Age Group: SECOND GRADE
Lily studies a poem at school by Israel’s national poet, Hayim Nahman Bialik, entitled Kan Zippor – A Bird’s Nest. The poem speaks of a nest in the treetop containing three eggs, and the second verse reads:
וּבְכָל בֵּיצָה הַס, פֶּן תָּעִיר
Which means “And inside each egg, quiet, lest you wake it”.
When Lily is asked to draw a picture related to the poem for homework, she wonders what a lestyouwakeit (in Hebrew, Haspentair) looks like and how she is to draw it. So she writes a letter to Bialik, and even gets a response!
This creative and amusing story about the naïve encounter between a young girl and the written word allows readers and listeners to get to know Hayim Nahman Bialik and his work.
“The bashful cannot learn”
(Ethics of the Fathers, 2:5)
Asking questions is a significant part of learning. Jewish tradition encourages us to ask questions at all ages, attributing great importance to questions in one’s internalization process. We should always listen to children’s questions, without feeling pressured to provide them with all the answers. Sometimes it is enough to encourage them to keep on asking, and accompany them as they seek out and discover the answers on their own.
In A Letter to Bialik, Lily is not ashamed to ask what a “lestyouwakeit” is. Let us follow in her footsteps and never stop asking questions…
Book-Related Video
Copies Distributed:
40,000
Publishing:
ידיעות ספרים
Year of Distribution:
1977 2016-2017