November 27, 2015

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Volume XXI, Issue XXII  |  www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts

15 Kislev 5776 | November 27, 2015

HANUKKAH PLANNING

Join us for a Super Sunday of Eight ways philanthropy, fitness and fun! to celebrate Hanukkah that don’t involve gifts BY HILLARY SCHULMAN

HSchulman@JewishAllianceRI.org

Join the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island on Dec. 13 for Super Sunday, the biggest fundraising day of the year. Volunteers will be working hard to raise money for the Jewish Alliance Annual Campaign, which supports more than 300 programs and services in Rhode Island, in Israel and around the world. Volunteer to make phone calls any time between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. at the Dwares JCC in Providence. Can’t volunteer? Then answer the call! Super Sunday co-chairs MinCaption dy Stone and Doug Simon have been working behind the scenes Last year’s co-chair to make this a day to remember Deb Salinger for the entire Jewish community. “I am very excited to be co-chairing this event this year with Doug,” Stone said. “We have a strong, cohesive Jewish community and Super Sunday is a great opportunity to bring everyone together for one day to help make us even stronger. This year is going to be especially fun for the entire SUPER SUNDAY | 6

BY MAAYAN JAFFE JNS.ORG Despite Hanukkah being one of the few Jewish holidays not mentioned in the Torah, it gets a lot of play – pun intended. Shmuel Arnold of Baltimore recalls how while growing up in a secular Jewish household, his parents made an extra effort to give Hanukkah gifts every night. Sometimes they needed to get creative, like wrapping socks PHOTO | PINTEREST or delivering a gift from an extended family member. A collage of Hanukkah craft projects for kids from Pinterest. Without even a rendition of “Rock of Ages” around the meaning: presents. Today, from 9 to 18, Arnold – like Hanukkah menorah, Arnold however, married with three many other parents – tries to says the holiday had one children ranging in age infuse more meaning into the HANUKKAH | 22

With popularity and sales up, Mensch on a Bench has much to smile about BY DEBORAH FINEBLUM SCHABB/JNS.ORG The Mensch on a Bench is so much happier now than he was a year ago. Look carefully and you will notice that, whereas the previous Mensch had a decidedly worried look, this latest version of the popular Hanukkah toy is flashing an exuberant grin. Is the erstwhile Mensch smiling because he expects to be in some 100,000 homes by year’s end? In truth, the change in vis-

age was suggested last year by the “sharks” on ABC’s “Shark Tank” program, where Mensch on a Bench founder Neal Hoffman pitched for – and secured – investors in his company. The requested change in facial expression was one that Hoffman was happy to make. “We were going so fast – in less than a year we went from concept to product on the shelf – that I didn’t match the Mensch’s face to the one in the book,” Hoffman

told JNS.org. He was referring to how the plush doll is sold for around $30 along with a book that tells the story of Hanukkah while featuring “Moshe the Mensch” guarding the miraculous lights of the menorah in the ancient Temple. But the 38-year-old Cincinnati man, a toy pro after his six years with Hasbro, is not one to rest on his laurels – or his bench. Having sold out last year’s crop of 60,000 MENSCH | 21

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