The Shabbos candle lighting campaign has yielded far-reaching results. One example from the
many reports we received: A little girl, five or six years old, attended a non-religious school in
Israel. One day, an older girl spoke to her class about the Mitzvah of Shabbos candles. She
taught them the blessings, and gave them candles and candlesticks to take home.
The Shabbos candle lighting campaign has yielded far-reaching results. One example from the
many reports we received: A little girl, five or six years old, attended a non-religious school in
Israel. One day, an older girl spoke to her class about the Mitzvah of Shabbos candles. She
taught them the blessings, and gave them candles and candlesticks to take home.
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The Shabbos candle lighting campaign has yielded far-reaching results. One example from the
many reports we received: A little girl, five or six years old, attended a non-religious school in
Israel. One day, an older girl spoke to her class about the Mitzvah of Shabbos candles. She
taught them the blessings, and gave them candles and candlesticks to take home.
The young girl was delighted! At first her family discouraged her. But slowly the Mitzvah
began to penetrate their hearts as well. First they stopped watching television as long as the
candles were lit. Then they stopped answering the phone. Then the mother began to light too
and stopped cooking on Shabbos…
Little by little, the whole family was transformed. And what sparked it all? One small Shabbos
candle. True, a younger girl only lights for “educational” reasons, but that candle educated not
only her, but her parents and siblings as well. Today the entire family is Torah-observant due
to her one light.