THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 6, 1985 BORENSTEIN'S The Chanukah Store 25242 Greenfield Rd., Oak Park, MI 48237 • •• • •• • DESIGNER SAMPLES Bridal Gown Sale 50-15% OFF MONDAY, DECEMBER 2nd to SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15th Also, Bridal Veils and Bridesmaid Gowns at Exceptional Savings ALL SALES FINAL • CASH OR CHECK ONLY • PREVIOUS PURCHASES EXC. Creations By Pollak's Inc. Hunters Square Orchard Lake at 14 Mile Rd. 851-5111 rf .11(% crz At Harvard Row we make gift choosing so easy. Our shops are filled with welcome treasures to delight the hearts of family members and friends. And you can do all your shopping in fast one stop. Visit us soon. . . enjoy our stores and services, and have a very happy holiday. LASSALE Watches cut and polished like gemstones. Lich precise line and facet is part ot a grand design to draw light. magnify richness. I ulti is dramatically thin: both are satiny gold-time \• i al need,: stripe dials his ∎ smoky. hers lighter grey and crystals with mercimal. raceme borders. Such extraordinary beauty wears well for a hictime. Lassalc.. :rhe heritage is obvious. \QM 01,01141 kk:4•: , , o ooffoo, Hoo0o0h ohoO0000 o 4o440o0o WAMOMOI 0 THE MERCHANTS OF _Ay/W C- ONiNf0L Jewelers & Silversmiths Since 1916 Diamond Brokers, Importers, Jewelry .Manufacturers MEADOWBROOK FISHER BUILDING DOWNTOWN VILLAGE. MALI. DETROIT BIRMINGHAM ROCHESTER 125 FISHER BLDG. 280 N. WOODWARD 375-9100 , I. Greetings of the season during this beautiful Festival of Lights. r. ■ • 872-3360 , • 642-7157 I • • • .11 11 MILE ROAD AND LAHSER Se , k0 Ti me Co rp delicacy called birmennailes, a tortilla-like pancake made from fried meal, is quite popular. In the Ashkenzai communities the pancake batter is made from grated potatoes and the dish is called latkes and eaten together with apple sauce or sour cream. In Israel, the entire nation snacks on sufganiot, fried jelly donuts, either of the home-made variety or ones bought on street corner stands. , Many Jewish communities have a tradition of eating dairy products to recall the bravery of Judity. According to Jewish apocrypha the beautiful Judith, reputedly a member of the Hasmonean (Maccabee) family, invited the enemy general Holofernes to a banquet. Judith insisted on feeding him only dairy products and when he grew thirsty she gave him wine to quench his thirst until he fell into a drunken stupor, where- upon she stabbed him to death. In some Sephardic com- munities the seventh day of Chanukah is observed as a spe- cial women's feast honoring Judith. In North Africa, women and girls would fill the synagogue where they withdrew the Torah scrolls from the Ark and kissed them. In a special service they then recited prayers and blessings invoking God's protection of women, after which they returned home and ate cheese dishes and engaged in song and dance. The women of Hebron also set aside the seventh day of Chanukah to celebrate and eat dairy de- licacies. foods, Chanukah Like Chanukah games are also de- eply symbolic. Although Jewish tradition generally frowns on gambling and games of chance, on Chanukah such games are permitted. The most popular is the spinning top or dreidel game, where even children 'may be found betting on the turn of the dreidel using nuts or chanukah gelt as their stakes. Although the game originates from early medieval Europe it is popular with Sephardim as well as Ashkenazim. The top's Yiddish name, dreidl, comes from the German dreihn or to turn over. The game symbolically recalls the turn of events when Judah Mac- cabee and his small rag-tag army defeated the mighty Greek empire. On the dreidel are carved the Hebrew letters which form an acrostic for the phrase "a great miracle happened there." These letters simultane- ously indicate the players next move in the game. So inherent a part of Chanukah was this feat- ival game that concentration camp inmates during World War II carved dreidels from their wooden shoes. Many dreidels are now made from plastic, there are menorot which use electric lights and supermarkets stock ready-to-use frozen latkes. But the spirit of Chanukah remains and the Maccabean story of Jewish revi- val and victory of the few over the many is as timely today as ever before. (313) 967-3920 • N, •• •I • 4 SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN • • e e ■ 37