*>> gift guide A Very Israeli Chanukah Former Detroiters celebrate with the country's customs, activities and foods. Shelli Liebman Dorfman I Contributing Writer T he excitement of the upcoming Chanukah holiday is reaching a new level for the Parshan family who, this year, will be celebrating it for the first time in their new home in Israel. "We have plans!," says Lisa Parshan, former director of Akiva Hebrew Day School's Early Childhood Center, who made aliyah from Southfield with her family this past summer. Taking advantage of the break offered by many Israeli school districts on Chanukah, the family will visit sites specific only to Israel. Parshan says the Hasmonean Village in Shilat, where the story of Chanukah is recreated each year, and attending the Ein Yael Oil Festival "are on our list:' "Unlike the U.S. where, if you planned it well, you could do a day trip every Sunday, here the kids are in school six days a week, so when they are off school, it's trip time," says Parshan, who lives in Beit Shemesh. Chanukah-related fun can be found nearly everywhere in Israel. Several big- production children's shows tour the country and venues like the Children's Museum in Holon, the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the Tel Aviv Museum of Art and the Museum of Edible Oil Production in Haifa highlight Chanukah with related displays. GIFTS AND GELT With eight nights of gift-giving not being an Israeli-Chanukah practice, Parshan says, "We will fit in perfectly as it is actu- ally our family tradition specifically not to give gifts on Chanukah. If you look at the sources for gift-giving it is pretty clear to see that custom became popular in North America as Chanukah fell during the win- ter months tied to a non-Jewish holiday where gift-giving is expected." But she says, "That doesn't mean that my kids lose out. When the kids were younger, we would buy a new family game and have game night; we make sure that each night of Chanukah we have a special dinner planned with the kids' favorite foods:' One night the children get Chanukah gelt, with the amount cor- 1E1 .11111. Inr An LED menorah lights up the Tel Aviv shoreline. sufganiyot. ;FS 1111110 1 IDF soldiers dig into Jill Greenbaum's ornate case allows the family's menorah to be displayed outdoors, for everyone to see. responding to their age, plus an extra one for good luck. "I once heard after the Greeks were defeated — after the miracle of Chanukah — it was necessary to begin re-educating the Jews about Jewish cus- toms and traditions that had been lost during the Greek reign. As a reward for Torah study, children got gelt." Jeana Rivkin, who grew up in Southfield and now lives in Jerusalem, says her family, including her Israeli- born children, "have been keeping with my parents' tradition and give a gift each night:' She admits, "One or two nights we give them socks or a coloring book:' For Elana Greenbaum, who made ali- yah from Southfield to Netanya in 2014, there's no place like Israel to celebrate Chanukah. "In America, Chanukah and Christmas often overlap and it's pretty hard to compete with 'the season with all the lights, and trees and songs on the radio," she says. "But here 'the season' is Chanukah. Every store is selling suf- ganiyot [Chanukah doughnuts] and you can buy a full box of candles for 1 shekel [26 cents]! People decorate, there are Chanukah songs being played; it's impos- sible not to feel that a special holiday is coming:' Hannah Farkas also feels the holiday everywhere she goes. "At work, we light candles together and people sing, which is a really nice tradition and definitely makes the holiday feel more like a com- munal activity:' says the former West Bloomfield resident. "We always have suf- ganiyot at work, as does every workplace I've been in or heard of, which was weird at first because I am used to the holiday being marked by my grandma's latkes. People eat sufganiyot — with all different flavors: creams, infusions of liquor and more. Every bakery competes for the best sufganiyot. I guess Israel still knows how to give meaning to the term gaining 'holi- day weight:" Greenbaum says, "I think one of my favorite parts about being in Israel is that the moment one holiday ends, everyone starts preparing for the next one. So right when Sukkot ended, bakeries already started selling sufganiyot. One bakery, Roladin, is most famous for its special suf- ganiyot that come with a syringe of frost- ing that you get to inject into your dough- nut. And I don't think it's possible to be here without making lathes at home:' Many Israelis also taste Moroccan foods, like dairy couscous and svinge (fried fritters made of flour and oil and dusted with sugar that are served with chocolate, halavah and homemade jams), which Greenbaum calls "delicious. "I had it for the first time in Tzfat, and last year my friends made and gave it out to people on the streets:' CHANUKAH LIGHTS Outdoor Chabad candle-lighting ceremo- nies take place in various cities. At the Western Wall, the start of Chanukah is marked by the lighting of a giant menorah, lit with a torch that is first passed from hand to hand by partici- pants who line the roads from Modi'in to Jerusalem in the annual Chanukah Torch Relay. Arts and crafts workshops and other holiday-related booths pop up in malls and outdoor spaces during the holiday. Israelis and tourists flock to Jerusalem or Bnei Brak to see the menorahs on rows of window sills. "It's so special because growing up in the States you walk around and you see one or two chanukiot [Chanukah meno- rahs] lit on each street, but here you walk around at night and an entire building continued on page 52 50 November 19 • 2015