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AVA'S HOMEMADE HANUKKAH by Geraldine Woberg

AVA'S HOMEMADE HANUKKAH

by Geraldine Woberg ; illustrated by Julia Seal

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-8075-0495-6
Publisher: Whitman

Ava’s extended family members bring their menorahs to celebrate the eighth night of Hanukkah.

The girl decides to create her own menorah after she learns the story behind each special lamp. She tells her pet rabbit, named Maccabee (after the warriors who found the miraculous oil that burned for eight nights in the Hanukkah story), about their meanings. Pop-Pop’s menorah uses “corks that float in jars of oil,” often found in the Sephardic tradition. Aunt Rachel’s lamp is fashioned with a clear glass tube displaying pieces of the special glass ceremonially broken at her wedding with Aunt Tamar. Aunt Tamar’s traditional metal menorah was found by her grandfather in a box left by his grandfather. She tells Ava that she was excited to discover that she had Jewish ancestors, although she was not brought up as a Jew. Other relatives explain their menorahs, and Ava then makes her own menorah to remember people, places, a special event, and her family origins. The story reflects different aspects of contemporary Jewish life and could be used with other books that tell the story of Hanukkah as a festival of religious freedom. It would also work well as an introduction to a menorah-making activity. The characters are light-skinned, except for Aunt Tamar, who is brown-skinned, and Pop-Pop, who has slightly browner skin than most others, perhaps indicating Sephardic heritage. The colorful though pedestrian illustrations clearly show the details of each menorah. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Inspiring creativity and a closer look at personal observances of Hanukkah.

(Picture book. 6-8)