Sedering with Kids
How to have a fun and meaningful Passover seder.
By Sharon Duke Estroff
Reprinted with permission of the author.
For the parents of squirmy kids, a Passover seder can feel
longer than the 40 years our ancestors spent wandering the desert. Fortunately,
it's perfectly possible to prevent the fifth question (are we done yet?) and
the eleventh plague (restless natives) from showing up at our Pesach
celebrations this year.
Taking into account that every family has different comfort
levels, objectives and degrees of observance, here are some tips toward
creating a fun and meaningful Passover Seder that promises to captivate the
interest of all kinds of kids--wise, wicked, simple and just plain unable to
ask.
That's the Ticket
Prior to the big night, make "matzah tickets" out
of index cards. Award the tickets to children throughout the Seder for reciting
the Ma Nishtana, answering tricky
Passover trivia questions, helping little brothers and sisters make Hillel
sandwiches and oodles of other desirable seder behaviors. At the end of the evening
let ticket-holders redeem their winnings for Passover related prizes (i.e.
stickers, candies, plastic frogs).
Keep the Karpas Coming
Grumpy kids and hungry tummies go hand in hand. A steady
flow of karpas (a.k.a. carrots and
celery) and kosher for Passover salad dressing for double dipping, will keep
your kids happily crunching away until it's time for the main course.
Give out Goody Bags
Keep your junior seder participants happy and occupied with
special plague goody bags. While you can purchase already prepared "bags
of plagues" at Judaica stores and online for around $12 a piece, you can
accomplish the same thing at the dollar store for a fraction of the price. Try
plastic sunglasses for darkness, toy frogs, wild beasts and insects (lice and
vermin); kosher for Passover marshmallows for hail, red dot stickers for boils;
and band-aids for blood.
Don't Passover the Books
Visit a library or bookstore and stock up on Passover themed
books. Scatter them around the table for children to peruse during the longest
stretches of the Seder. A few surefire hits are: Shlemiel
Crooks by Anna Olswanger, Wonders
and Miracles by Eric Kimmel and Uncle
Eli's Passover Haggadah by
Eliezer Segal.
Have an Afikomen Search Party
It's always the same story at my house: The big cousins find
the afikomen and the little cousins get upset; the little cousins get a
prize anyway and the big cousins get upset. By making the afikomen hunt a team
effort rather than a competition, we can do away with such griping. Use post-it
notes to lead the search party from one destination to the next (i.e. "Go
to the place where Elijah will enter," or "Pharaoh had frogs jumping
in his bed," see if there are any jumping in yours"). The clues
should ultimately lead the pack to the illusive dessert of honor. Be prepared with inexpensive "afikomen
finder" rewards for the whole crew.
Take Plague Breaks
Help kids stay focused and fidget-free during long seders by
periodically letting them get their wiggles out. Should your children's
attention start to stray from the task at hand, call for a "plague break"
and instruct all antsy guests to jump like frogs or run in place like wild
beasts.
Have a Matzah Match
Before the Seder, write matched pairs of Passover words on
index cards. For example, write "Hillel" on one card and "sandwich"
on another; "ten" on one card and "plagues" on another. Keep
going – four/questions; matzah/ball; Elijah's/cup--until you have enough cards
to secretly stash one under every guest's plate. Sometime before dinner, tell
everyone to lift their plates, look at the card and track down their matching
half. (Hint: For children too young to read--or to understand the match
mentality--cut cards in half using varying puzzle cuts and write one word on
each half. When kids find a card that "fits" theirs, they'll know
they've found their match).
Put a Spotlight on Stories
The true purpose of the seder is to pass down the Passover
story from generation to generation, but why stop there? Ask a few of your
senior guests to come prepared to share stories about seders past. When kids
get antsy, pass a play microphone to a family patriarch or matriarch and let
the storytelling begin.
Perform a Little Elijah Magic
Give little skeptics something to think about by making
Elijah's wine magically disappear. Secretly place some super absorbent
polyacrylamide crystals (sold in gardening or craft stores as Aqua Crystals or
Hydro Gel) in the bottom of an opaque Elijah cup. Just before you welcome the
prophet, let your children see you fill the cup with "wine" (a.k.a.
water with kosher for Passover food coloring). By the time you finish singing "Eliyahu
Ha Navi" the liquid will be solidified. That's when you turn the cup
upside-down and reveal--tada--Elijah drank every last drop! (Hint: A pre-seder practice round will help
ensure a successful liquid/crystal ratio.)
Keep An Eye On the Big Picture
Sure, planning a kid-friendly seder is liable to take more
work than simply bribing our kids to behave with a pound of chocolate-covered
macaroons, or locking them in the playroom with a babysitter for the night. But
we'll know our efforts have been well worth our while when our fidgety children
one day do the same for our fidgety grandchildren.
Sharon Duke Estroff is
an internationally-syndicated Jewish parenting columnist, award-winning Jewish
educator and mother of four. Her first Jewish parenting book will be published
by Broadway Books, a division of Random House this fall. Her website is www.sharonestroff.com.