Happy Chanukah, 4th Grade!
Reminder that you’re invited to our Chanukah party, just a few days away, on Dec 20 — just sign up here: https://cbebk.shulcloud.com/holidays/hanukkah-youth-family-celebration-2019
Our 4th Grade scholars are taking a historical tack on Chanukah this year. Through games, discussions, and illustrating a book together, we learned about the military history of this holiday: what’s supported by historical research (the Jewish uprising against the Syrian-Greeks! Rededicating the Temple! Guerrilla warfare!), and what legends were probably added in afterwards (the miracle with the oil! dreidls!). We talked about why we teach these cool legends, even the parts that probably didn’t happen that way historically. According to one 4th Grade scholar — and I agree — “We can learn true things, even from stories that aren’t true.” In this case, we’re learning about standing up for what is right. We’re learning that great stories can inspire our people towards peace, and towards uprisings, too.
We focused on who was an upstander in the Chanukah legends. We’re ready to stand up for what’s right even today – whether that’s protesting, talking to people in charge, emotionally supporting somebody who needs help, or other ways to help create change when change is most needed.
We also enjoyed knowing that we can love our non-Jewish friends, while also being proud of who we are; our uniqueness and our diversity. (In my humble opinion, that’s the True Meaning Of Chanukah – though I’m sure the kids consider snacks and modern presents to be much more significant factors, hah!)
To continue these conversations at home:
- For a historically-fascinated, war-and-peace child: The Talmudic sages told a friendly story of oil to encourage peace, and they deemphasized the military story of the Maccabees (which would’ve encouraged a too-dangerous uprising – they super wanted to keep their young people safe). It takes wisdom to know what kinds of stories to tell, and when. Do you think the sages made the right call? Today, how might we choose when it’s the right time to tell a story of peace, and when to tell a story of war?
- For a social, loving, proud-of-diversity child: What makes us special and unique? What do we love about our non-Jewish family, friends, neighbors, etc? Isn’t it cool how different we all are? What are you proud of?
- For a political activist child: If somebody was telling somebody not to be Jewish, how can we stand up against that nonsense? How can we stand up for other people, when something wrong is happening against them? We need all kinds of people to help!
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