nest

At the end of a visit, my grandmother would often ask, “When will I see you again?”  or  “You’re leaving already?” I remember finding this irritating. I am visiting now! Why are you asking me this? How needy!

A little more than a week after Thanksgiving, I share her feelings. Having both of my children home, even if they were out with friends or doing homework, was wonderful. The fact that we will be back together in three weeks consoles me only a little.

I should be thankful. I got nearly a week with my entire family under one roof. It was joyful to be with them. I am grateful, but I am very eager to bring the entire family together again. Thanksgiving break wasn’t enough. It was a tease and a taste of times that are gone.

Yes, college students return home. But my elder is about to get her graduate degree and, hopefully, a job in a city far away. My younger has big summer plans. I am telling myself that I better learn to enjoy this new diet of family time because it is all I will get. But I haven’t accepted the reality of the situation yet.

I have come to terms with the term “empty nest.” My wife and I live here, so the nest isn’t entirely empty. Both of my children still call this their “permanent address,” but I think that will only be for a few more months. Neither has cleaned out his or her room or registered to vote or drive in another state – yet.

It has only been 105 days since our younger child went to college, but whose counting? It will only be another three weeks until he comes home for winter break. So what’s the big deal?

I miss my children. That is the deal. My friends tell me that I will adjust and come to love living in a quieter and childless home. I believe them. They love it. They may be right that I will love it, too. Someday. Not today.

Today, I miss my children. I hide my tears as the bus pulls out to take the younger back to college. I sniffle and pull myself together on the early morning ride from the airport dropping off the elder. While the kids have adjusted marvelously well, I am still in transition. Maybe I am becoming my grandmother.  

I haven’t become accustomed to an empty nest or the idea of long distance parenting. I get home and expect to see one of my children studying or watching television. When I return from services on a Friday night, I should be relieved that I can go to sleep and not wait up for someone to get home. I’m not. I wait up anyhow.

Thanksgiving Break is joyous. I will do anything to be with the kids. I went shopping on Black Friday. I went to a women’s clothing store and Bed, Bath, and Beyond. It doesn’t matter. Happily, the Thanksgiving meal is just half a day and I only have to share them a little. I find that I am jealous of my son’s high school friends who have been getting as much or more time with him as the rest of us. In addition to struggling with letting go, have I mentioned that I am not good at sharing my children either?

Not that I am complaining.

Thanksgiving break is a tease. Yet, it is a tease I was eagerly anticipating. It is not as long as winter break, but, after several months, I was thrilled that my home was full again. I could talk to my children without the assistance of technology, although not without the distraction of technology.

We are all growing up. I am just doing it a little more reluctantly.


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Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Cold Days Slide Us Back To School

Every year, snow days are wonderful surprises. A day off for something else is unusual. Two days off is rare. Two days off attached to a break is unprecedented. But that’s what happened.

At the end of summer vacation, I am ready for school. I am eager to meet my new students, rise to new challenges, see my colleagues, and get back in the game. Spring break is always too short. The week flies by, and school vengefully returns. Winter break is just about the right length. Although a third week would be accepted gladly, two weeks are long enough to let go of school.

However, going back to school isn’t exactly welcome. I was bracing myself for the return last Saturday. The break had been especially meaningful. My elder child had rejoined the family after being way since August. It was a joyful reunion, and we had a week in splendid Hawaiian isolation.

We returned to cold Chicago, and my children got touch with their friends, and made plans. We unpacked and prepared for school.  The four of us got together with neighbors and family, too. Winter break was waning.

And then it got cold – real cold. On Sunday, I drove my daughter to her grandparents’ house in the morning. My van’s doors froze shut on the way. It was a sign of what was coming. Soon after, the superintendent announced there would be no school on Monday.

Monday morning felt like Sunday. We slept late, and had a leisurely breakfast together. Although my daughter wanted to go out with friends, she was easily dissuaded by the terrible conditions outside. So the four of us stayed home – together.

We watched TV, read, and played games. We did family work together. We filled out forms, planned for school, and enjoyed a very different kind of isolation. We opened all the cabinets, ran the faucets, and checked the water pipes in the basement regularly. It was an extra vacation day spent in the arctic.

We played a game after dinner, looked at photos of my daughter’s African journey, and went to bed warm and relaxed. We were shocked when we got notice of a second canceled day.

The second day was our transition back into reality. First, I realized that there was cold air coming through the vents. The furnace was no longer heating the house. Then, as my kids left to go to the movies, the garage door wouldn’t close. When it ceased to work entirely, we realized that the power was out. No problem, we have a generator. It didn’t work either.

Our super handyman came over and was able to make three of our four issues go away. Commonwealth Edison eventually got the power back on.

My wife and I sat down to a late lunch exhausted, but pleased that the kids had spent the drama time at the movie theater with friends. The second snow day felt more like a frantic Saturday.

Thus, we are ready to get back to school tomorrow. The two extra days were more than icing on winter break. They were a last chance to circle the wagons and spend time with important people. They were also a reminder of why school had been canceled in the first place, and that real problems and real responsibilities are never far away.


Currently it is 1° outside. My son is studying. My daughter is packing. My wife is at a meeting. I am writing. Winter break is over. Tomorrow: school!