The Children's Post
The Children's Post

The Children's Post

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Dear Readers,

 

Necessity is the mother of new customs. I should know, I have made new ones for almost every festival. My mother taught me that if old customs make you feel left out then make your own customs to suit your needs.

Once I felt really sad on Rakshabandhan. As I have two sisters I felt as if we will miss the fun of this festival. My mother made all three of us tie rakhi to each other and made us promise that we will always protect each other. I liked the new tradition.

My parents visit all of their friend’s place on Diwali and this leaves them very tired. So we decided to order food and start a new tradition. Now our Diwali’s are incomplete without pizzas.

My daughter loves Christmas and waits for our very own Santa Claus every year. She feels that every time he resembles a different family member. But rather than feeling suspicious, she feels immensely happy that Santa takes the trouble to make her feel comfortable as she might get uncomfortable with a stranger. This is the newest custom that we have included in our lives.

I can say one thing for sure, the new customs certainly make our lives enriched. One day our new customs will become a part of our heritage and our future generations won’t know the difference. Interesting! (devilish smile)

 

Enjoy the edition

Priyanka

The Children's Post of India is a daily newspaper created by mothers for children. The ideal age group is 8 to 14 years old. Its a 4 page, print at home newspaper. 

If you are an institution (School, NGO, Activity center) working with children in this age group, please get in touch to get the paper and share with your students. Individuals can take the paper from here and share with their children.

This subscription licence is only for one child/family. Please do not use this subscription for redistribution in any form or format. 

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