Tut Banana Hebrew

Tut Banana Hebrew

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My name is Hadar, and I am passionate about bringing creativity to life through crafts and puppet theater while teaching Hebrew.

Together we make Hebrew more fun! Shalom!​
I’m Hadar, a puppeteer and educator from Israel, now living in Sweden. Education has always been my world. I earned my teaching certificate in Israel and spent years working with children of all ages in classrooms, after-school programs, and creative workshops. Whether teaching Hebrew or guiding theater-inspired activities, I’ve always believed that learn

25/05/2026

Wait for their favorite part 😂

24/05/2026

I read every single comment. Tell me honestly, what is really getting in the way?

Photos from Tut Banana Hebrew's post 21/05/2026

Shavuot is the holiday of the Torah!
But here comes the modern twist, the tradition of this day is wearing white and eating dairy!
Here are some words your kids can learn and use this holiday:

📖 תורה (Torah) – Torah / Bible
🧀 גבינה (gevina) – cheese
🥛 חלב (chalav) – milk
📜 חג (chag) – holiday
What Hebrew words do you know that are related to Shavuot? ✨🌸

20/05/2026

It’s something a mom once told me, and I hear this all the time.

And honestly? It makes sense. Learning a new language as an adult feels heavy, grammar, rules, pronunciation, overthinking every word…

That’s exactly why we start at age 4!

At that age, it’s not about grammar. It’s not about memorizing rules.

It’s about hearing the language, playing with it, using it in real life!

Simple words. Simple questions. Real conversations.

No pressure, just building confidence from the start. At an age when learning is only natural.

Because when Hebrew feels natural early on, everything else becomes easier later.

Would you want your kids to start young, or do you think it’s better to wait?

If you are ready to start now, comment FREE to join the waitlist for Free online Hebrew lessons 🍓🍌

17/05/2026

Want to start teaching Hebrew but don’t know where to begin?

These simple words open the door:
כן (yes)
לא (no)
אוהב (love/like – masculine) / אוהבת (love/like – feminine)
אתה (you – masculine) / את (you – feminine)

I love starting with these, because you can quickly turn them into real sentences:

אתה אוהב שוקולד? (Do you like chocolate? – to a boy)
את אוהבת אננס? (Do you like pineapple? – to a girl)

At the beginning, kids can just answer with yes or no, no pressure, just getting familiar with the sounds and the structure, while connecting it to things they actually like or don’t like.

Later, these same sentence patterns can be used with any new words they learn: animals, colors, food…

This way, Hebrew becomes practical and conversational.
Not just random vocabulary, but something connected to everyday life, to their likes and dislikes.

What words would you add to this list?

16/05/2026

Most parents think they need perfect Hebrew before teaching their child.
I disagree.
Your child needs exposure, repetition, and confidence from you, not perfection.
Start with what you know.
Use it in a fun playful setting, and make it something they are naturally curious about 🙃

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