A mezuzah can be placed on every doorpost in a home except the bathroom. A special knife can be used for the challah on Shabbat. the candles and wrap them in a silk bag, keep- ing them for the Shabbat closest to their first anniversary. Rabbi Mark Loeb of Beth El Congregation in Baltimore suggests that couples engrave their names on the cup, and leave room for their children's names. They will create a multi-generational kiddush cup that they can use for Shabbat or for Elijah's Cup on Passover. Some Rabbis request two kiddush cups for the wedding, one for the bride and one for the groom. There are sets with the words "I am my beloved; my beloved is mine" and "The voice of the bridegroom, the voice of the bride" inscribed on them. A popular silver cup that Tradition! Tradi- tion! carries has a base that forms a chuppah containing a miniature bride and groom in- side. Another model, the Tree of Life cup sym- bolizes the new life that the couple is starting. Some people prefer cups with no stem at all, says Avrom Borenstein of Borenstein's Book and Music Store in Oak Park. As long as the cup holds 3.3 ounces of wine, any ma- terial and design is permissible. Challah is also an important part of Shab- bat, and two challot are customary to com- memorate the double portion of manna the Jews received on Friday while they were in the desert so they would not have to gather it on their day of rest. Many stores carry plates large enough to hold two challot. The challah is covered, often with a beau- tiful silk-screened or embroidered cloth, be- cause, tradition says, the manna didn't lay on the ground. A layer of something like frost came before and after it. A Sabbath-related item, which is also used Your Checklist When you are ready to set up your Jew- ish home, here is a checklist of the 18 items that mitzvah mavens recommend: mezuzah candlesticks kiddush cup challah plate challah cover Havdalah set tzedakah box Seder plate matzah cover menorah Bible prayer books and Haggadot Jewish reference books Jewish magazines and newspapers Jewish art a sukkah your ketubah, framed kitchenware for meat and milk at other times, is a tzedakah [money for char- ity] box. Traditionally, Jews place coins in the "pushka" before lighting the Sabbath candles, as an important symbol of Jews' moral and ethical commitment to humanity. There are boxes in ceramic, silver and wood, some of which are quite decorative and beautiful. It is important to display a visible sign of giving tzedakah in a Jewish home, says Rabbi Irwin Groner. "The genius of Judaism is that abstract values and princi- ples are always made concrete in tangible ways." Shabbat ends at sundown Saturday night with the brief ceremony called "Havdalah," or separation, that marks the division between the holy time of the Sabbath and the rest of the week. Havdalah acknowledges the distinct change of pace from the Sabbath to the rest of the week, explains Rabbi Landau. It is a means of recapturing the highlights of Shabbat and uti- lizing them to help get through the rest of the week. It also gives a message to the family that they should not regard the rest of the week's hurried, perhaps neglectful, relationship as the real one. The real one, he says, is the Sab- bath relationship. Beautiful Havdalah sets include a kiddush cup, a candle holder for the twisted multi-wick candle, and a box for the sweet smelling spices. A minor holiday religiously, but a major cel- ebration for most American Jews, Chanukah is a time to display the beauty of Jewish ritu- al objects to the world. In fact, Jewish law spec- ifies that the nine-branched candelabra, the menorah, be placed near a window in order to "publicize the miracle" of the Jewish vic- tory over the Syrians. It is necessary to own a menorah since the object itself fulfills the mitzvah; nothing else can be used in its place. Eight of the can- dles should be at the same level, while the ninth, the shamash, is at a different level. Dec- orative menorahs may be sculptural works of art, displayed year round in many Jewish homes. The other holiday celebrated with a great deal of home ritual is Passover. A seder plate STYLE • BR' DES 1 94 -)5 • 47