They generally feel happy.
i do not know that is why i am asking u fools
A qetsatsah ceremony is a Jewish circumcision ritual where the foreskin of a male infant is removed. It is a fundamental part of the Jewish tradition and is typically performed by a mohel, a person trained in the practice. The ceremony is considered a sign of the covenant between God and the Jewish people.
The Bar Mitzvah ceremony marks the reaching of maturity for a Jewish boy.
it's a wedding ceremony. The chuppah itself is what the bride and groom stand under, but most people call the ceremony itself a chuppah
No meal is "celebrated" during the holiday of Passover. However, during the holiday of Passover, three meals a day are eaten for the duration of the holiday. On the first night in Israel and first two nights outside of Israel, a religious ceremony is held in the home. During this ceremony, the story of the Exodus is read and discussed. Partway through the ceremony, called a 'Seder', there is a break during which dinner is eaten.
Jewish people only have one God. And the Jewish view is that God is always present everywhere, not just at weddings.
Jewish people were treated horribly during the holocaust
Either, or neither, there is no requirement for weddings to be held in synagogues and many Jewish couples choose other locations for the ceremony.
You need to be a little bit more specific with your question. When someone gets married there is a ceremony and a party to follow afterwards, as I believe it is with many religions. Jewish people have a party after the ceremony of a life cycle event such as a birth (bris or baby naming, bar or bat mitzvah, wedding). Obviously there is not a party after a death, but there is a time of mourning as with any other religion.
There is no required ceremony, and no particular name for it, tomark the occasion when a Jewish boy becomes a Bar Mitzvah.Answer:The above answer may or may not be technically correct, but it will only serve to confuse people. The ceremony is called a Bar Mitzva ceremony. Also, it might not be technically required, but it is virtually universally customary and is thought of as a requirement.
Jewish wedding ceremonies can take place anywhere, many people get married in synagogues but holding the ceremony in a hotel or catering centre is almost as popular today.
If it is during the 2012 Olympics, nobody has lost any life.