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Jewish Notebook - Hanukkah Festival Of Lights Chanukah Israel Hebrew Mini Notepad Gift College Ruled Are you a Looking to buy some Festival Of Lights Gifts? Or you know someone that needs this Jewish notebooks for this coming Hanukkah? This is a great for taking notes, scheduling, journal and much more. Use it for work, business, travel or your day to day notes. Convenient 6 x 9 size - perfect for fitting in your pocket or purse Great gift idea for christian, jewish, jew, hebrews, black friday, Christmas, december, shopper, cyber monday, birthdays, cooking recipe, holidays, or any special occasion. Useful and funny chanukkah notepad for writing notes, journal and more! Perfectly sized at 6" x 9" 120 lined pages Cool hebrew cover design Thoughtful gift for people who loves Hanukkah!
Christian Prayer Journal- Hanukkah Festival Of Lights Chanukah Israel Hebrew Mini Notepad Gift College Ruled (6"X9") Are you a Looking to buy some Festival Of Lights Gifts? Or you know someone that needs this Prayer Journal notebooks for this coming Hanukkah? This is a great for taking notes, scheduling, journal and much more. Use it for work, business, travel or your day to day notes. Convenient 6 x 9 size - perfect for fitting in your pocket or purse Great gift idea for christian, jewish, jew, hebrews, black friday, Christmas, december, shopper, cyber monday, birthdays, cooking recipe, holidays, or any special occasion. Useful and funny chanukkah notepad for writing notes, journal and more! Perfectly sized at 6" x 9" 120 lined pages Cool hebrew cover design Thoughtful gift for people who loves Hanukkah!
Hanukkah, the Festival of Lights is a joyous Jewish holiday. It celebrates the defeat of the Syrian Greeks by the Maccabees and the rededication of the Jerusalem Temple. Game-playing during the holiday is very popular. One favorite game is the dreidel game. The dreidel (Hanukkah spinning top) contains four sides. On each side is a Hebrew letter: nun, gimel, hay and shin. The letters stand for the Hebrew words nes gadol haya sham (a great miracle happened there), commemorating the miracle of the jug of oil that burned for eight days. If the dreidel falls on the nun, the player gets nothing. If it falls on the hay, the player gets half. If it falls on the shin the player must put up the amount agreed upon at the start of the game. If the player gets a gimel, the player takes the whole pot. A song favorite called I Have a Little Dreidel is often sung at Hanukkah time.
The classic story from Nobel Prize winning author Isaac Bashevis Singer about a family who adopts a parakeet during Hanukkah, fully illustrated and in picture book form for the very first time. When young David and Mama and Papa are celebrating Hanukkah one frosty winter evening in Brooklyn, Papa sees a parakeet sitting on the window ledge. He lets the parakeet in and everyone is delighted to find that it speaks Yiddish. They name it Dreidel and it becomes part of their family. Many years later, when David is in college, he is at a party one night and tells Dreidel's story-only to discover that Zelda, a young woman at the party, owned the bird herself as a child. Papa and Mama are worried that they will have to give their beloved pet back, but then David and Zelda decide to get married after college, and everyone agrees that they should take Dreidel with them as they start their own family.
"As he tries to survive Hannukah 1971 in the suburbs of Los Angeles, middle-school magician Joel learns to appreciate life's small miracles with the help of an unusual stranger he meets on a bus"--
From award-winning fantasy author Ellen Kushner comes an unforgettable adventure inspired by Jewish folklore and tradition. Sara wishes her family celebrated Christmas or at least had one of the pretty trees she sees at her friends' houses. But at her family's big Chanukah party, mysterious guest Tante Miriam gives Sara a one-of-a-kind gift: an enormous, golden dreidel. Miriam warns her to be careful, for when she spins it, she's spinning miracles. Sara soon discovers there's much more to the dreidel than meets the eye, and before long she's spun herself into a whole new world--one of magical princesses, riddles, and demons. Can Sara discover her wisdom and rely on her courage to help a new friend and to find her way back home? The perfect Chanukah read!
Are you looking for the perfect Hanukkah gift? You found it! This elegant design featuring teal/turquiose dreidels (svivonim in modern Hebrew) decorated with the Hebrew letter shin in front and hey in the back, is sure to make someone happy! Traditionally, during the holiday of Chanukah, children (and often adults) play a soft-hazard game with a dreidel (or sevivon in modern Hebrew). On the four walls there are the Hebrew letters Nun, Gimmel, Hey, and Shin, which stand for the phrase Nes Gadol Haya Sham, or, A great miracle happened there. Together with the menorah (chanukiyah), dreidels are the popular symbols of Hanukkah (Festival of Lights). At the front, under the red dreidel, there are Hebrew "Sefer Zichronot" and English "Journal" phrases. This Hanukkah notebook features: Convenient size - 6" x 9" 120 lined pages Unique Judaica cover design in a lovely glossy finish Great for gift budgets under $15 This Hanukkah Journal is a thoughtful gift idea for all your friends and loved ones who love Hanukkah!
The title of this book is a phrase often used to describe the fate of the Jewish people in the world and invokes one of the central arguments for the creation of the state of Israel. In this thoughtful collection of essays, Kim Chernin suggests that the Zionist struggle has left the Palestinian people in a similar predicament; now they, too, are merely guests in their former homeland. Confronting her own uncritical support of Israel, Chernin tries to reconcile her desire for a Jewish homeland with the reality of the violence carried out in order to secure it. Following an in-depth examination of the perspectives of both Jews and Palestinians, Chernin writes eloquently of the process by which she gradually learned to hear once-ignored Palestinian voices. By combining her knowledge of Jewish history with her insights as a psychotherapist, Chernin discovers the psychological mechanisms that have kept her and other Jews from fully comprehending the suffering of both parties in this seemingly endless conflict. She argues persuasively that by overcoming the mental blocks that prevent so many from seeing the Palestinian point of view, Jews can learn to feel empathy for them without diminishing their love and support for Israel.
Once upon a time a nine year old girl had a dream of becoming an author. She wrote her first story ‘The Magical Scarecrow’ and sent it to a publisher. The publisher told her that her style was good but the content not long enough. Twenty-five years later, with her first best-seller under her belt, the little girl rewrote her first story for her sister’s children. As those children grew and shared their aunt’s story with other children the expanded Magical Scarecrows stories by Auntie Lynn were suddenly in hot demand. But rather than make these a commercial offering, Auntie Lynn decided she would have the stories professionally illustrated, edited, and produced to give away for free to needy children to help with the vital skill of literacy in a program that has become known as The Magical Scarecrows KIDS WHO READ SUCCEED program. The concept was so successful that it almost sent Auntie Lynn to the bankruptcy courts when she fulfilled requests coming in from orphanages in Bali, missions in India, schools in Zimbabwe, Aborigine reading programs in Australia, and many more.