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Make a Shofar to Celebrate the Jewish New Year Rosh Hashanah by by Cindy Hopper for Alphamom.com

Make a Shofar to Celebrate the Jewish New Year

By Cindy Hopper

Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, begins this year at sundown on Sunday, September 29th and lasts through Tuesday, October 1st at sundown. During Rosh Hashanah a Shofar, traditionally made from a hollowed-out rams horn, is blown to awake and inspire.  The Shofar is such an important part of this holiday that sometimes Rosh Hashanah is called Yom Teruah, which means “day of the Shofar blast” in Hebrew.

With a few supplies, you can make your own Shofar horn. Gather 3 toilet paper rolls per horn, a party horn, masking tape, glue, paintbrush, scissors, and white and brown paint.

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Cut all they way across one roll lengthwise.

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Remove fringe or cardboard from the party horn so you are only left with the plastic noise maker.  Wrap the cut cardboard tube around the plastic noisemaker.

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Fasten cardboard to plastic noisemaker securely with masking tape.

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With the other two rolls fold the edge to make a pleat in the bottom side. You are making the bottom small enough to fit inside another roll. This will give the Shofar a nice curve.

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Place the tubes inside each other.

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Paper mache the toilet paper rolls with long strips of paper and a mixture of equal parts water and glue (use can also use equal parts flour and water). If you want to forgo the mess, simply wrap the toilet paper rolls with masking tape.

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Allow the paper mache to dry completely. Paint with white paint. While white paint is still wet, sponge on some bits of brown and mix and smudge lightly to give the horn “realistic” color and dimension.

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Finished! Now you can listen to your Tokea (which literally means ‘blaster’ and is the name for person who blows the horn), celebrate.

Make a Shofar Horn to Celebrate the Jewish New Year Rosh Hashanah by by Cindy Hopper for Alphamom.com

You can learn more about Rosh Hashanah and the Shofar at Torah Tots.

More Rosh Hashanah crafts from Alpha Mom here:

1. Sweet Little DIY Honey Bee Cards for Rosh Hashanah!
2. DIY Happy Rosh Hashanah Cards for Kids

About the Author

Cindy Hopper

Cindy Hopper was fortunate to be raised in a family who appreciated the arts. This background led to a Bachelor’s Degree in Art Education. With a keen eye for design and color, Cindy has cont...

Cindy Hopper was fortunate to be raised in a family who appreciated the arts. This background led to a Bachelor’s Degree in Art Education. With a keen eye for design and color, Cindy has continued her love of art and is now passing her creative skills on to her three children. Cindy’s family and friends are the beneficiaries of her passion for fun and meaningful creative projects.

Cindy’s personal blog, Skip to My Lou, has taken her love of a project to new levels. Postings keep the family busy -– from testing new recipes for holiday treats to designing and building floats for a neighborhood parade to making fabric rolls to hold crayons to creating themed parties. Cindy seems to have an unending supply of ideas for gifts, parties and rainy days.

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