Traditions for the Holidays

Holidays are generally festive occasions, and create a sense of cheer and goodwill amongst the general public. Companies with great culture inject that cheer to foster the same sense of goodwill among its employees. At Klemchuk LLP, we have several holiday traditions that our employees look forward to year after year. At the Thanksgiving holiday, our employees bring their appetites and cooking skills to the office potluck lunch. The Firm provides the meat, while the employees provide the rest of the fixings. Everyone sits down to eat together and enjoy each other’s company. Our Christmas traditions include an Ugly Sweater Lunch and our firm holiday party. But the best part of the holiday party is the White Elephant Gift Exchange. Every employee is given the same amount of money and tasked with finding either a creative, useful or hilarious gift. Everyone draws numbers at the party, and selects their gift in order. An employee can chose a yet-unwrapped gift, or steal one someone else has already opened. However, once a gift is stolen twice, it is ‘dead’ and cannot be stolen again. This tradition is usually met with cheering, and some jeering, depending on the gift!

We understand that other countries and religions have different and varied traditions during the holidays. Here are a few of our favorites:

Estonia

The holiday season in Estonia is often called Yuletide and runs from December 21st – January 6th. During this time, Estonians typically abstain from all but the most necessary work, and instead spend their time decorating villages, visiting friends and preparing lavish meals that symbolize having sufficient food in the coming year.

Czech Republic

During the cold winter, fruit is considered a luxury, and apples and pears are given as special gifts. The Christmas season is traditionally a time of fortune telling: families cut down branches form cherry or morello trees and place them in a warm corner in their homes in the hope that they will bloom by Christmas Eve, bringing good fortune in the coming year, and the shapes seen in apple cores are also thought to foretell major events of the next year. As with most countries, the holidays are a time for family and closeness – but those with out family are invited to join in their neighbor’s celebrations. But there must not be an odd number seated around a table, as odd numbers are thought to bring bad luck.

Denmark

Danish families dance around the Christmas tree singing carols before dinner begins with rice pudding. Hidden in the pudding is one whole almond, and the family member that finds it is awarded a prize – usually a small pig molded from marzipan. Children also set bowls of rice pudding in the attic on Christmas Eve to pacify the Nisse, a mischievous old man who dresses in grey pants, wooden shoes and a red pixie hat.

Source: http://www.msichicago.org/scrapbook/scrapbook_exhibits/catw2004/traditions/#sthash.V7N9kQAH.dpuf


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About the Firm:

Klemchuk LLP is a litigation, intellectual property, transactional, and international business law firm dedicated to protecting innovation. The firm provides tailored legal solutions to industries including software, technology, retail, real estate, consumer goods, ecommerce, telecommunications, restaurant, energy, media, and professional services. The firm focuses on serving mid-market companies seeking long-term, value-added relationships with a law firm. Learn more about experiencing law practiced differently and our local counsel practice.

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