coovA and A ro to ol 0 ))w O THE STORY OF THE DREIDEL Elizabeth Applebaum Gift Guide Editor P robably the most popular Chanukah song ever written focuses on a "little dreidel" made "out of clay." What Jewish child in day school, Sunday school or summer camp has- n't learned this number, only to gleefully drive his or her parents crazy by singing it 100 times in repetition? The holiday's other most recognizable sym- bol, the menorah, has religious significance, recalling the eight days the oil burned in the Beit HaMikdash, or Holy Temple, recaptured by the Jews. The dreidel, or sevivion in Hebrew, has a very different story. The game of dreidel -- take or put a certain amount in the pot, based upon the letter on which the driedel stops after it spins — is a cus- tom that began in Jewish communities during the Middle Ages. And most scholars believe this tradition is based on a medieval German gam- bling game where players tossed dice marked with the letters N, G, H and S, for nichts (noth- ing), ganz (all), half(half) and steill in (put in). From the start, the Jewish version of the game featured four Hebrew letters: nun, gimmel, hey, shin. Initially, these stood for the Yiddish words nimm, gib, halb and, shtell, which mean: take, give, half and put. Quickly, however, some- one quite astute — but alas forgotten in history — noticed that the letters also were the first that began each word in nes gadol haya sham, or "A great miracle happened there." In Israel, of course, dreidels instead bear the letters nun, gim- mel, hey, peh, for "a great miracle happened here." (Incidentally, those intrigued by Gematria, which assigns a numerical equivalent to each Hebrew letter, point out a compelling tidbit regarding the numerical total of the four Hebrew letters on the dreidel: it equals that for the word mashiach, or messiah). The game of dreidel likely became popular for two reasons. First, young Jewish boys were supposed to spend their time studying Torah, not playing games. But there were exceptions, like the holi- days, when such "frivolous" behavior was accept- ed. Second, Jews are directed to enjoy the Chanukah lights, not to work while they are burning. So what to do with all that time? Play dreidel, of course. Today, it isn't only clay that makes a nifty dreidel. Jewish gift boutiques and art stores sell dreidels made of everything from glass to silver to ceramics. Visit Israel and you might be lucky enough to catch Yemenite Jews playing dreidel, which they call duame, with a spinning top they traditionally make of nutshells. Though dreidel is certainly the best-known game for Chanukah, it's not the only one associ- ated with the holiday. In Persia, Jewish children enjoyed many games of chance, the most popu- lar of which was backgammon. In years past, Ashkenazi Jewish children played a game with cards that bore Jewish pic- tures and were inscribed with Hebrew letters. Want to try your hand playing dreidel on the Web? CHECK OUT ANY OF THESE SITES: NA/ww.holidays.netichanukah/dreidel.html www.billybear4kids.com/holidays/kanukkah/random2.11tm www.jewiaq.org/dreiciel/ www.olmorg.il/yky/article.php/1309 For more on Chanukah and driedels visit: www.ohr.org.il/yhiy/article.phal 309 IN GIFT GUIDE I • NOVEMBER 20(15 • 11