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Channukah Holiday Thread... I think we need something for the Jewish percentage of PC

Blaine

Mon chere...
  • 828
    Posts
    21
    Years
    I'm half Jewish and I saw all the Christmas threads and I was like, I celebrate Christmas, yeah, but what about Channukah? So this is for all the Jews at PC. How was your Channukah? Are you enjoying it? I'm pretty sure it ends tomorrow, Friday, night. How do you distibute gifts during Channukah, if you give gifts at all. What about the menorah? Do you like a decorative one or a more traditional, old, and heirloom type of menorah?

    I'll come up with more topics later...
     
    I'm glad you wanna know.

    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.

    (This is not my work but Judaism 101. I don't own it or anything so know it's all hers.)

    More to come...
     
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