Yom HaAtzmaut יוֹם הָעַצְמָאוּת
3 weeks earlier on the calendar — the natural pairing.
See the Yom HaAtzmaut pack →Jerusalem is our heart-home. 17 slides covering the eight gates of the Old City, the Kotel, the 19-year separation, and the joy of reunification — told gently for early elementary learners (K–3, ages 5–9). Each gate gets its own slide with photo, Hebrew name, and a fun fact.
New: Free 30-minute lesson plan — teach Yom Yerushalayim tonight, then grab the pack for the full version.

Slides 7–14 take you through every gate of the Old City: Jaffa, Zion, Dung, Golden, Lions', Herod's, Damascus, and New. Each one with a real photo, the Hebrew name, what it's used for, and a "did you know?" fact. By the end your child can name them all.
The Old City of Jerusalem has eight gates, each one a doorway with its own purpose and personality. Slides 7–14 introduce them one at a time, with a clean photograph, the Hebrew name, what it leads to, and the kind of fun fact a young learner remembers all year.
The 19 years of separation from the Kotel are framed as "we couldn't visit" — a story of longing, not battle. The 1967 reunification is shown as joy.
Each gate gets its own beautifully laid-out slide. Real photographs (CC-BY-SA from Wikimedia Commons). Hebrew names with nikud. Kid-friendly facts.
The Golden Gate slide explains gently why this gate is sealed — and why our tradition says it will open again. A beautiful moment in the lesson.
All eight: Jaffa Gate, Zion Gate, Dung Gate, Golden Gate, Lions' Gate, Herod's Gate, Damascus Gate, and New Gate. Each gets its own slide with a photo, the Hebrew name with nikud, what it's used for, and a fun fact.
Gently. We frame 1967 as the joy of reunification after 19 years of separation from the Kotel — never as battles. The arc is exile → longing → return, told for a 5-year-old.
Yes. Multiple slides reference the Kotel. Slide 4 — "Why couldn't we visit the Kotel?" — gently explains the 19 years of separation. The celebration slides cover the joy of reunification in 1967, and the Dung Gate slide notes it's the closest gate to the Kotel.
Yes — the Beit HaMikdash is part of the Jerusalem story from the very first slides. The Hebrew word בֵּית הַמִּקְדָּשׁ appears throughout, transliterated for parents who don't read Hebrew.
The 28th of Iyar — usually mid-to-late May on the secular calendar. About 3 weeks after Yom HaAtzmaut. Our two May packs pair beautifully.
Yes — the pack is written for families who don't live in Israel. The lesson frames Jerusalem as "our heart-home" wherever you are. Many homeschool families teach this with a globe in front of them.
3 weeks earlier on the calendar — the natural pairing.
See the Yom HaAtzmaut pack →
The Beit HaMikdash in Jerusalem is the heart of the Chanukah story too.
See the Chanukah pack →Single ZIP download. Yours forever, free updates included. Single-family license.