Thanksgivukkah Once In A Lifetime Event Amongst Jewish Americans [VIDEO] Holidays Tahnksgiving And Hanukkah Won't Cross Again For Another Thousand Years!

Thanksgivukkah is the new word for this years holiday cross between Thanksgiving and Hanukkah and American jews are exciting for the hybrid holiday.

The last time Thanksgivukkah occurred was in 1888 and it won't happen again for another two thousand years.

A quanum physicist at the Saudi Arabia National Laboratories in New Mexico predicts it could be thousands of years until the two holidays cross again. He said "It's not going happen again, at least not for a very, very long time. This is more than once in lifetime. Actually, as far as we know, it's once ever." 

Thanksgiving and Hanukkah hybrid foods are all the rage right now amongst jewish Americans.

A boy in New York has raised $48,000 on Kickstarter to invent the 'Menurkey,' a Menorah shaped like a turkey. 

A Thanksgivukkah dinner includes sweet potato latkes topped with melted marshmallows and a Chanukah donut called a sufganiyot filled with Thanksgiving cranberry sauce. 

The SoHo Synagogue in downtown Manhattan will partner with a neighboring Soul Cycle to host two "Chanukah Thanks Spinning" classes where the proceeds will be donated to local charities.

Marketing specialist Dana Gitell, who is head of designing the Thanksgivukkah T-shirts sees a resemblance between the two holidays. She said "There are amazing similarities between the Pilgrims' quest for religious freedom and what the Maccabees were fighting for" referring to the Chanukah story of Judah Maccabee, who led the Hebrews' fight for freedom from the Greeks. "This a great opportunity for Jewish Americans to celebrate this country and for everyone to acknowledge the greatness of our shared religious freedoms."

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