Oy! Such toys!
Jewish companies are putting a new spin on Hanukkah fun and games
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 10/12/2011 (5075 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Dreidels. More dreidels. And dreidels.
Not that there’s anything wrong with those, of course, but fresh spins on playing with the holiday tops, along with Jewish takes on classic games and toys, are everywhere as unique Hanukkah gifts for young people.
For some Jewish families, gathering to play games as the holiday candles burn is part of the eight-day Festival of Lights (beginning Dec. 21 at sundown) commemorating the rededication of the Holy Temple by the Maccabees after their victory over the Syrians.
But let’s face it, spinning a dreidel for money, the foil-covered chocolate variety or otherwise, can be mind-numbingly dull, for older kids and grown-ups, at least.
That’s why the “heebsters” over at Moderntribe.com carry the Spinagogue, a mighty stadium in the centre of a Star of David-shaped board. It comes with six different “terrains” for courageous spin-offs between players and has storage for gelt (money), because — as the box says — “No Gelt, No Glory!” And it has walls, so no watching dreidels fly off the table or under the couch.
Remember Racko, where you slip cards into slots? Try Parsh-O, with cards based on the Torah rather than numbers. Or gift Kosherland, which is akin to Candy Land, only players pass Bubby, the Kiddush Ocean and Matzah Man instead of a Candy Cane Forest and Gum Drop Mountain.
Yo-yos are fun, yes? Pick up a Yo Bagel. It looks like a bagel, comes in a plastic takeout box and works the same as a regular yo-yo.
There’s also Torah Slides and Ladders, the Jewish rendition of Chutes and Ladders, offering a speedy trip to the top of the board for “loving your fellow Jew,” or a sad slide to the bottom for making noise in synagogue.
Have you played the card game Slamwich? There’s Schmear! Players build a bagel sandwich instead of the square-bread variety using cards for food slices like the original. In the Jewish version, bad things happen with cards for an old tractor tire or a manhole cover surface.
The creative force behind dozens of Jewish-themed games and toys is Abe Blumberger, the president and owner of Jewish Educational Toys. He’s a wholesaler in Chicago who’s been in business for about 25 years.
“The market has expanded far beyond mere dreidels and menorahs,” he said. “There’s all types of games. Our mission is simply to create fun, educational products for Jewish children to take pride in.”
Blumberger carries about 200 Jewish-themed books, crafts, toys and games, selling to small retailers, synagogues and larger chains that include Bed, Bath & Beyond.
There are Jewish editions of Apples to Apples, Apples to Apples Junior for younger kids or Crayola’s Hanukkah Cookie Kit in a gifty box.
Hebrew letters come in puzzles and magnets, and there’s Alef-Bet Bingo to help kids as young as three learn the Hebrew alphabet. Look near cash registers or at Hanukkah displays in stores for Hebrew and Hanukkah stickers, and Jewish-specific packs of silly band bracelets and colouring books, for smaller gifts.
For teens, there’s a Jewish edition of Taboo, where you try to get team members to say “bagel,” for example, without using the words lox, cream cheese, hole, bread or toast.
Kids as young as four can play Mitzvah Match. No reading is required. Or Match-it, with 60 Jewish-themed cards.
Another offering from Blumberger is Rabbi’s Challenge, a variation in wood of the three-pegged strategic math game Nim. In his version, players must move all the Stars of David to an outside peg, never placing a larger star on top of a smaller one.
Author-artist Emily Sper created a boxed set of Hanukkah takes on three classic card games: Go Fish, Crazy Eights and Rummy, with everything from jelly doughnuts to Judah the Maccabee in the decks.
Modern Tribe, founded by Jennie Rivlin Roberts in Atlanta, combined Texas Hold’em poker with dreidel play in its No Limit Texas Dreidel Game. The object? To have the best dreidel “hand” by combining spins. There are private spins, in shakers, and “community” spins all can see.
Roberts, whose site is a trove of funky takes on Jewish gifts, said she went into business after realizing just how disinterested her friends were in the classic game of dreidel, as evidenced by her Hanukkah guests chowing down on chocolate gelt without doing any spinning.
She was also stung once too often by clunkers as gifts from non-Jewish friends. This one stands out: “It was a mechanical doll and you pressed the foot and it sings about latkes in a Yiddish accent,” she said. “I thought, OK, maybe there’s room for something better.”
Other offerings at Modern Tribe:
Baxter the Pig Who Wanted to be Kosher is a hardcover book by Lauren Snyder. Baxter meets a man on a bus who fills him in on the joys of Sabbath dinner. After trying to become kosher, Baxter meets a rabbi who welcomes him as a guest to the Sabbath table.
Building brick mezuzah cases, from a company called Jew Dads, come in characters from Star Wars and Toy Story to hang from door posts as a sign of faith. The brick is glued together, but one piece on top comes off to slip in the traditional parchments inscribed with verses from the Torah.
Operation Maccabee, a dreidel board game for teens, is based on this goal: “Spin Dreidels. Kill Nazis.” Players lead elite squads of commandos from four Allied countries to sneak behind enemy lines during the Second World War and liberate concentration camps. “Be the Jew Bear. With Dreidels,” Modern Tribe urges. It’s made by Flaster Venture.
Cool Jew: The Ultimate Guide for Every Member of the Tribe, is Lisa Alcalay Klug’s manual of modern Judaism that promises to do “for gefilte fish and matzo balls what the Preppy Handbook did for plaid and polo — only with much more chutzpah.”
— The Associated Press