1 Rosh Hashanah - The Jewish New Year
2 Aseret Yemei Teshuva - Ten Days of Repentance
3 Yom Kippur - Day of Atonement
4 Sukkot - Feast of Booths (or Tabernacles)
5 Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah
6 Hanukkah - Festival of Lights
7 Tenth of Tevet
8 Tu Bishvat - New Year of the Trees
9 Purim - Festival of Lots
10 Pesach - Passover
11 Sefirah - Counting of the Omer
12 Lag Ba'omer
13 Shavuot - Feast of Weeks - Yom HaBikurim
14 Seventeenth of Tammuz
15 The Three Weeks and the Nine Days
16 Tisha B'av - Ninth of Av
17 Rosh Chodesh - the New Month
18 Shabbat - The Sabbath - שבת
19 Yom HaShoah - Holocaust Remembrance day
20 Yom Hazikaron - Memorial Day
21 Yom Ha'atzmaut - Israel Independence Day
22 Yom Yerushalaim - Jerusalem Day
Yes, since Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday.
The people who celebrate Hanukah are Jewish instead of Christian. Christmas is a Christian holiday, and Hanukah is the Jewish holiday that falls closest to Christmas.
Only Jews celebrate Channukah because it is a Jewish holiday that commemorates an event in Jewish history.
A gentile is someone who is not Jewish; therefore, a gentile does not celebrate the Jewish holidays such as Hannukah, Rosh Hashannah, etc.
Christmas and Easter
Gentiles aren't Jewish. Hanukah is a Jewish holiday.
There is no such thing as "Hanukkah People". People who celebrate the holiday of Hanukkah are called Jewish people. And there are no Jewish rituals that refer to "long" candles.
The holiday of Passover is when we celebrate how HaShem brought us out of slavery in Egypt.
Muslims don't celebrate Kwanzah. That's a Jewish holiday.
jewish new year
Jewish people celebrate Passover to celebrate their people's liberation from slavery. The holiday celebrates when Jews were freed from slavery in Ancient Egypt.
Hanukkah is a Jewish celebration:http://judaism.answers.com/jewish-holidays/hanukkah