The Jewish Chronicle

Who picked up the Etgar schools trophy at Wembley?

- BY SIMON ROCKER

WHILE THE English football team were raising the nation’s hopes at the World Cup in Russia, back at Wembley another trophy was being eagerly contested.

Hundreds of children gathered on Tuesday for the biggest inter-Jewish schools event of the year, the Etgar Challenge.

Now in its sixth year, the Jewish general knowledge quiz for year-fives at primary schools attracted its largest participat­ion — 950 children from 28 Jewish schools from London, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds and Birmingham plus one from Israel.

No one going to Etgar for the first time would be prepared for the aural barrage on arrival at the Great Hall at Wembley — a swell of a thousand animated voices and an amplified keyboardis­t pounding out the William Tell Overture, the Sabre Dance and a string of Jewish favourites.

Many schools have been building up to the event, where teams are tested on their knowledge of informatio­n in the Etgar Handbook, since the start of the school year.

“When they walked up to the stadium, their whole faces lit up and they went ‘Wow!”, said Philippa Isaac, a learning support assistant at Wohl Ilford Primary School.

Rimon in Golders Green, one of the new Jewish free schools, was taking part for the first time. Orah Soller, head of Jewish studies there, said it marked “the culminatio­n of all the general Jewish knowledge they have learned throughout primary. They are excited to see everything they have put in coming to fruition.

“What is so amazing is to see children from the same year from all the schools doing the same thing under the same roof.”

Simon Marks from Stoke Newington did not send a team last year but were back this time. “It’s every Jewish child’s right to come to Etgar. We didn’t want them to miss out,” said head of Jewish studies Yolande Pieters.

The school was one of a number to include non-Jewish pupils as well.

Around the hall, a hundred tables were decked with green and white balloons and loaded with healthy snacks of grapes and carrots as children grappled with two half-hour rounds each consisting of 50 multiple-choice questions. “We made the questions much harder this year,” said Etgar co-founder Jo Rosenfelde­r.

As well as knowledge, creativity was also put to the test in a number of other challenges: to design a poster for an interactiv­e learning centre about the site of the burning bush; to write a book review of the Tanach; and to produce a rap to be sung by the Levites in the Temple.

(The winning Levite rap, from a Sinai team, opened: “They washed hand by hand/ And got no land/ They used to sing, play instrument­s too,/ They bless, they bless, gave no less/ None participan­ts, Golden Calf — no !”.

Milly Ozon, 10, and her class from North Cheshire Jewish Primary, had left Manchester at six in the morning to reach the event in time. “It’s so worth it,” she said.

“Even if you don’t win, it’s still fun,” Milly said.

But there was one school that had come from much further afield — for the second successive year, the bilingual King Solomon near Herzliya. Its executive head Rabbi Jacob “Cobi” Ebrahimoff, former head of the Independen­t Jewish Day School in Hendon — who

We made the questions much harder’

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