(JEWISH GROUP) In a state with few Jews, how teachers introduce students to Hanukkah
In Montana, students across the state from Hutterite colonies to Native American reservations are learning about Hanukkah in school: playing dreidel, lighting candles, and reading a picture book that tells the true story of Billings residents who united against antisemitism.
Thats thanks to the Montana Jewish Project, which is in its third year of distributing 50 Hanukkah curriculum boxes to public school teachers around the state, many in rural areas with few to no Jewish students in their classrooms. Teachers who sign up for the box receive it free of charge.
A teacher at a school with a large Mennonite population went out of her way to email us and say, Thank you so much. This resonated so much with my students, said Rebecca Stanfel, executive director of the Montana Jewish Project. It makes a lot of sense, because the lesson plan is really about accepting everyone in your classroom, whatever their faith tradition.
Montana, home to the most hate groups of any state and a Jewish population of a few thousand, tends to be the subject of alarming headlines: Neo-Nazis urge armed march to harass Montana Jews and Jewish man attacked in Montana by self-proclaimed Nazi on Oct. 7, most recently.
But the state has also been a national model for how to effectively push back against hate. In 1993 in Billings, neo-Nazis threw a brick through a 6-year-old Jewish boys bedroom window, which was displaying a menorah. In response, the Billings Gazette printed a full-page picture of a menorah for readers to cut out and tape to their windows. Thousands posted the menorahs to show solidarity.
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