Christmas is pretty firmly a Christian holiday; if you're not following the religion of it but still doing the holiday then you're still following the cultural traditions, even if the religious part is gone, if that makes sense.
Oh, lots! My favorites are in the fall. My family is mostly Jewish but we've picked up a lot of local flavor over the generations that don't seem to match what the other Jews local to our current area are doing, so it's kind of funny that way, since the traditions don't exactly line up perfectly.
Like Sukkhot, right?
The way we were raised, you spend all year gathering natural things from around where you live or where you travel, and you hope in the end to have things representing the important parts of your lives, and then when Sukkhot rolls around after you've built the shelter you decorate it with all these things, and every day you have guests over to eat in it; there's a bunch of categories you try and fill (like a newly married couple, and a family with at least three generations, and teachers, and the homeless or needy, and someone new to the area, etc) by the end of the holiday. One of the days you usually end up going over to eat in someone else's, though. Anyhow.
You spend the days getting the gardens ready for winter and gathering firewood for Last Night, and tell constellation stories at night, since you're all out in the shelter.
And the last day, you take down the shelter and you have a great big bonfire all that night; one side is the side you feed and then you rake the coals over to the other where you have drying racks set up, and everyone takes turns keeping watch and tending the fruit harvest and the fire, and in the morning you take whatever hasn't dried proper and give it to the hungry of wherever you live, and everyone takes the coals in to start the winter fires in their fireplaces (it doesn't matter how cold it gets earlier, we don't start out fires until then), and then you put out the fire and pray for rain and life goes back to more or less normal.
Of course these days most of the fruit harvest goes to fancy electric dehydrators, or gets prepped and frozen and/or canned, and only a portion goes on the drying racks. But we still do it because Tradition.
Anyhow it's probably my very favorite of the holidays! It's hard work, of course, but most of life is, and it's kind of a camping trip/party as well, even if it's right in our own yard.
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