Interesting concept. We don't usually think of a 'Place' consumed by a celebration,
unless the place is heavily ... almost exclusively ... populated by a single ethnic,
religious, or cultural group, and that's definitely not true of Asia. What I'm saying is:
Maybe the USA celebrates Thanksgiving and July 4th, but any other occasion I can
think of is actually celebrated by some group of people, not by a place.
Jews celebrate Hanukkah, wherever they are.
Virtually nobody else does, no matter where they are.
Hanukkah is a Jewish celebration:http://judaism.answers.com/jewish-holidays/hanukkah
Only the Jews in Mexico celebrate Hanukkah.
Yes, most Jewish people celebrate Hanukkah.
Almost all Jews celebrate Hanukkah.
Jewish people who live in England celebrate Hanukkah.
French Christians celebrate Christmas. French Jews celebrate Hanukkah.
Jews around the world celebrate Hanukkah, including in Israel.
Jewish people celebrate Hanukkah. (They are not called "Hanukkah people")
Yes, Jews celebrate Hanukkah in many different countries.
Yes, the small Jewish minorities in the African countries celebrate Hanukkah privately in their homes.
They don't. Jews believe that Jews should celebrate Hanukkah.
Hanukkah is a Jewish celebration with no connection to Buddhism.