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All up we have a minimum of 21 major days of cultural significance in our house. 21. That’s close to one a fortnight. If you include the additional days we celebrate with friends who are diverse in their own cultural backgrounds (we’ve celebrated Diwali and Carnivale among others) it would definitely reach one a fortnight.
Here is the question for which I don’t actually have an answer: when you’re a multicultural family with so much history and tradition to preserve, how do you figure out where to draw the line?
My inclination is that it should be up to the kids where the line is drawn, but not all festivals are fun and involve jam doughnuts (Chanukah), presents (Christmas) or going to the annual fete at the Collingwood children’s farm with our Blak friends and family (Naidoc).
Easter, Passover, Naidoc: in a multicultural family with so much tradition and history, where do you draw the line? Isabelle Oderberg
In 2020, celebrating the Jewish festival of Purim was one of the last fun things we did BCE (before the Covid era). My son dressed up as Iron Man, I recycled my skeleton costume from Halloween and our Rabbi dressed up as a case of Corona beer in a light-hearted nod to the virus that, as we now know, ended up being no laughing matter.
In late February this year however, Purim slid by us quietly, like a penguin on ice, despite life having returned to some form of comparative normalcy after the best part of a year in and out of lockdowns.