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Home > All About Hanukkah
Dreidel Game
The dreidel (a four-sided spinning top) is associated with Hanukkah.
It has four sides, each engraved with a different Hebrew letter:
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נ (Nun)
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ג (Gimel)
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ה (Hey)
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ש (Shin)
These letters are an acronym for the Hebrew words, נס גדול היה שם,
Nes Gadol Haya Sham—"A great miracle happened there"
(referring to the miracle of the oil that took place in the Beit
Hamikdash).
In the State of Israel, the fourth side of most dreidels instead shows
the letter פ (Pe), rendering the acronym, נס גדול היה פה, Nes Gadol
Haya Po—"A great miracle happened here" (referring to the fact that
the miracle occurred in the land of Israel). This custom was adopted
after the capture of East Jerusalem during the Six Day War. It is
rejected by most Charedim, and toy stores in the ultra-Orthodox
enclave of Mea Shearim are annually the county's near exclusive
suppliers of the traditional Shin dreidels.
Traditional Jewish commentaries ascribe deep symbolism to the markings
on the dreidel. One commentary, for example, connects the four letters
with the four exiles to which the nation of Israel was historically
subject—Babylonia, Persia, Greece, and Rome.[13]
The dreidel is the centerpiece of a game which is often played after
the lighting of the Hanukkah menorah, to keep the children interested
during the short time the candles are burning. Each player starts out
with 10 or 15 coins, nuts or other markers, and places one marker into
the "pot". The first player spins the dreidel, which lands with one of
its symbols facing up, indicating the appropriate action to be taken,
corresponding to one of the following Yiddish words:
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Nun - nisht - "not" - the next player spins
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Gimel - gants - "all" - the player takes the entire pot
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Hey - halb - "half" - the player takes half of the pot, rounding up if
there is an odd number
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Shin - shtel ayn - "put in" - the player puts one or two markers in
the pot
Another version differs in that nun is nem - "take", while gimel is
gib - "give". The game may last until one person has won everything.
The dreidel game is played in part to commemorate a game that the Jews
under Greek domination played to camouflage their Torah study. Though
the Greeks made a law forbidding the study of Torah, the Jews would
gather in caves to engage in learning. A lookout was posted to alert
the group to the presence of Greek soldiers; if he spotted them, he
would give a signal and the Jews would hide their scrolls and begin
playing with spinning tops (dreidels) and coins. This ruse gave the
impression that they were engaged in gambling, not learning.
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