Festivals |
Tishrei
From Rosh Hashana to Yom Kippur
Short Activities to start off the New Year
This file is designed to give you some general activities which
will not require a great deal of preparation at the beginning
of your programming and can be used in conjunction with the
more extensive programming on Jewish Ethics. The ideas are
adapted from our own experience with groups of teenagers and
students.
To start the New Year off right
The group sits in a circle. Ask the participants to think of
something that they've never done before and that they would
like to do this year. You should give them about five minutes
for this, and then anyone who would like to share some of
his own plans--what led him to make such plans, and his intended
means of accomplishing them--should feel free to do so.
Next, ask them to think of something that the group has never
done together and that would be good to undertake. Each participant
should propose an idea free from group criticism or commentary.
An open discussion should follow this "round table" during
which all the suggestions are examined and the most useful
ones selected. The activity concludes with the construction
of a project unifying the ideas agreed upon by the group.
Values Clarification
1. Use the activity with the Magen David as featured in the
Sukkot activities file below.
OR:
2. Draw a set of scales, half on each of two sheets of paper.
Mark the left sheet: "What I achieved this year" and the right-hand
sheet: "What I would like to achieve next year". Mark in 5
answer spaces above each scale. Make copies for all your group.
Each participant fills out their sheets - ask them to try
for at least 3 answers on each. They do not need to write
their names on their worksheets.
Create pairs or - if the participants already know each other
well - groups of five. They can juxtapose sheets and compare.
Ask them to discuss their ideas, review what is similar and
what is different. Each sub-group designates a reporter.
Group Review: the reporters present the findings, with additional
comments where necessary from other participants. Discuss
trends and problems.
Situate the exercise in a Jewish context as well as the general
one. Ask, too, what will be "new" about this year.
Ceremonial Side
1. Tashlich ceremony as a group
Tashlich, or the ceremony of expiation of sins against the
Almighty, recited over flowing water, can be performed as
an exercise before Rosh Hashana - or during the Ten Days of
Penitence - with the object of teaching the group / class
about personal responsibility for behavior and freedom of
choice in Jewish tradition.
Use this pretext to bring your teenagers together, work through
one of the above exercises and then go to Tashlich together.
Review emotions afterwards.
2. Crafts
For younger children, art design of greetings cards for the
New Year can focus, too, on the Hebrew messages and their
significance.
For teenagers, this can still be interesting if everyone designs
cards using computer graphics and there is some involvement
in the printing process, such as use of silk screen printing.
Gila Ansell Brauner, Barbara Weill
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