Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ, said Himself that nothing would be done away with in the old Law, that He had come not to do away with it, but to fulfill it. Everything that God did in the Old Testament has a meaning for Christians, this is from the website about Christianity:
Jesus and the Feast of Lots:
Purim is a celebration of God's faithfulness, deliverance and protection. Although the Jews were sentenced to death by King Xerxes' original decree, through Queen Esther's courageous intervention and willingness to face death, the people's lives were spared. Similarly, all of us who have sinned have been issued a decree of death, but through the intervention of Jesus Christ, the Messiah, the old decree has been satisfied and a new proclamation of eternal life has been established:
Romans 6:23
For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord. (NLT)
It's called Purim, like in Hebrew.
Purim
they eat cougnou (sweet bread shaped like baby jesus) and Belgium Spice cookies :)
There are no written records of how Purim was observed in the biblical era, so we don't know if it has changed.
It was the Feast of the Passover, a traditional gathering with food. Jesus used the symbolism as He became Our Passover - a blood sacrifice that could and does forgive sin and the guilt of it.
Feast of Tabernacles
what people do in Iceland on Christmas is they usually celebrate JESUS'S birth by going to Church next having a feast then last opening presents
Mordecai, whose story is found in the Book of Esther in the Bible. See also:What_is_the_Jewish_tradition_concerning_Esther
Are there any special traditions for saint Sylvia's feast day
Gi-be wikonge. (Feast of the Dead)
Because Haman cast lots to see when he might succeed in getting the Jews killed.
They celebrated feast days