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Home > All About Hanukkah
The Story of Hanukkah
Around 200 BC Jews lived as an autonomous people in the land of
Israel, also referred to as Judea, which at that time was controlled
by the Seleucid king of Syria. The Jewish people paid taxes to Syria
and accepted its legal authority, and by and large were free to follow
their own faith, maintain their own jobs, and engage in trade.
By 175 BC Antiochus IV Epiphanes ascended to the Seleucid throne. At
first little changed, but under his reign Jews were gradually forced
to violate the precepts of their faith. Jews rebelled at having to do
this. Under the reign of Antiochus IV, the Temple in Jerusalem was
looted, Jews were massacred, and Judaism was effectively outlawed.
In 167 BC Antiochus ordered an altar to Zeus erected in the Temple.
Mattathias, a Jewish priest, and his five sons John, Simon, Eleazar,
Jonathan, and Judah led a rebellion against Antiochus. Judah became
known as Judah Maccabee ("Judah the Hammer"). By 166 BC Mattathias had
died, and Judah took his place as leader. By 165 BC the Jewish revolt
against the Seleucid monarchy was successful. The Temple was liberated
and rededicated. The festival of Hanukkah was instituted by Judah
Maccabee and his brothers to celebrate this event.[2] After having
recovered Jerusalem and the Temple, Judah ordered the Temple to be
cleansed, a new altar to be built in place of the polluted one and new
holy vessels to be made. According to the Talmud, oil was needed for
the menorah in the Temple, which was supposed to burn throughout the
night every night. But 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.
Hanukkah lamp unearthed near Jerusalem, c. 1900.The version of the
story in 1 Maccabees, on the other hand, states that an eight day
celebration of songs and sacrifices was proclaimed upon rededication
of the altar, and makes no mention the miracle of the oil.[3] A number
of historians believe that the reason for the eight-day celebration
was that the first Hanukkah was in effect a belated celebration of the
festival of Sukkot, the Feast of Tabernacles.[4] During the war the
Jews were not able to celebrate Sukkot properly. The theory is based
on the belief that Sukkot also lasts for eight days, and was a holiday
in which the lighting of lamps played a prominent part during the
Second Temple period (Suk.v. 2-4). However, Sukkot is in fact a
seven-day holiday, the eighth day being a separate festival known as
Shemini Atzeret ("the Eighth Day of the Assembly"; see Lev. 23:33-36,
Num. 29:12; Deut. 16:13-15). The historian Josephus[5] mentions the
eight-day festival and its customs, but does not tell us the origin of
the eight day lighting custom. Given that his audience was Hellenized
Romans, perhaps his silence on the origin of the eight-day custom is
due to its miraculous nature. In any event, he does report that lights
were kindled in the household and the popular name of the festival
was, therefore the "Festival of Lights" ("And from that time to this
we celebrate this festival, and call it Lights").
It has been noted that Jewish festivals are connected to the
harvesting of the Biblical seven fruits which Israel was famed for.
Pesach is a celebration of the barley harvest, Shavuot of the wheat,
Sukkot of the figs, dates, pomegranates and grapes, and Hanukkah of
the olives. The olive harvest is in November and olive oil would be
ready in time for Hanukkah in December.
It has also been noted that the number eight has special significance
in Jewish theology, as representing transcendence and the Jewish
People's special role in human history. Seven is the number of days of
creation, that is, of completion of the material cosmos. Eight, being
one step beyond seven, represents the Infinite (as an eight turned on
its side). Hence, the Eighth Day of the Assembly festival, mentioned
above, is according to Jewish Law a festival for Jews only (unlike
Sukkoth, when all peoples were welcome in Jerusalem). Similarly, the
rite of circumcision, which brings a Jewish male into God's Covenant,
is performed on the eighth day. Hence, Hanukkah's eight days (in
celebration of monotheistic morality's victory over Hellenistic
humanism) have great symbolic importance for practicing Jews.
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