A Do-It-Together Kotel

Join your kids in creating a Kotel together as a symbol of achdut.

We have a book that my kids enjoy called “The Travels and Tales of Dr. Emanuel J. Mitzva: Doctor of Mostly Everything” by Yaffa Ganz. One of my youngest daughter’s favorite stories is about a girl named Julie, who gets the chicken pox and can’t go to school to complete her Sukkah project with the class. When Dr. Mitzva suggests she just do the project at home, she explains that it’s a “do-it-together project” as the puzzle pieces they are making need to fit together. In a truly Corona-friendly twist, Dr. Mitzva brings the class over to her yard and they hold up their drawings to the window so they can each see them and complete the project properly. Of course he explains that bikkur cholim, visiting the sick, is a “do-it-together mitzva” as you need both the healthy and sick person to do the mitzva and both are impacted by it.

Now we are approaching Tisha B’av, not Sukkot, but I loved the idea of the “do-it-together project” and “do-it-together mitzva.” We learn that the Beit Hamikdash was destroyed because of baseless hatred. There is nothing better than a “do-it-together” to rejoin us all, in our case by both doing a project and learning about a mitzva.

If you have more than one kid, or a group of kids in camp, this is a great collaborative craft. We are planning to go big and have each kids do a few pages that will be assembled as a mural on the wall. If you don’t have either the manpower or the space, if you and your child can each paint one page, and that will be more than enough to reassemble on a sheet of paper.

You can add anything you find meaningful to your Kotel on top of the watercolor blocks. A picture of your family, a note you want to put in the wall or anything else.

I hope that by all of Jewish people joining together in achdut, we can rebuild the real Beit Hamikdash!

Looking for more Tisha B’av projects?
Rebuilding Yerushalayim (in paper)
Yerushalayim Puzzle for Tisha B’av
Peek-a-boo Yerushalayim

Stained Glass Yerushalayim

Do-It-Together Kotel

Time:
Active: 20 minutes

Age: 3-10

Materials:
Watercolor paints
Paint brushes
Paper
Scissors
Tape or glue

Process:
Give each participant a piece of paper and brush and have them fill the page with watercolor painting. No need to make any specific design or shape. You can assign each kids a few colors, so they will recognize “their” pieces once it is cut up. Or just have them all use just lots of colors!

When the pages have dried, cut them up into rectangles and squares. I stacked the pages and cut strips, and them stacked the strips to cut the smaller squares and rectangles – we don’t need to be precise! Glue or tape the squares in rows onto a piece of paper or if you are doing this on a larger scale, on the wall. Overlap some smaller pieces in between the bricks to simulate the greenery growing on the Kotel.

Did you do this project? Share your pictures on our facebook page!

Mixed-Media Menorah

Use everything and anything to make a menorah!

menorah2

Looking for a craft for a Chanukah project but don’t want to spend a lot on supplies? Go raid your craft cabinet and make these mixed-media menorahs! Set out small bowls with whatever you have on hand and let the kids mix it up. 10 mismatched buttons, a small piece of ribbon and some leftover beads from another project work great here. No one menorah branch needs more than a little of each type of supply, and the greater the variation, the more interesting the creation!

menorah1

My one caveat here is the lay the whole design out on you page before gluing it down. Otherwise you can run out of space and not end up with enough room for all of the menorah branches. Also, you can move your items around until you get the “perfect” design and order. We drew on the flames and a base with marker after we finished gluing for similar reasons.

I am honored to once again to have this project featured in this week’s edition of The Jewish Link of New Jersey, in the Kid’s Link section. Pick up a copy if you are local or check it out online.

Looking for more Chanukah projects?
Edible Menorah
Pipe Cleaners and Straws Menorah
Menorah and Dreidel Snowflakes
“Light” a Paper Menorah
Nature Menorahs
“Spinning” Paper Dreidel
Decorate a Dreidel…with a Dreidel!

Mixed-Media Menorah

Time:
Active: 15-25 minutes

Age: 5-9

Materials:
Buttons, sequins, ribbons, yarn, pipe cleaners, pompoms, feathers or any embellishment you have!
Glue

Processs:
Lay out a design using a variety of embellishments and glue into place.

Did you do this project? Share your pictures on our facebook page!

Peek-a-boo Yerushalayim

Yerushalayim is always in our minds…or underneath our paper!

opening

Coming up to Tisha B’av, I wanted to come up with something the expressed the meaning of the day. Sitting in United States, we want to feel a connection to Israel. By using flaps to “uncover” the Israel beneath, we are symbolizing that beneath our everyday activities, we always have Israel in our hearts and prayers. This idea is a little abstract for small children, but flaps are always fun and I think the gist of the idea can come across.

closed

I did this sample piece while the kids were out at camp and I have to say I got very engrossed in it! I played with different kinds of collage by sifting through the recycling bin. I found a mailer for a car dealership, and I tried cutting out a car to add to the road but while I loved the mixed media effect, it ended up not fitting well with the flap. Don’t confine yourself to plain construction paper, see what else you can add!

open

Looking for more Tisha B’av projects?
Rebuilding Yerushalayim (in paper)
Yerushalayim Puzzle for Tisha B’av

Peek-a-boo Yerushalayim

Time:
Active: 15-30 minutes
Drying: 15 minutes+ if using paint

Age: 3-9

Materials:
Printout of the Kotel (or draw it yourself!)
Construction paper or magazines and newspapers
Glue
Scissors

Process:
Print out or draw a picture of the Kotel. Fold in both sides of the paper to the center until they touch.

On top of the flaps, create a cityscape that reminds you of where you live. You can use construction paper shapes, or images from magazines or newspaper. Add your family in to the picture too!

Unfold the flaps to the reveal the Yerushalayim beneath.

Did you do this project? Share your pictures on our facebook page!

Paper Seder Table

Recreate the Seder…in paper!

paper-seder-table

Now that Purim has passed, we needed to redecorate our wall. We took down our Shushan Mural and were debating what to put up for Pesach. After tossing around a few ideas, we decided to make a Seder table.

In the front hallway of the kid’s school, they have a seasonally decorated wall similar to ours but on a larger scale. Last year they put up the most amazing Seder table, but on the wall. Think tablecloth, nice plastic dishes, etc but vertically hanging on the wall. I loved it so much we recreated in in an easier paper form for our one wall.  You can definitely do this on a piece of paper if you don’t have a spare wall hanging around! Prop it up in the center of your table for an adorable meta centerpiece.

We will not be home for the Sedarim but if we were, I would have printed out pictures of everyone who was going to be in attendance and put them on our paper table!

Looking for more Pesach projects?
Seder Placecards
Chametz Hunt with Peek-a-boo Doors
Pesach Puppets

Paper Seder Table

Time:
Active: 15-30 minutes
Drying: 15 minutes+ if using paint or glue

Age: 3-9

Materials:
Construction paper
Scissors
Markers
Plastic tablecloth or patterned paper

Process:
Tape together paper to form your base, if doing as a wall mural. Cover the paper with a piece of plastic tablecloth and tape on the reverse side to secure.

Cut out wine cups, Haggadot, a Seder plate, matza (ours looks sort of like bananas since our new package of construction paper sadly does not include brown!) and anything else you might want (dish of salt water, plates and silverware, etc.) We put the place settings on the opposite side of the table upside down for authenticity but you can put them all right side up if your kids prefer.

Add photos of your Seder guests!

Note: If you are hanging this on the wall, let it dry completely before hanging. We didn’t and the wet glue on our wine bottle label ran and smudged the whole label. We pulled it off and are going to redo it and have more patience this time!

Did you do this project? Share your pictures on our facebook page!