Many modern Jewish families celebrate by lighting the hanukkiah. One candle per night of Hanukkah is lit, like Hebrew is read, from right to left. People might also play dreidel games and eat certain foods like sufganiyot (similar to jelly donuts) and latkes (fried potato pancakes).
They celebrate hannukah.
Hannukah
A gentile does not typically celebrate Hanukkah, as it is a Jewish holiday that commemorates the rededication of the Second Temple in Jerusalem.
Hannukah? or Channakuah?well to celebrate Hanukkah you light the Minora and you play with a dradle, and many different games. everyone gets one present each day. (8 days)the Jewish celebrate it.if you would like more info search it on ask.com, Google.com, anything like that....
Who Knew - 2010 Hannukah 2-79 was released on: USA: 30 November 2010
Answer: 96% of Americans celebrate Christmas so 'Merry Christmas' would be the best choice, unless you know that the person is Jewish in which case you would say 'Happy Hannukah'.
Hannukah.
Hannukah is a holiday with no specific food prohibitions. The one requisite is that in order to celebrate the oil that lasted for eight days, foods should be oilier (which is where latkes (potato pancakes) and sufganyot (jelly doughnuts) come from.) There is no specific food that Jews eat for breakfast on Hannukah and most Jews eat the same things for breakfast on Hannukah that they do during the rest of the year (i.e. cereal, oatmeal, fruit, eggs, french toast, etc.)
It's Hannukah, not honicka. It's a Jewish holiday.
No, otherwise she would have Hannukah instead of Christmas.
Holidays are dates that are agreed upon by people in a country - they celebrate some special event. Some good examples are Christmas, celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ; Hannukah, celebrating the rededication of the Jewish temple in Jerusalem; Independence Day, celebrating the date of your country's independence.
No, Lutherism is part of Christianity. Hannukah is a Jewish celebration