The stuff "mensch" toys bring a Hanukkah message Courtesy of themenschonabench.com.
From games in the car to Mad Libs and everything in-between (including one major present that involves travel and doesn’t need to be wrapped).
By: Deborah Fineblum
The eight days of Hanukkah (this year the first candle is lit on Sunday night, Dec. 22 and the last one on Sunday, Dec. 29) are the highlight of the year for nearly every Jewish child. But they can be daunting for the one tasked with procuring eight nights of gifts. And, on the last couple of nights how many of us have resorted to wrapping up a single Matchbox car, a pair of socks or a box of crayons?
Indeed, we need a miracle to pull it off every year. Just like when things looked the darkest for the Jews of Judea, they were given a double miracle: the militarily impossible victory of a small band of Jewish priests who took on the powerful Greek army (elephants and all) and the miracle of one day’s worth of oil lasting a full eight days in the freshly scrubbed holy Temple. Leading generations of Jews to let the world know the miracles performed for our ancestors by lighting our hanukiyahs (menorahs) in a place visible to all.
So, in addition to the latkes filling the house with happiness (and a fine layer of oil on walls, furnishings, humans and pets alike) and the dreidels ready to spin (don’t forget a couple rolls of pennies to make the game more exciting), if you are searching this time of year for Hanukkah gifts guaranteed to delight, as well as transmit the ancient miracle of the holiday to your kids, grandkids or great-grandkids, these can get you started:
Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins. Eric Kimmel’s Caldecott-winning classic is an unforgettable battle between good and evil, made all the more powerful by Trina Schart Hyman’s haunting illustrations. Since 1989, children have cheered on Hershel of Ostropol, who may appear like a simple Jew, but wait till you see how he outfoxes a series of big, scary goblins over the course of the eight nights of Hanukkah. The price varies by format and edition.
The Power of Light: Eight Stories for Hanukkah. This is the 40th year that families have been able to get cozy before the lit candles and read aloud a story each night from Isaac Bashevis Singer’s collection, beginning in his childhood home in prewar Poland. “The great storyteller at his gentlest and most nostalgic” is how The New Yorker described the book ($10.95 paperback), which is enriched by the illustrations of Irene Lieblich.
(JNS.org)
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