Our Edot track students concluded this semester, as did all the weekday classes at Isaiah, with our annual "Bring-A-Friend" day. Students often share with their friends outside of our Isaiah community their experiences in Religious School, and this is the one day during the year when they can invite one friend into our classroom. The lesson for the day in Edot track revolved around Hanuka. Charna started the lesson by welcoming all the friends, and explaining what the Edot track was all about. She then read a summary of the events of the Hanuka story. Students and their friends were then divided into four groups, and each group was given one fourth of the summary Charna had just read, and given the challenge to create a skit depicting their assigned part of the story. The challenge was that each group was told to perform the skit in a certain style. Group 1 had to perform the start of the Hanuka story in the style of an American western film; Group 2 as a scifi film; Group 3 in the style of a Harry Potter story; and Group 4 in the style of a Sesame Street episode. The groups went to separate rooms and areas with teachers and Avodah TA's overseeing them. After 20 minutes we all assembled in Room 202, which had been set up with a stage area, and the performances began. The audience was asked to try to guess the assigned style of the performance, and, in every case, on both days, the groups performed so well that we all guessed correctly. Following the performances, students were given dreydls and bags of pennies, and for the next half hour the sound of dreydls being spun and pennies being thrown into the "pot" could be heard, along with the accompanying shouts of triumph or sighs of frustration. We rounded out the session at a Hanuka assembly in the Sanctuary with the rest of the weekday classes. Rabbi Greninger chose 9 volunteers from friends who were visiting to become a "human hanukiya." The friend playing the role of the Shamash (servant candle) "lit" the 8 friends playing the roles of the 8 candles of the last night of Hanuka, as Rabbi Greninger explained that we put the candles into the hanukiya each night from right to left, but then light them from left to right (lighting the newest candle first). Rabbi Greninger and our Shira (Music) Track teacher, Elaya, then led us all in singing Hanuka songs until it was time to go home. A good time was had by all!
Have a very happy Hanuka holiday - Chag Hanuka Sameach! Enjoy your winter break, and a smooth and enjoyable transition into 2012.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Hanuka Around the World
Students in our Edot class completed their Hanuka unit of study last week by learning about different Hanuka customs and traditions around the globe. They shared some of what they learned in the form of posters depicting the customs in 9 different countries or regions: Mexico, Germany, Poland/Russia, Tunisia, Kurdistan (northern Iraq), Yemen, Germany, Alsace region of France, and Morocco. These posters were then hung on a bulletin board outside our classroom, made to look like the 8 candles plus the Shamash (servant candle) of a hanukiya (Hanuka menorah). The finished products were wonderful, and, even more importantly, the process of learning and creating the posters was enlightening (excuse the Hanuka pun!) and fun.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Hannuka YouTube Links
Now that the Thanksgiving holiday is behind us, our Edot class has been focusing on learning about the Jewish holiday of Hannuka, as it relates to a running theme of our curriculum - cultural borrowing.
We began by reviewing the customs and laws of Hannuka. Students volunteered how they celebrated the holiday at home, and these customs were listed on the board. The students were then asked to look over the extensive list they generated, and share which of the items on the list were mandated by Jewish law (halacha). It was a surprise to many of them that playing the dreydl game and eating latkes (potato pancakes) were not required. The only halachic ritual we are required to perform is lighting the hannukiya (the 9-branch menorah used only for Hannuka), adding one more candle each night, and placing the hannukiya where all can see it - "l'farsem et ha'nes" - "to make famous the miracle." Everything else, from playing the dreydl game to eating the latkes, giving presents, eating chocolate hannuka gelt, etc., all falls under the category of customs or traditions ("masoret" in Hebrew).
Once we established the difference between "halacha" and "masoret," we continued the lesson by reviewing the history behind the events of the Hannuka story, beginning with the conquests of Alexander the Great in the early 3rd century B.C.E., the spread of the Hellenistic (Greek) culture, and the ultimate clash of cultures when many Jews began to adopt the Greek culture. The Maccabees, as we know, were victorious, and the Talmudic era Rabbis, living about 500 years after the events of the Hannuka story, emphasized that the miracle that occurred was not so much that the small Maccabean army was able to defeat the large, well-organized army of the Syrian-Greeks. Rather, the true miracle was that a minority culture could survive in the midst of a larger one, and the lesson we could share with the rest of the world was that religious freedom should and could be attained "not by might, and not by power, but by spirit." This lesson is what the ritual of lighting the hannukiya is meant to help us remember each year.
This past Sunday, recalling what we had learned about the prevalence of the Greek culture in the Mediterranean world some 2,000 years ago, we took a close look at our own American culture and how American Jews have adopted many of its elements, giving them a "Jewish twist" and making them part of our own culture. We viewed 4 YouTube videos, each of which reflected how we have borrowed extensively from our American (western) culture to enrich our Hannuka celebrations. Below are the links to these YouTube videos. See if you can isolate the American cultural elements in each. Enjoy!
The Maccabeats sing "Candlelight"
Hanuka with Veronica Monika
Adam Sandler's Chanuka Song
Hannuka Flash Mob in Jerusalem
We began by reviewing the customs and laws of Hannuka. Students volunteered how they celebrated the holiday at home, and these customs were listed on the board. The students were then asked to look over the extensive list they generated, and share which of the items on the list were mandated by Jewish law (halacha). It was a surprise to many of them that playing the dreydl game and eating latkes (potato pancakes) were not required. The only halachic ritual we are required to perform is lighting the hannukiya (the 9-branch menorah used only for Hannuka), adding one more candle each night, and placing the hannukiya where all can see it - "l'farsem et ha'nes" - "to make famous the miracle." Everything else, from playing the dreydl game to eating the latkes, giving presents, eating chocolate hannuka gelt, etc., all falls under the category of customs or traditions ("masoret" in Hebrew).
Once we established the difference between "halacha" and "masoret," we continued the lesson by reviewing the history behind the events of the Hannuka story, beginning with the conquests of Alexander the Great in the early 3rd century B.C.E., the spread of the Hellenistic (Greek) culture, and the ultimate clash of cultures when many Jews began to adopt the Greek culture. The Maccabees, as we know, were victorious, and the Talmudic era Rabbis, living about 500 years after the events of the Hannuka story, emphasized that the miracle that occurred was not so much that the small Maccabean army was able to defeat the large, well-organized army of the Syrian-Greeks. Rather, the true miracle was that a minority culture could survive in the midst of a larger one, and the lesson we could share with the rest of the world was that religious freedom should and could be attained "not by might, and not by power, but by spirit." This lesson is what the ritual of lighting the hannukiya is meant to help us remember each year.
This past Sunday, recalling what we had learned about the prevalence of the Greek culture in the Mediterranean world some 2,000 years ago, we took a close look at our own American culture and how American Jews have adopted many of its elements, giving them a "Jewish twist" and making them part of our own culture. We viewed 4 YouTube videos, each of which reflected how we have borrowed extensively from our American (western) culture to enrich our Hannuka celebrations. Below are the links to these YouTube videos. See if you can isolate the American cultural elements in each. Enjoy!
The Maccabeats sing "Candlelight"
Hanuka with Veronica Monika
Adam Sandler's Chanuka Song
Hannuka Flash Mob in Jerusalem
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