Family Fun This Makes Sense Teaching children about Judaism by using their senses. find ways to enjoy it. Here are some ideas to get you started: ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM AppleTree Editor Taste: • Look for a Jewish food you've never tried before and give it a taste. • Ask family members for favorite recipes. Place all in the box and allow your children to select one to prepare. They will love cooking with you. • Buy a small bottle of every kind of kosher grape juice you can find. Ask: Which do you like the best and why? verything matters. Even the notebook. Especially the notebook. Perhaps you, the parent, have forgotten how important getting ready for a new school year can be. It isn't that you need just any three- ringed notebook. You need the light notebook. Your 10-year-old daughter simply can't show up at school with something bearing the image of, say, Barney and Baby Bop on its cover. She would be laughed out of school — all because of you. Later in life, everyone would still be talking about that stupid notebook with the purple dinosaur and so she wouldn't be able to find a husband, not to mention a job. Consequently, her entire life would be ruined simply because you were dumb enough to get that Barney notebook. Younger children, those not headed to school just yet, are a little more flexible. Here, the issue is not who appears on their notebook but are they going to get one of their own? ("How come you're getting her all that stuff for school and I don't get anything?" likely will pour forth, in the form of a shrill whine, from the lips of every 4-year-old with an older sibling.) • Tell your child: Imagine your favorite gentile cartoon character, or figure from history, is coming for dinner and would like to try some Jewish fare. Have your child create an entire menu he might prepare; then, pretend he is the guest eating the food. What might Mickey Mouse have to say about gefilte fish? How might Caesar have enjoyed a bagel? • Have an old-fashioned lunch, such as you might have found in the home of an Eastern European Jewish family. Some ideas: challah, lokshen (noodles) with cream cheese and onions or fruit, pickled beets, babka cake and tea. A great cookbook for this is called Yiddish Cuisine (Aronson Publishing) by Robert Sternberg. • Challenge your child to make the best bagel sandwich ever. Activity Box As you're out shopping for school sup- plies for the older crowd, here's an idea for putting together a great educational packet for younger children, as well. Buy the children some markers, paper and glue and you'll be able to do most of these projects, satisfying that desire to "buy school stuff" Not only is this pack- et affordable, boys and girls will enjoy it all year long — and they'll learn a lot Jewishly. It's called the "This Makes Sense" box. Begin with a medium-sized box, such as a shoebox. Then start collecting Jewish treasures that directly involve a child's senses. Every day, place one new item in the "This Makes Sense" box and . Smell: • Place a number of spice samples in small baggies, along with an empty jar, in your box. Allow children to mix and create their own spices for Havdalah. • Put a spoonful of several traditional Jewish foods in small containers. See if your child can identify each just from the smell. • Gather all ingredients necessary for a familiar Jewish dish, such as challah or cholent (don't announce what you've decided on). Now, let your child smell each item individually and try to guess what they make when all are combined. • Buy unscented play dough (or make your own) and add ingredients to make it smell like a Jewish food. You can also shape the dough into the appropriate food and create a yummy Shabbat din- ner for some hungry dolls or stuffed ani- mals. • Put a coupon in the Sense Box that promises your child a visit to your favorite Jewish bakery. But before you buy any treats there, stand for a full two minutes and enjoy the aromas. Touch: • Gather a few small items, such as a dreidel, Shabbat candle or coin from Israel. Ask your child to close her eyes and see if she can identify each object, just by touching. • Spread whipped cream on a large bak- ing pan, such as a cookie sheet. Ask your child to write Hebrew words into the whipped cream, letting her lick her fin- gers when she's done. • From cardboard or fabric scraps, cut out letters of the aleph-bet (or, you can buy these at most Jewish bookstores). Ask your son to close his eyes and feel to identify each letter. • Place a familiar Jewish object in the box, but instead of simply looking at it, concentrate on what it's like to touch this. (Some things to try: a mezuzah, tallit or tzedakah box). Ask your child to write down adjectives that describe the way the item feels. • Have your child make a picture of the Shabbat table, with every item having some kind of texture. For example, you could sprinkle real poppy seeds atop her picture of challah, and use purple plastic-wrap or a piece of purple fabric for the grape juice. Hearing: • Ask a grandparent to sing a lullaby she heard growing up. Record it on tape for your child to enjoy. • Write down all the sounds that happen in your home before Shabbat begins. Some ideas: the hot-water pot warming up, hurrying voices, coins clinking in the tzedakah box, bubbling chicken soup, Jewish music playing, someone taking a shower, a match striking to light the Shabbat candles, water running in the sink to fill a vase with flowers. • Try a new tape of Jewish children's music from your favorite bookstore. • Buy an inexpensive instrument, like a recorder or harmonica, and ask your child to make up a Jewish song or try to play one he already knows. • Write a Jewish song together. • Ask your child to name a single sound that characterizes each of the holidays. Of course there's the shofar (ram's horn) on Rosh Hashanah, but what sound makes him think of Pesach (Passover) (perhaps crunching matzah)? For Sukkot, what about the sound of the lulav shaking, or the wind blowing through the trees as you enjoy a meal in the sukkah? • Add Jewish touches while reading your child a favorite secular story. Imagine, for example, the Three Bears dining on cholent instead of porridge, or having ducks that wade in chicken soup and matzah balls rather than water. Sight: • Photocopy a picture of a famous figure in Jewish history; then, learn about that person. • Have a Jewish treasure hunt. Write down clues, directing your child to Jewish objects around the house. Have a treat at the end. • Make "bare" Jewish items into beau- ties. Using a pencil, draw a stark Shabbat candle- sticks (two lines will work fine; in this case, the plainer the better) and an empty rectangle for a mezuzah case. Now ask your child to use markers, glitter, stickers and anything else that will make these look lovely. • Ask your child to make an illustration for one of your favorite Jewish quotes. When you've collected enough of these, you can put them together in a book. Here are a few you might want to consider: • God could not be everywhere, so he created mothers. • Though parents have a dozen chil- dren, each is the only one. • A mails father is his king. • The warmest bed of all is your moth- er's. • One mother achieves more than 100 teachers. • Look through family photo albums and remember wonderful stories about each person. • Make paper dolls of your family members and have fun creating Shabbat and holiday clothes for each person. These also make great table decorations on appropriate days. ❑ 8/ 2 2002 65