On April 20, 2006, President George W. Bush named the month of May as Jewish American Heritage Month. This heritage month recognizes the contributions that Jewish Americans have made to our shared culture. You can help students explore the Jewish and Jewish American experience through the eyes of real and fictional characters and the stories’ authors with these Jewish American Heritage Month books:
Add diverse perspectives to your ELA lessons by incorporating texts that focus on the lives of real and fictional Jewish characters with books like:
Though Anne Frank never lived in America, her autobiographical diary helps shed light on what life was like for Jewish people living in Europe during the Nazi rule, some of whom later became Jewish Americans themselves. You can pair this Newsela ELA book study with the text to build background knowledge on topics like:
This middle-grade novel tells the story of Yanek, a Jewish boy in Poland who is taken prisoner during the Holocaust and tattooed with the marking B-3087. Gratz based Yanek’s character on Jack Gruener, a real-life Holocaust survivor and Jewish American. Pair the Newsela novel study with the book to provide more insight into Yanek and Jack’s experiences:
This historical fiction novel gives an outsider’s perspective of the struggles and challenges Jewish people faced when trying to escape the Nazis’ rule during World War II. Use the novel study on Newsela ELA to give students insights into related topics like:
“Maus: A Survivor’s Tale” tells the true story of Art Spiegelman’s father Vladek, and how he survived the Holocaust and made it to America. Use the Newsela novel study to expand on the content in the graphic novel with your students:
Though this novel discusses the life of an Irish immigrant family in the 1900s, it describes the struggles and dreams of all the immigrant groups in Williamsburg, including German, Italian, and Jewish Americans. Use our Newsela novel study to explore themes related to immigration in the novel:
As one installment of Lauren Tarshis’ “I Survived” series, this novel (and its graphic novel companion!) tells about siblings Max and Zena Rosen and their life in a Jewish ghetto after their father is captured by the Nazis. Use the Newsela novel study to help students explore themes related to growing up Jewish in Nazi-ruled countries:
This memoir gives a voice to the experiences of Holocaust survivors in their own words. Author Elie Wiesel became a Jewish American professor and author after his liberation from the concentration camps. Use the book study to learn more about:
This novel by Jane Yolen shows that sometimes the family rituals and traditions young people find “boring” have greater significance than they realize. Use the novel study to help students explore the sci-fi, historical, and religious themes of the novel, like:
Help students get to know the Jewish American authors behind famous works and some of their favorite books:
Novel and book studies are the perfect companions to books your students read during Jewish American Heritage Month—and at any other time throughout the school year. With Newsela ELA, you can help students build background knowledge on any topic to better understand the stories they read and how they relate to the real world.
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