Chanukah

  • Thread starter Thread starter Friar_David_O.Carm
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
F

Friar_David_O.Carm

Guest
What is Chanukah?

A local rabbi was on the local news the other day saying that Chanukah is the celebration of religious freedom.

That doesn’t sound right to me but I don’t know.

So I am asking, what is the celebration of Chanukah?
 
*Chanukkah, the Jewish festival of rededication, also known as the festival of lights, is an eight day festival beginning on the 25th day of the Jewish month of Kislev. *Chanukkah is probably one of the best known Jewish holidays, not because of any great religious significance, but because of its proximity to Christmas. Many non-Jews (and even many assimilated Jews!) think of this holiday as the Jewish Christmas, adopting many of the Christmas customs, such as elaborate gift-giving and decoration. It is bitterly ironic that this holiday, which has its roots in a revolution against assimilation and the suppression of Jewish religion, has become the most assimilated, secular holiday on our calendar.

The Story


*The story of Chanukkah begins in the reign of Alexander the Great. Alexander conquered Syria, Egypt and Palestine, but allowed the lands under his control to continue observing their own religions and retain a certain degree of autonomy. Under this relatively benevolent rule, many Jews assimilated much of Hellenistic culture, adopting the language, the customs and the dress of the Greeks, in much the same way that Jews in America today blend into the secular American society. *

More than a century later, a successor of Alexander, Antiochus IV was in control of the region. He began to oppress the Jews severely, placing a Hellenistic priest in the Temple, massacring Jews, prohibiting the practice of the Jewish religion, and desecrating the Temple by requiring the sacrifice of pigs (a non-kosher* animal) on the altar. Two groups opposed Antiochus: a basically nationalistic group led by Mattathias the Hasmonean and his son Judah Maccabee, and a religious traditionalist group known as the Chasidim, the forerunners of the Pharisees (no direct connection to the modern movement known as Chasidism). They joined forces in a revolt against both the assimilation of the Hellenistic Jews and oppression by the Selucid Greek government. The revolution succeeded and the Temple was rededicated. *According to tradition as recorded in the Talmud, at the time of the rededication, there was very little oil left that had not been defiled by the Greeks. Oil was needed for the menorah (candelabrum) in the Temple, which was supposed to burn throughout the night every night. There was only enough oil to burn for one day, yet miraculously, it burned for eight days, the time needed to prepare a fresh supply of oil for the menorah. An eight day festival was declared to commemorate this miracle. Note that the holiday commemorates the miracle of the oil, not the military victory: Jews do not glorify war. SOURCE
 
Hi all!

Yes, Chanukah starts this coming Sunday evening! 🙂

The festival commemorates both the 164 [BCE rededication of the Second Temple in Jerusalem after its desecration by the ruling Seleucid (Syrian Greek) Kingdom, under Antiochus IV – and the re-establishment of our religious freedom after a period of harsh repression. The success of the popular revolt led by Judah Maccabee and his brothers has, ever since, symbolized our fight for, and achievement of, our liberty and freedom as a nation against overwhelming odds. This link that Karin gave http://www.jewfaq.org/holiday7.htm”]http://www.jewfaq.org/holiday7.htm is a very good introduction to the holyday (it has audiolinks).

I would like to quote 4 excerpts from I Maccabees. They sum up what Chanukah is and what it means.

I Maccabees 2:19-22 -
Then Matityahu [Matathias] answered and spoke with a loud voice, “Though all the nations that are under the king’s dominion obey him, and fall away every one from the religion of their fathers, and give consent to his commandments, yet will I and my sons and my brethren walk in the covenant of our fathers. God forbid that we should forsake the Torah and the ordinances. We will not hearken to the king’s words, to go from our religion, either on the right hand, or the left.”
1 Maccabees 2:51-64 -
“Remember what acts our fathers did in their time; so shall you receive great honour and an everlasting name. Was not Abraham found faithful in temptation, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness? Joseph in the time of his distress kept the commandment and was made lord of Egypt. Pinchas [Phineas] our father in being zealous and fervent obtained the covenant of an everlasting priesthood. Joshua for fulfilling the word was made a judge in Israel. Caleb for bearing witness before the congregation received the heritage of the land. David for being merciful possessed the throne of an everlasting kingdom. Elijah for being zealous and fervent for the Torah was taken up into heaven. Hananiah, Azariah and Mishael, by believing were saved out of the flame. Daniel for his innocency was delivered from the mouth of lions. And thus consider you throughout all ages, that none that put their trust in Him shall be overcome. Fear not then the words of a sinful man: for his glory shall be dung and worms. Today he shall be lifted up and tomorrow he shall not be found, because he is returned into his dust, and his thought is come to nothing. Wherefore, you my sons, be valiant and show yourselves men on behalf of the Torah; for by it shall you obtain glory.”
I Maccabees 3:18-22 -
Unto whom Judah answered, It is no hard matter for many to be shut up in the hands of a few; and with the God of Heaven it is all one, to deliver with a great multitude, or a small company. For the victory of battle stands not in the multitude of an host; but strength comes from Heaven. They come against us in much pride and iniquity to destroy us, and our wives and children, and to spoil us, but we fight for our lives and our Torah. The Lord Himself will overthrow them before our face, and as for you, do not be afraid of them.
I Maccabees 15:33-34 -
We have neither taken other men’s land, nor do we hold that which pertains to others, but the inheritance of our fathers, which was in the possession of our enemies, wrongfully, for a certain time. But we, having opportunity, hold the inheritance of our fathers.
(cont.)
 
(cont.)

Chanukah is a far more complex holyday than meets the eye. On the one hand, it was a kulturkampf between Judaism & Hellenism. As Rabbi Shlomo Riskin wrote in a Jerusalem Post column last year:
Whereas Hebraism claims that God formed the human being in His image, and that we “must walk in God’s ways” of compassion, loving-kindness, and truth, Hellenism, with its pantheon on Mount Olympus, pictured the gods in the image of human beings and declared that “man is the measure of all things” (Heraclitus).

The sculptor Praxitatles saw the human image as ultimate perfection, and the chorus of Sophocles’s play Antigone sings that “although many are the wonders of the universe, nothing is as wondrous as the human being!”

God is at the center of the Hebraic universe, while man is at the center of the Greek cosmos.
As the late Prof. Michael Grant noted in his book From Alexander to Cleopatra: A History of the Hellenistic World:
Judea went further in violently rejecting all that Hellenism had to offer. The Jews proved to be unassimilable.
Why did we react so violently? After all, Antiochus IV’s egoistic insanity aside, the Hellenistic world was offering us an open hand. As Hamlet says, “Ay, there’s the rub.” Our Sages contrast Chanukah with Purim (jewfaq.org/holiday9.htm). In the Book of Esther (the events of which Purim celebrates), the enemy Haman approaches with a closed fist and seeks to destroy us by using that closed fist to slaughter us. But Haman was stupid for seeking to destroy us with a closed fist (because, as Esther shows, we responded with a closed fist of our own). The Hellenists were far cleverer, they sought to destroy us not by smashing us with a closed fist, but by extending to us an open hand and saying Come, join us. Accept our culture, merge with us, accept syncretism, intermarry, assimilate with us, be us. This is far more clever & insidious. And as I Maccabees 1:11-15 tells us
In those days certain renegades came out from Israel and misled many, saying, “Let us go and make a covenant with the Gentiles around us, for since we separated from them many disasters have come upon us.” This proposal pleased them, and some of the people eagerly went to the king, who authorized them to observe the ordinances of the Gentiles. So they built a gymnasium in Jerusalem, according to Gentile custom, and removed the marks of circumcision, and abandoned the holy covenant. They joined with the Gentiles and sold themselves to do evil.
,

many Jews were so seduced. Thus, on the other hand (see above), aside from being a war for religious & national liberation, Chanukah was a struggle between Jews who wanted to be Jews and Jews who wanted to be Greeks.

One week after Chanukah, on January 10th, we mark the first-light-to-nightfall fast of the 10th of (the Hebrew month of) Tevet (the “fast of the fourth month” referred to in Zechariah 8:18); see aish.com/literacy/mitzvahs/The_Tenth_of_Tevet.asp.

One of the things that the Fast of the 10th of Tevet commemorates is the deaths of Ezra & Nehemiah, who were our spiritual leaders during the critical period following our return from the Babylonian Exile, in which we struggled to rebuild both the Temple & ourselves as a nation/people. If you look at the books of Ezra & Nehemiah, you’ll see that intermarriage/assimilation was a big, big problem, just like it was a few centuries later during the Chanukah period (and like it is today; see? what goes around comes around!). But Ezra & Nehemiah managed to stop this and bring about a great change & return to God, in us by words, by their oratory alone. But, several centuries later, as I Maccabees 2:44-48 tells us:

(cont.)
 
(cont.)
They organized an army, and struck down sinners in their anger and lawless men in their wrath; the survivors fled to the Gentiles for safety. And Mattathias and his friends went about and tore down the altars; they forcibly circumcised all the uncircumcised boys that they found within the borders of Israel. They hunted down the arrogant men, and the work prospered in their hands. They rescued the Torah out of the hands of the Gentiles and kings, and they never let the sinner gain the upper hand.
, the Hasmoneans resorted/had to resort/ to force. Something not good had happened to us in the intervening centuries. Whereas oratory alone had once sufficed, now force had to be used. Either the Hasmoneans didn’t try to use words or we were so far enamored of Hellenism and so hell-bent on jettisoning our Jewish heritage and the worship of the One God that is at its heart (see my citation of I Maccabees 1:11-15 in my previous post) that their words would have had no effect, or some combination of both, but something had happened. Instead of Jew speaking to Jew, Jew fought Jew, and even if that is sometimes necessary, it is never good or desirable. It’s certainly nothing to trumpet.

This is why Chanukah (apart from a rather dry & technical discussion of when to light the candles, with what, by whom, etc.) gets very little press in the Talmud and this is also why our expressions of joy on Hanukkah are rather muted (we light the candles & say festive prayers, but there is no precept to feast & drink like there is on Purim, see my previous post above); our Sages did not want to overly dwell on this shameful chapter in our history when Jews’ shed each other’s blood (it’s certainly nothing to feast about).

Without violating my self-imposed cyber-rule of never discussing the Israeli-Arab conflict online, I’ll simply say that as Hanukkah approaches, I find myself thinking about this alot especially seeing that things here in Israel are so polarized and public debate is so charged about so many things. Civility & courtesy seem to be doing not so good right now and the still, small voices are getting shouted down.

We will do this Festival of Lights a disservice if we don’t learn from both its positive & negative aspects. Just as a candle banishes the physical darkness, so too must we use the 8 (count 'em!) candles of Chanukah to banish the spiritual darkness, because where the divine light shines, the darkness cannot come.

In keeping with the Chanukah tradition of eating foods fried in oil, potato pancakes (latkes in Yiddish; levivot in Hebrew; here’s a recipe: jewfaq.org/holiday7.htm#Latkes) & donuts are big. So, last year, we were having latkes for dinner one night during Chanukah. DW was frying them in the kitchen. I was sitting with Da Boyz at the table in the lounge to make sure that the latkes were, in fact, being eaten (as opposed to being used as projectile weapons). And as I sat with Da Boyz, I told them about Chanukah and as is my wont, I waxed…creative. I told them about Matityahu (Mattathias) and his five exceptional boys (see I Maccabees 2; hope.edu/bandstra/BIBLE/1MA/1MA2.HTM), the most well-known of whom was Judah Maccabee. I told Da Boyz of the untimely end of Judah’s brother Elazar (I Maccabees 6:32-46):

(cont.)
 
(cont.)
Then Judah marched away from the citadel and encamped at Beth-zechariah, opposite the camp of the king. Early in the morning the king set out and took his army by a forced march along the road to Beth-zechariah, and his troops made ready for battle and sounded their trumpets. They offered the elephants the juice of grapes and mulberries, to arouse them for battle. They distributed the animals among the phalanxes; with each elephant they stationed a thousand men armed with coats of mail, and with brass helmets on their heads; and five hundred picked horsemen were assigned to each beast. These took their position beforehand wherever the animal was; wherever it went, they went with it, and they never left it. On the elephantsk were wooden towers, strong and covered; they were fastened on each animal by special harness, and on each were fourl armed men who fought from there, and also its Indian driver. The rest of the cavalry were stationed on either side, on the two flanks of the army, to harass the enemy while being themselves protected by the phalanxes. When the sun shone on the shields of gold and brass, the hills were ablaze with them and gleamed like flaming torches. Now a part of the king’s army was spread out on the high hills, and some troops were on the plain, and they advanced steadily and in good order. All who heard the noise made by their multitude, by the marching of the multitude and the clanking of their arms, trembled, for the army was very large and strong. But Judah and his army advanced to the battle, and six hundred of the king’s army fell. Now Eleazar, called Avaran, saw that one of the animals was equipped with royal armor. It was taller than all the others, and he supposed that the king was on it. So he gave his life to save his people and to win for himself an everlasting name. He courageously ran into the midst of the phalanx to reach it; he killed men right and left, and they parted before him on both sides. He got under the elephant, stabbed it from beneath, and killed it; but it fell to the ground upon him and he died.
And so, I told Da Boyz, this is why we eat potato pancakes which are flat:rolleyes:…prompting DW to aim a dishtowel at my person.

Be well!

ssv 👋
 
A ton of great information, all of which is found on the 'net though a search.

I am just looking for a short quick answer. I can not really go though all the above information in a short conversation with people.

So again, a local rabbi was on the local news the other day saying that Chanukah is the celebration of religious freedom.

So what does Chanukah celebrate?
 
40.png
ByzCath:
A ton of great information, all of which is found on the 'net though a search.

I am just looking for a short quick answer. I can not really go though all the above information in a short conversation with people.

So again, a local rabbi was on the local news the other day saying that Chanukah is the celebration of religious freedom.

So what does Chanukah celebrate?
Once again if you take the 5 minutes to read the posts that have been provided for you regarding what the holiday celebrates you would know 🙂
So from my post to you…here it is again…
  • Chanukkah, the Jewish festival of rededication, also known as the festival of lights, is an eight day festival beginning on the 25th day of the Jewish month of [Kislev (http://www.jewfaq.org/defs/kislev.htm).
  • It is bitterly ironic that this holiday, which has its roots in a revolution against assimilation and the suppression of Jewish religion,
  • *Note that the holiday commemorates the miracle of the oil, not the military victory: Jews do not glorify war. *
 
Religious freedom is a good short answer.

Basically the Seleucid Greeks tried to ban the practice of Judaism and enforce paganism around 200 BCE. They desecrated the Temple in Jerusalem and there was a revolt. When the revolt was over the Temple was reconsecrated and there was a miracle involving the oil for Eternal Light (Ner Tamid) burning for eight days while a fresh batch of consecrated oil was made. That miracle is the specific reason for the holiday.

Incidentally Chanukah is not the traditional gift giving holiday in Judaism. Purim in the springtime is. Modern Judaism picked up giving gifts at Chanukah as a result of exposure to the Christian practice at Christmas.

–arthur
 
Why is the story of Hanukkah in the Catholic bible and not in the Hebrew scriptures?
 
Hanukah is a festival commemorating an event that happened 150 years before
Christ became man.
The connection to Christianity is in short, Israel was saved from being
Hellenized and thus Judaism was saved for the future generations. Without
it, Christ may not have come. He had to come to Israel, the little town in
Judah called Bet Lekhem (Bethlehem, House of Bread). So even though it’s not one of the most famous and
important holy days in Judaism, it is very significant.
This year it starts with Christmas and lasts 8 days. The lighting of each
candle is done the eve before, so if the 1st day of Hanukah is on the 25th,
the 1st candle is lit the night before. It is lit by the servant candle. A
Hanukah lamp is called Hanukiyah and consists of the 8 sticks plus 1 for the
shamash. The candles are considered sacred and are not to be lit by each
other but by the “servant” candle (See John 8:12) . Nor are they to be left alone.
They are commemorating the miracle of the eternal light of The Temple, which
was cut off by the pagans when they defiled the building installing a pagan
image to be worshipped. I am sure you are familiar with Maccabbees I and II
where the details are. After the revolt, when the rededication of the temple
was to have been celebrated they had enough oil for 24 hours. To get more
oil a 4 day trip north and a 4 day trip south would be needed. The miracle
was that the small supply lasted till the oil was replenished 8 days later.

Jesus (Yeshua) celebrated Hanukah, The Feast of Dedication, as recorded in John 10. This is the only place in the all of scripture that mentions this Feast and its in the New Testament…

Traditionally Jews around the world celebrated each evening with songs of
praise to God and with snacking on food fried in oil such as potato latkes
(crisp potato pancakes) and doughnuts. The kids play with a dreidle(top) on
which Hebrew letters on each of the 4 sides remind us of the miracle. If the
dreidle falls with the Nun letter up you win, it represents the NES
(miracle) the other letters are G - H - S
(Nes gadol hayah sham: great miracle happened there).

Praising The Lord in songs and prayers is what Christianity inherited from
Judaism.
Also the early martyrs of The Church include the 7 children of Hannah who
were tortured to death rather than worship the pagan God represented by the
king. Trusting in their salvation in the after life.

A true story from the Holocaust; in Poland in honor of Christmas, the
starving prisoners were given a teaspoon of butter each for their stale
bread (which was all they were given to eat). The Jews in one of the
building in the camp saved the butter to make Hanukah lights out of it.
Hope all this helps. When I first saw the advent wreath in Mexico at a home
of friends I thought it may have started with the Hanukah celebrations…who
knows. All ancient cultures have holidays involving lights during the
darkest time of year.

Shalom,
Ken
 
Hi all!
40.png
threadkiller:
That’s fine, but why do you celebrate Hanukkah if it’s not in your scripture, like say, the Passover? :confused:
Because it appears in rabbinical writings such as the Mishnah & Talmud & because our Sages have the authority to institute such a holyday.

In Leviticus 23, God instructs Moses regarding the orders of offerings for each of the Torah-prescribed holydays, starting with the Sabbath & ending with Sukkot/Tabernacles. Immediately after, "Moses declared unto the children of Israel the appointed seasons of the ,"Lord (23:44) we read that God instructs Moses regarding the pure olive oil with which to light the menorah (or “candelabra”). In Numbers 7 the princes of the 12 tribes bring their offerings to/for the dedication of the Tabernacle (the forerunner/predecessor of the Temple). The tribe of Levi, including both regular Levites & Aaronic priests, is not included. Immediately afterwards (beginning in Numbers 8:1), God commands Aaron regarding the lighting of the menorah, or candelabra. We believe that these are prophetic hints/references to Chanukah (which was instituted by Aaron’s descendants the Hasmoneans and the chief symbol of which is the menorah/candelabra.)

Chanukah begins on the 25th of the Hebrew month of Kislev.

The 25th word in the Bible (in Hebrew) is “light.”

Our 25th stop/waystation while we were trudging around the wildreness was Hashmonah (Numbers 33:29-30), a prophetic hint/reference to the Hashmonaim (Hebrew for “Hasmoneans”).

This coming Saturday (Dec. 31) will be triply-special Jewish-wise: It’s the Sabbath (jewfaq.org/shabbat.htm), it’s Chanukah (jewfaq.org/holiday7.htm) and its the Fitst Day of the New (Lunar) Month (jewfaq.org/chodesh.htm) all together. We’ll read from three Torah scrolls, say assorted special prayers (ou.org/chagim/hallel.htm & ou.org/chagim/alhanisim.htm), and read the section from the prophets of Zechariah 2:14-4:7.

Be well!

ssv 👋
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top