New York – Oy Vey, Holidays! Does Hanukkah Wannabe X-mas?

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    This undated image provided by Harbor Sweets shows the company’s “Chanukah Box” of chocolates decorated with a menorah. Harbor Sweets, a small New England handcrafted chocolate company, created the box in response to demand among customers who wanted to give chocolates as a holiday gift while acknowledging friends and clients who don’t celebrate Christmas.  It’s one of a number of examples of products originally conceived of as Christmas gifts that have been rethemed for Hanukkah. (AP Photo/Harbor Sweets)New York – Christmas has Elf on the Shelf. Now Hanukkah has Mensch on a Bench — not to mention Maccabee on the Mantel.

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    Christmas has gingerbread houses; Manischewitz sells Chanukah House kits, using cookie dough with blue-and-white icing.

    These are just a few of the Hanukkah-themed products inspired by Christmas traditions and toys. Pinterest and Etsy are loaded with blue-and-white Hanukkah crafts like wreaths and stockings. There are Hanukkah greeting cards, cookie cutters, and even tree ornaments shaped like the three symbols — Stars of David, menorahs and dreidels — that scream “Hanukkah!” amid a sea of holiday merchandise adorned with Christmas trees and Santas.

    You can also buy a $285, 6-foot Menorah Tree, shaped like a candelabra, with pine garlands wrapped around each of the menorah’s nine candle-holders.

    Some may say “Oy vey!” to all this kitschy retooling of Christmas stuff for Jewish consumers. But others, like Rabbi Evan Moffic of Congregation Solel in suburban Chicago, ask, “Why not?”

    He sees the crossover trend as part of how Jews “embrace the larger culture.” Moffic points out that even dreidels, the spinning tops that are a traditional Hanukkah toy, were borrowed from German culture.

    Latkes, the fried pancakes that are a quintessential Hanukkah food, are a crossover tradition too. They’re made from potatoes, which were abundant in Eastern Europe, where millions of Jews lived for centuries.

    “What most of us think of as Jewish food was borrowed from all the different countries Jews lived in in Eastern Europe,” said Ted Merwin, a Dickinson College professor who’s writing a book about the history of Jewish delis called “Pastrami on Rye.” ”I don’t know why people think that when Jews come to America we would stop taking from the surrounding culture.”

    Merwin says the Hanukkah-Christmas crossover products are “driven by high rates of intermarriage between Jews and Christians, but some of it is simply the reality” of living as a minority in a multicultural society.

    Dianne Ashton, a Rowan University professor and author of “Hanukkah in America,” says Jews began giving gifts at Hanukkah to show they had joined America’s consumer culture: “For immigrants in the early 20th century on the Lower East Side, buying presents for your kids showed you weren’t a greenhorn, and it also showed that you had earned enough money and had a few pennies extra.”
    This 2012 photo provided by Manischewitz. shows the Chanukah House kit from The Manischewitz Company. The kit, sold widely in supermarkets and drugstore chains, was inspired by the Christmas tradition of gingerbread houses. The house is made from cookie dough and comes with blue, yellow and white icing, along with decorations like a Star of David. (AP Photo/Manischewitz/Lynn Griffin)
    The custom of “Hanukkah bushes” instead of Christmas trees emerged in the 1950s, Ashton said, along with postwar suburban life.

    “You were no longer Jews living in urban ethnic enclaves where everybody was Jewish,” Ashton explained. “Here children were much more exposed to what their gentile peers were doing and how their neighbors’ houses were decorated.”

    Neal Hoffman created Mensch on a Bench last year after his son asked for Elf on the Shelf, the doll that watches kids’ behavior so Santa knows whether they deserve Christmas presents. Hoffman is Jewish, his wife is Catholic, but they’re raising their children Jewish. He raised $22,000 on Kickstarter for a prototype Mensch last year, and is producing 50,000 units for sale this year in retailers like Target and Toys R Us.

    But Mensch on a Bench is different from Elf on the Shelf: Kids can’t touch the elf, but the mensch “is an old Jewish guy” designed to be played with like any doll, Hoffman said. It comes with a guidebook for family activities for each of Hanukkah’s eight nights, including collecting presents for others in need.

    Other Hanukkah toys that echo Elf on the Shelf include Kippah Kantor and Maccabee on the Mantel. The Maccabee doll comes with a book that tells the Hanukkah story, in which a band of Jewish soldiers called Maccabees defeated the Syrians, who had tried to force their Jewish subjects to give up their religion.

    The Manischewitz Company — best known for selling Passover matzo — launched Chanukah House kits in 2012. “We want to give families a fun activity to do,” said spokeswoman Sara Stromer. Manischewitz hosts a competition on Facebook for the best-decorated house, with a $2,000 first prize.

    Harbor Sweets, a small, New England handcrafted-chocolate company, started selling Hanukkah gift boxes decorated with menorahs in response to customer demand.

    “Christmas-celebrating customers do not want to leave out their friends or clients who celebrated Hanukkah, and requested that the company make a specific gift box,” explained Harbor Sweets owner Phyllis Leblanc.

    One of Merwin’s favorite examples of the blurring of the two holidays is a children’s book, “How Murray Saved Christmas,” a rhyming spoof of “‘Twas the Night Before Christmas.” Murray, a deli owner, fills in for Santa and gets the toys delivered even though he smells like pickles and can’t remember the reindeer names.

    “It’s a brilliant parody,” said Merwin.


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    11 Comments
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    Wise-Guy
    Wise-Guy
    9 years ago

    What’s next?
    An 8-branched Menorah sprouting from a crucifix?

    As if our ancient Jewish culture has any need to adopt from other cultures….
    The implication is an insult and erroneous.

    True, it’s good to be somewhat familiar with the neighboring cultures/customs. But only to the extent of awareness, and for communication purposes.

    Otherwise it smacks of “step 1” of assimilation.

    This whole concept (of gawking admiration of foreign cultures) stems from not understanding the true nature of “Yiddishkeit” (in the Brooklyn vernacular).

    Next year let’s all sing “Deck the Sukkah with boughs of holly…”

    Yitzi1
    Yitzi1
    9 years ago

    Did that Rabbi ever hear of avoda Zara?

    mewhoze
    mewhoze
    9 years ago

    did the Chanukah house 2 years ago, it was awesome!!

    Brooklynhocker
    Brooklynhocker
    9 years ago

    “Dreidel are borrowed from German culture” someone tell this “guy” that the Greeks were around long before the country of Germany was established, and the reason for Dreidels are because the Rebbiem would play “dreidel” with their Talmidim when the Greeks would come around because there was a restriction on teaching Torah. Every 5 year old knows that.

    Mark Levin
    Mark Levin
    9 years ago

    Last week the Jewish Depressed ran a column in their South Florida section about a halloween shabbos “seuda” done by the South Florida editor.

    This is total KRUMKEIT and it MUST be stopped.

    ayoyo
    ayoyo
    9 years ago

    When I was a kid it was chanukah gelt , a few pennies that we got from zedie. It was a time when yiddish was spoken by our senior citizens who remembered the jewish life in europe.Today the yiddish language is only spoken by hasidim .The whole culture has been lost. Yiddish was the cement of the jewish people that unified them.The 2nd. generation has abandoned the holy sprach.and all of its culture, only to be replaced by yanky-isms The gentile street has been adopted by our fellow jews instead of a vibrant yiddish culture.

    Mentsch613
    Mentsch613
    9 years ago

    “Rabbi” Moffic and his wife “Rabbi” Ariella say the following on their reform temples website
    “We have a strong commitment to interfaith couples, their children and extended families; we offer support, learning and a place to feel at home.”
    When you have a superficial religion, the superficial takes precedence.

    Unfortunately, as Mark points out, the krumkeit has crept into the orthodox culture.

    The_Truth
    Noble Member
    The_Truth
    9 years ago

    Strangely enough, they sell numerous different Chrismas cakes with reliable hashgochos – Kosher Pareve, Yoshon!
    Now who’s borrowing from who?!

    annoynomous
    annoynomous
    9 years ago

    that is why some people do not give chanuka presents, rather we only give chanuka gelt as not to follow chukas hagoyim.(but yes, we do eat latkes, because minhag yisroel torah hei)