qift cuide • Time Passages own holiday together for the first time. Three menorahs. A baby changes Chanukah. We had a tiny third menorah at first, so small it used birthday-cake can- dles. Our April baby was just barely old enough at her first Chanukah to grin toothlessly at the candles and to gum her gifts. She smiled and slapped her hands on her highchair tray and tried to catch the dancing flames which were — in her opinion — much too far out of her reach. Four menorahs. Our August baby was too little for her first Chanukah to make much of an impression on her but her meno- ONOWINVHM OIAVO A8 Nolivuisniii On e menorah. I was a single woman, spend- ing most holiday evenings with friends or working such long hours that evening rit- uals often passed me by. One menorah was plenty, and it got used two or three evenings dur- ing Chanukah. After that, the rest of the candles rattled around in the kitchen drawer for six months or so and then got thrown out. Two menorahs. We were newlyweds, with my old beat-up menorah and a new shiny one, a wedding present wrought in lovely metals. We felt warm and wonderful having our own can- dlelighting, our own home, our ERICA MEYER RAUZIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS rah, our fourth, added depth to the holiday for us. The baby's big sister made it for her in nursery school. It was a strip of board, painted with pink poster paint, with nine, upside down metal bot- tle caps glued to it. It took half an hour to melt enough wax off the bottom of each candle to get them all to stand in place, but the ju- nior carpenter's pride of crafts- manship was boundless; and the combined light of our four meno- rahs was a sight to behold. The baby cooed and smiled and fell asleep with applesauce on her chin while the rest of us were eat- ing latkes. Five menorahs It's different having a boy after two girls, a February boy who under- stood enough about his first Chanukah to begin to expect little presents to come his way after the first couple of nights. "His" menorah, proudly pro- duced by his second sister, was a painted clay hot dog with nine careful holes poked in it. It rested on one semi-flat side steadily enough to hold its allotted candles, at least for a short while, before it slowly keeled over. We propped it up with a teaspoon, and it served beautifully. The children's faces, slightly saffron-colored in the candlelight, change so much from year to year. They grow older so quickly. The babyhood delight at anything new changes to childlike antici- pation of wonderful treats, which in turn, gives way to mixed pre- adolescent messages of forthright greed and subdued wonder at the meaning beyond the presents. As the children grow, our five menorahs continue to provide a cheerful combined conflagration each night of Chanukah. We by each year to keep the children in- volved with our family celebra- tion, as friends and parties beck- on. We try to make the saga of the Macabees compelling, the mira- cle meaningful. We spin the drei- del and play games with the letters symbolizing "A Great Mir- acle Happened There." We try to make the saga of the Maccabees compelling. We were discussing our vari- ous customs recently with a friend who was in Israel during Chanukah last year. He stopped at a shop in Jerusalem to buy a few gifts to take home and picked up a dreidel. He looked at it, and then went to speak to the sales- man. "One letter on this dreidel is wrong," he told the clerk. "No,"the clerk responded. "Look. It is correct." He gave the dreidel a little spin on the counter top. "Notice the fourth letter again," he said as the little top tipped over, clattered and lay still. "In Israel, the last initial is different on purpose. Our dreidels say, 'A Great Miracle Happened Here." The Israeli dreidel is right: Chanukah's great miracle hap- pened in Israel. But as our chil- dren gather in the candle glow, I think we, too, could spin an Is- raeli dreidel, for a great miracle happens here as well in every home where the candles' flames illuminate the path from the past and the way to the future. From our house to yours, may the menorahs of Chanukah bring you light and joy. El