סְּפָרִים
Book-Related Family Activities
We All Have Inventions
You can discuss and ask: Do you also want to become an inventor? What would you like to invent? Have you ever come across a problem or a need and thought of an invention that can help?
Making a Family Comic Strip
This book can inspire you to create your own family comic strip. Imagine some amusing characters, and try to draw them while adding short sentences. What are your characters saying? What sort of interesting story can they tell?
From the Book to Real Life
You can look around you and identify which of the inventions in this book are in your life. Perhaps the drip irrigation in your backyard? Or the cherry tomato salad at dinnertime? How about the game of Taki you enjoy playing? Next, you can write a thank you note to the inventor of that particular invention, and tell him or her how useful it is to you.
Our Home
You can also think about challenges in your daily lives with your family, and build an imaginary machine that can help deal with them using household items. A shoebox and old handle, for example, can turn into a laundry-folding machine, while a toilet-paper roll can become an innovative gardening tool.
Arts & crafts, inspirations, and other surprises can be found on the Sifriyat Pijama Pinterest page
Childhood memories
The grandfather’s friends tell his grandchild about the boy his grandfather once was. Take a moment to share with your child too about the childr you once were, what you liked to do, what you miss, and share childhood photographs. You can also ask your child: What would you tell about yourselves when you were younger? What memories are particularly joyful or moving?
A song from the land of childhood
This book can inspire you to introduce your child to songs that remind you of your childhood or the place where you grew up. You can listen to old songs together and ask: Do you also have songs that remind you of things?
“Buenos Dias”
When the grandfather and father in this book speak to one another in Ladino, the child feels as if they are sailing away together to a faraway land. It is very exciting to understand, know, and utter words in a foreign language. Throughout the book, words and phrases appear in Ladino; you can go back and look for them in the book, then try to pronounce them together, and look .up their meaning
QR code
Scan the QR code and listen to the book Trees Waiting for Rain on the Sifriyat Pijama podcast. We recommend following along with the book while listening.
Proposed Family Activities:
- This book is based on a true story. Perhaps your child could read it with a member of an older generation, such as a grandparent, uncle or aunt. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if by doing so, you will learn some family stories you had not heard before? It may be advisable to make an audio, video or hand-written record of them!
- You may enjoy leafing through the book together and pointing out signs of the time that have been incorporated into the illustrations. Perhaps you could look for old photographs of family members at home, and focus on the clothes, hair styles, and various objects they had back in their homelands.
- Where has your family come from? How many generations has your family been living in Israel? You may want to open an atlas, place some tracing or parchment paper on top of the world map, and draw arrows on it to mark the journey made by your family before coming to Israel. You could also use online software, such as Google Maps, to take a virtual tour of your family members’ homelands.
- Do you also have a personal or family dream? It may be fun for each member of your family to write down their dream on a piece of paper, insert it into an empty bottle, and seal it with a cork or top. You can return to your bottles in a year, and check whether the dreams you wrote came true.
- The new olim in this book have different customs, languages, and clothes. Sometimes, different customs, clothes, and traditions can be found within the same family. How about teaching your children some words in their grandparents’ mother tongue? Or reminding one another of your special family traditions and songs.
- The two new olim in the book sing a liturgic song together, originating in Psalms and found in the Hallel prayer:
“בצאת ישראל ממצרים בית יעקב מעם לועז…”
Do you know the tune to this song? How about singing it together? You could also look up other tunes online at www.zemereshet.co.il.
read this book together
You may want to read this book together, pause, and ask your child to tell you what they think is happening at that point in the story. How far along were you when you figured out where the grandmother and grandson were going, who the people in the black suits were, and what their cases contained?
• The grandmother and grandson in this book are spending time together
The grandmother and grandson in this book are spending time together. A special connection is often forged between children and their grandparents, that is unlike the relationship between parents and children. Can you recall a special time spent with your grandma or grandpa? You may want to share your childhood memories with your child, and discuss their relationship with their grandparents, aunts, or uncles.
playing a game
The authors depict the concert in the sand through a detective story, in which the grandmother does not tell her grandson where they are headed. Having read the book together, you may want to suggest playing a game in which your child will take you somewhere without disclosing your destination. Your child can prepare clues along the way, much like a treasure hunt.
What kind of music do you like listening to?
During the first concert, the orchestra played pieces by Schubert, Brahms, Mendelssohn, and others. What kind of music do you like listening to? Does anyone in your family play a musical instrument, or is learning to play one? Having read this book together, you may also enjoy attending a concert together, or even holding one of your own at home. There are many roles to be played at a family concert – musicians, conductor, and audience.
Bronislaw Huberman
Not too many people know the story of Bronislaw Huberman. Numerous men and women have been courageous and done great deeds for which they have not become famous. Perhaps you can think of another historical figure that you have heard about or known personally, whose story you would like to share with your child. You could even make a short storybook about them, and send it to us.
Max the Inventor
Trees Wait for Rain
Barefoot in the Sand
A Concert in the Sand 


