The Jewish Chronicle

Eight tales of Chanucah

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1

In 166 BCE, the guerrilla rebel Maccabees took back the Second Temple from Antiochus’s Seleucid Empire. The Hellenisti­c empire had taken over the Jewish temple and desecrated it, sacrificin­g pigs to Greek gods and contaminat­ing the oil used to light the menorah. When the Maccabees reconsecra­ted the temple, their one-day supply of lamp oil lasted for eight days, allowing time to repurify it.

2

Many of the Maccabees’ main fights during their three-year revolt were with other Jews who had converted to Hellenisti­c worship.

3

Olive oil was used to anoint everything sacred. Both King David and King Solomon were anointed with olive oil.

4

Oil’s importance in this festival led to celebratin­g with food cookied in oil such as latkes, doughnuts and kugel.

5

Dreidels were a subversive toy, designed when Jews were forbidden by their conquerors to study the Torah. The Hebrew characters stand for “A great miracle happened here”.

6

The holiday starts on 25 Kislev, which can range between late November and late December.

7

The original lamp had seven prongs, as specified by God to Moses in Exodus 25. One such is carved into the Arch of Titus in Rome.

8

You need a total of 44 candles to celebrate the eight days of Chanukah.

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PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES

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