BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Cincy MultiFaith Calendar - ECPv6.15.1.1//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:Cincy MultiFaith Calendar
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Cincy MultiFaith Calendar
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/New_York
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20260308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20261101T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20261204
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20261213
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T220118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T220118Z
UID:3026-1796342400-1797119999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Hanukkah (Jewish)
DESCRIPTION:Hanukkah\, also known as Hanukah\, Chanukah\, and Chanukkah can be spelled many different ways in English. It is an eight-day celebration known as the Festival of Lights marked by the lighting of candles using a special candle holder called a menorah or chanukiah. This holiday is where Jews celebrate their victory over a tyrant Greco-Syrian king and the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem. As the story goes\, a small quantity of oil to light the Temple’s menorah miraculously lasted eight days. Traditions include a game involving spinning dreidels (tops)\, eating potato latkes (pancakes) and other oily foods\, and gift giving. \nMore Information \nHoliday Greeting: Happy Hanukkah! \nCommonly observed by synagogue attendance\, community or family gatherings.
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/hanukkah-jewish-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T224157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T224157Z
UID:3036-1767657600-1767743999@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Three Kings (Hispanic)
DESCRIPTION:The Feast of Reyes (Fiesta de Reyes or Los Reyes) is celebrated in Spain/Portugal and Latin America on January 6th. The feast celebrates the passage in the Bible in which the Three Wise Men safely arrive to Jerusalem thanks to the guidance of the Star and bring gifts to Jesus. The level of celebration varies from a family gathering to a huge city wide and very anticipated parade depending on the culture/country. For example\, both Spain and Puerto Rico celebrate with large parades\, and many argue that Reyes is more festive/a larger celebration than Christmas. Despite the differences in the level of “Community Celebration”\, all cultures/countries share some traditions around this feast: 1. Family gathering the night before and/or the day of Reyes. 2. Eating the Rosca/Roscon de Reyes\, a sweet bread in the shape of a large oval “doughnut” with dried fruit on top. This is a very time consuming sweet to make. Inside the bread there is one (or more than one depending on the size of the Rosca) figurine of “Baby Jesus”. Based on each family’s traditions (mostly guided by the cultural traditions of the country of origin) the person that receives the piece of bread with the figurine will be responsible for hosting the party the next year\, bringing tamales for the feast of Candelaria/Candlemas Day (Mexican Tradition)\, or doing/not doing the dishes\, first one to other presents\, etc. 3. All kids (and grown up kids) leave their shoes by the window the night before Reyes (Jan 5th) or under the Christmas Tree so the Reyes (Kings) can fill them with gifts during the night. Usually\, kids select their favorite shoes\, “Church” shoes or the shoes that better represent them (soccer shoes\, dance shoes\, flip-flops\, etc). 4. Kids also leave water outside their home for the camels to drink. (The Three Wise Men travel on camels). It is important also to mention that this feast brings much attention to the idea of the star that guided the Three Wise Men to Jesus and how we should always follow God’s light and path and trust that we will be safe. \nMore Information
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/three-kings-hispanic-7/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20261230
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20261231
DTSTAMP:20260424T223015
CREATED:20251030T220303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T220334Z
UID:3028-1798588800-1798675199@multi-faithcalendar.org
SUMMARY:Feast of Sharaf / Honor (Baha'i)
DESCRIPTION:Wherever they live\, Baha’is gather every 19 days for what we call a Feast. This is a members-only event comprising three parts: \n1. A spiritual portion that’s the time for prayer and reflection; \n2. A business portion for consultation about administrative issues (plans for forming classes\, organizing to perform community service\, observing holy days\, or any ideas or projects community members wish to discuss. It’s also a time when local members can ask their Local Assembly to forward their concerns to the National Assembly; \n3. A social portion that can consist of anything from just glasses of water to a full-course dinner.
URL:https://multi-faithcalendar.org/events/feast-of-sharaf-honor-bahai-4/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR