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Alone Together on Dan Street

Illustrator:
Jen Jamieson
A young girl practices the Four Questions on her apartment balcony in Jerusalem and finds a way to bring the neighbors together for Passover even during the separation of a pandemic.
In stock
SKU:
5596
ISBN:
9781681155968
Product Type:
Printed Material
Grade Level:
P-2
$17.95

It was the year the singing stopped.

The streets across Jerusalem were silent.

To stay safe from a bad virus, everyone stayed home.

Playdates ended.

Purim was barely there.

Passover, Mira thought, would be different too.

In an inspiring story based on a real event in Jerusalem, a young girl and her family find a way to come together with their community and make something special of a Passover taking place at a very difficult moment for the world.

A note to families discusses coping with feelings of loneliness and separation.

Reviews

"A lovely story of how a little girl in Jerusalem turns the challenge of Corona Virus into an opportunity for sommunity and song. It offers a wonderful way to relfect on how we can be our best when we think of others and come together."

--Dr. Rona Milch Novick,

Dean of the Azrieli School at Yeshiva University and author of Mommy, Can You Stop the Rain?

 

 

 

 

Breathtaking and powerful. Shows the universality of the quarantine experience. --Heidi Rabinowitz and Susan Kusel, The Book of Life Podcast


A lovely story of how a little girl in Jerusalem turns the challenge of Corona Virus into an opportunity for community and song. It offers a wonderful way to relfect on how we can be our best when we think of others and come together.  --Dr. Rona Milch Novick,

Dean of the Azrieli School at Yeshiva University and author of Mommy, Can You Stop the Rain?

 

We come back to the very recent past in Alone Together on Dan Street, in which Erica Lyons gives a hopeful but not sugarcoated retelling of the first spring and Passover of the pandemic. While people in New York City banged on pots with their windows open daily at 7 p.m. and Italians sang out their windows, Israelis moved their Seders on to their balconies so that anyone who lived alone could have a Seder surrounded by other voices. Lyons captures the monotony and claustrophobia of those early days of the pandemic perfectly, in recounting the story of Mira: “[n]ow the days were all mixed up … [a]nd seasons were only things that happened on the balcony. Every picture [Mira] drew was of the same building across the street.” She also juxtaposes the fact that, while for people who lived by themselves, the pandemic was especially isolating, for those who lived with families in small apartments, it could, somewhat ironically, be hard to find a place to be alone. A lovely reminder of how the pandemic that separated us also brought us together.   --Rachel Fremmer, Tablet Magazine