JTF.ORG Forum

General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: ChabadKahanist on August 22, 2022, 08:49:08 AM

Title: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka should I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: ChabadKahanist on August 22, 2022, 08:49:08 AM
If my Russian neighbor has a yolka should I assume that they are not Jewish? I mean really what self respecting Jew especially somebody that lives in Israel have one?
Title: Re: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka shoold I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: Hrvatski Noahid on August 22, 2022, 11:34:43 AM
If my Russian neighbor has a yolka shoold I assume that they are not Jewish? I mean really what self respecting Jew especially somebody that lives in Israel have one?

You mean ёлка? What's a shoold? 
Title: Re: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka shoold I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: ChabadKahanist on August 22, 2022, 04:00:16 PM
You mean ёлка? What's a shoold?
A yolka is basically  a Christmas tree & I meant should it was a typo & I corrected it
Title: Re: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka should I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: Hrvatski Noahid on August 22, 2022, 04:30:14 PM
If Rabbi Singer is correct that Christian missionaries are a stage 4 cancer in Israel, you can't be sure.
Title: Re: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka shoold I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: zeraisraelkahanist on August 22, 2022, 07:30:49 PM
A yolka is basically  a Christmas tree & I meant should it was a typo & I corrected it
Ask if it is for the Russian new year because many Russian Jews have New Year's trees
Title: Re: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka shoold I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: ChabadKahanist on August 22, 2022, 11:28:28 PM
Ask if it is for the Russian new year because many Russian Jews have New Year's trees
Xmas trre New Year tree same shtuyot why would any self respecting Jew have one & especially in Israel?
Title: Re: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka shoold I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: Binyamin Yisrael on August 24, 2022, 12:40:59 AM
Ask if it is for the Russian new year because many Russian Jews have New Year's trees


The Russian New Year is actually January 14. It's January 1 on the Julian Calendar. In 2100, it will start being on January 15. But Communist Russia destroyed religion so they celebrate a Secular New Year mixed with X-mas. The Russian X-mas is actually January 7.

Either way, it's goy nonsense. Even self-hating Israelis have an evil day which they refer to as "the Silvester". They celebrate the Secular New Year under an Xtian name that even goyim in the West don't and just view it as a Secular holiday.

I heard they call it 'the Silvester" because Haredim looked on the calendar and saw a goy holiday on December 31 to persuade Jews not to celebrate it. But it backfired and they actually started celebrating it as "the Silvester" rather Rosh HaShana HaEzrachit (The Civil New Year), which is the correct name for New Year's Day in Hebrew.

Title: Re: If my Russian neighbor has a yolka should I assume that they are not Jewish?
Post by: Zelhar on August 24, 2022, 04:33:42 PM
I know that to many the Christmas tree is not a religious thing but just 'tradition' but it is still a very clear symptom of assimilation and loss of Jewish values.