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Elf On The Shelf Meets Jewish Counterpart: Mensch On A Bench

*courtesy Neal Hoffman
*courtesy Neal Hoffman
*courtesy Neal Hoffman

Mensch on a Bench visits NPR.
Amy Ta
Mensch on a Bench visits NPR.

Jake Hoffman inspired his father to create Mensch on a Bench.
*courtesy Neal Hoffman
Jake Hoffman inspired his father to create Mensch on a Bench.

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Elf On The Shelf Meets Jewish Counterpart: Mensch On A Bench

During a visit to a store last holiday season, Jewish dad Neal Hoffman felt bad telling his son Jake that he couldn't have an Elf on the Shelf. The widely popular Christmas toy is intended to watch children's behavior for Santa. Hoffman kept thinking, maybe there could be something similar, but rooted in Jewish tradition.

Hoffman, a former Hasbro employee, decided Mensch on a Bench was the answer. "A mensch means a really good person. It's a person that you strive to be," he says.

He raised more than $20,000 using the crowd-funding website Kickstarter, last spring. Since then, the interest has been tremendous. After the product arrived "we sold out in two weeks," Hoffman tells Michel Martin, host of NPR's Tell Me More.

Hoffman decided early on that Mensch on a Bench wasn't just toy. An accompanying book is inspired by the story of Hannukah. In it, a fictional character called Moshe tells Judah and the Maccabees he will watch over the oil while they sleep in the Temple. "They say, oh Moshe, thank you so much. You're such a mensch sitting on that bench, watching over the oil!"

He also created eight rules for having a mensch. "They range from singing and playing dreidel and doing latkes with your family, to having the mensch watch over your menorah. ... Also, one night of Hannukah, you're not going to get presents. You're going to go out ... buy presents for somebody in need, and you're going to give them to somebody else."

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