Boy: Aw, man! Thankgiving and the start of Hanukkah are on the same day this year! Frazz: Ah, man? Boy: Guaranteed, a vacation day goes missing in there somewhere.
No one I knew ever took Hanukkah off, it is a minor event except in the US and even at that. Overlapping relatives and friends visiting for food for both events may happen,, but only local relatives and friends.
As a Wiccan of several decades of practice, the only way we get our holy days off (e.g. Solstice, Equinox, Beltane (May 2), Samhain (October 31), Yule (December 21), among others) is if they fall on a weekend
Agent54 about 11 years ago
No one I knew ever took Hanukkah off, it is a minor event except in the US and even at that. Overlapping relatives and friends visiting for food for both events may happen,, but only local relatives and friends.
mdcdjg2008 about 11 years ago
I don’t get the holidays off so one holiday running into another means nothing to me.
lynnskay about 11 years ago
Got it in one… congrats!
PAKillerTomato about 11 years ago
Worse, it means eight days of leftovers.
Varnes about 11 years ago
Kosher turkey….
South2North about 11 years ago
Hanukkah Turkey — the bird that lasts for 8 days and nights.
gmforde about 11 years ago
Actually the start of Hanukkah is at sundown the day before, on my birthday. lol
Alan Steenhouwer about 11 years ago
אוי ויי
I Quit about 11 years ago
Panels out of order.
fotolinda about 11 years ago
I have a problem with this strip- Hannukah starts the night BEFORE Thanksgiving.
rekam Premium Member about 11 years ago
Gee, I never had a day off for Hannukah. Think the school administration would have laughed if anyone had asked for it.
gcarlson about 11 years ago
India has a national holiday for each of its top 6 or 8 religions’ holidays.
JP Steve Premium Member about 11 years ago
“chinnies?” That’s either the longest string of typos on record or really, really offensive!
childe_of_pan over 7 years ago
As a Wiccan of several decades of practice, the only way we get our holy days off (e.g. Solstice, Equinox, Beltane (May 2), Samhain (October 31), Yule (December 21), among others) is if they fall on a weekend