Antelope Valley Press

Jews plan smaller Hanukkah celebratio­ns amid virus

- By ELANA SCHOR and LUIS ANDRES HENAO Associated Press

Jewish Americans from a variety of branches of the faith are celebratin­g Hanukkah with smaller-than-usual gatherings this year, in hopes of keeping the year-end holiday safe but still joyful as Coronaviru­s cases spike across the country.

Many Jewish Americans are already accustomed to more intimate celebratio­ns of a holiday focused more on the home than on the synagogue, including Haredim or ultra-Orthodox communitie­s. So the recent successful Supreme Court challenge to New York restrictio­ns on in-person worship by some Orthodox groups won’t mean much as far as their Hanukkah plans.

But celebratin­g Hanukkah during a pandemic still poses a challenge to some Jewish Americans, for whom the holiday has risen in prominence in part because its social elements and timing line up with non-Jewish holidays such as Christmas.

That has often provided a reason to host get-togethers, said Rabbi Avi Shafran, director of public affairs at Agudath Israel of America, a plaintiff in the court case.

But such large gatherings are “not an essential part of the holiday on any level whatsoever,” he added. “So to Haredim, to us ultra-Orthodox, it’s not something that’s going to cramp our style.”

Hanukkah is not affected by the restrictio­ns on electronic device usage that observant Jews heed during the sabbath and holy days, allowing for virtual celebratio­ns.

So, like many others, Shafran and his wife, who have nine children and 50 grand

children, celebrated with some of them via Zoom this year in a nod to health recommenda­tions — “just as festive ... because the meaning of the holiday is not parties, it’s the memory of ancient times,” Shafran said.

Before he lit the candles of the branched candelabra called a menorah, he recited blessings, including one expressing gratitude to God for life: “This year,” Shafran

said, “we really have to thank God.”

Rabbi Moshe Hauer, executive vice president of the Orthodox Union, also planned to connect with extended family via Zoom, in addition to hosting a small in-person family get-together.

“Family gatherings are going to be limited, with or without the Supreme Court decision,” he said.

The eight-day holiday beginning Thursday at sunset, also known as the Jewish Festival of Lights, honors the rededicati­on of the Second Temple in Jerusalem during the second century B.C. following victory over the Syrians. Celebrated with the nightly lighting of the menorah, it usually falls in December but sometimes in late November.

Hauer linked Hanukkah’s underlying message of the Jewish people’s endurance, “the triumph of the spirit against tremendous odds,” to the present-day Coronaviru­s crisis.

“There’s been a tremendous power of the spirit to continue to practice and continue to worship and celebrate, and find new ways to celebrate,” he said.

Rabbi Daniel Sherman of Temple Sinai, which describes itself as New Orleans’ oldest Reform congregati­on, said it has been more difficult to adapt other holidays on the Jewish calendar to the constraint­s of the pandemic.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man on a bicycle pauses Thursday on the first night of Hanukkah, the annual eight-day Jewish festival of lights, on the sidewalk along Fifth Avenue in Manhattan near what has been described as “the world’s largest Hanukkah menorah.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS A man on a bicycle pauses Thursday on the first night of Hanukkah, the annual eight-day Jewish festival of lights, on the sidewalk along Fifth Avenue in Manhattan near what has been described as “the world’s largest Hanukkah menorah.”

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