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Bring Meaning to Your Hanukkah Celebration
Presents vs. Mitzvot (Good Deeds)
By Cara J. Stevens
To offset the Christmas carols that inevitably get stuck in your head throughout the season, buy some fun Hanukkah music and play it at your family gathering or as background music throughout the holiday. A game of musical chairs set to Klezmer music or Adam Sandler's latest Hanukkah song can at least give you new tunes to hum in the shower.
Traditional foods, such as potato latkes (pancakes) or sufganiyot (donuts), are usually cooked in oil to commemorate the miracle of Hanukkah which is the oil that burned in the temple for eight days and nights when there was only enough left for one day. Cooking with children or as a family is a wonderful group activity, and it's a great time to tell the story of Hanukkah while you have a captive audience.
"A game of pin the candle on the menorah is always fun," says Debbie Fine, preschool director at Temple Sholom of Greenwich, Conn. "For the youngest children, you can simplify it using Velcro or felt pieces on a felt board."
In every celebration, amidst all the commotion of presents, food, conversation and drinks, it can be quite hard to bring more tradition into a large family gathering. Bringing in a Hanukkah activity, such as a game of dreidel with chocolate Hanukkah gelt as the prize, an impromptu group cooking activity or a card game marathon, can at least remind everyone of the larger context of the holiday.
* Name changed to protect privacy.
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