The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rabbis shine light on Jewish faith with quirky menorahs

- By Jonathan M. Pitts

Rabbi Velvel Belinsky says he’s always looking for fresh ways to promote the Jewish faith and its teachings.

He has hired mentalists and handwritin­g experts for parties at Ariel Jewish Center, a Russian Jewish synagogue and community center he runs in Pikesville, Maryland. He’s emceed a “Jewish Family Feud” game.

Then there was a giant Hanukkah menorah made of yellow balloons. Belinsky and a friend fashioned an 8-foot version of the traditiona­l holiday candelabru­m from party decoration­s last year and, as funny as it looked, it became the main attraction of the biggest holiday party the center has ever thrown.

The rabbi used the occasion to retell the history of Hanukkah, the eight-day Jewish holiday that began at sundown Dec. 22.

“Entertainm­ent can be a big part of education,” he says.

When Belinsky’s center reprises the balloon menorah this year, it won’t be the only novelty version of the symbolic lampstand on display in the Baltimore area.

In Baltimore’s McKeldin Square stands a 30-foot, metal menorah that stands just 2 feet shy of being the world’s tallest.

Outside the Town House in Sykesville, Maryland, a group of children affiliated with Chabad of Carroll County lighted the first lamp on a 6-foot-tall menorah they made out of thousands of Lego pieces at a community party.

Members of Chabad of Hunt Valley planned to use an 8-foot menorah carved from blocks of ice, while elementary school students at Harford Chabad in Bel Air were creating a chocolate menorah as part of a holiday bash.

Hanukkah, also known as the Festival of Lights, commemorat­es a seminal event in Jewish history. Nearly 2,200 years ago, a ruling body in Jerusalem dominated by the Syrian Greeks banned Judaism and captured the Jewish people’s most sacred site, the Second Temple. A cadre of rebels, the Maccabees, eventually ousted their oppressors and reclaimed and rededicate­d the temple. When they went to light ceremonial lamps, it is said, they found just one day’s worth of oil, but the lights blazed for eight days and nights.

Jews celebrate this miracle each winter by lighting menorahs, candelabra built to hold nine candles — eight to mark the eight days and nights, and one to light them.

Originally set in the windows of homes, menorahs have generally been modest in size and made of metal or wood.

But in the early 1970s, the Orthodox Jewish movement known as Chabad-Lubavitch began pushing the menorah envelope. Its famed rebbe, Menachem Schneerson, promoted the creation of “public menorahs” — oversized versions that could be lit as reminders of the Hanukkah miracle and as a declaratio­n of religious freedom.

The first was built in front of Independen­ce Hall in Philadelph­ia in 1974, the second a year later in San Francisco. Chabad communitie­s have created some 15,000 more around the world since then, including at the Eiffel Tower, the Kremlin and the Great Wall of China.

The Baltimore-area rabbis helping create novelty menorahs are members of Chabad, too. While their handiwork is part of the growing trend, each of their menorahs is part of its own story.

When Rabbi Sholly Cohen and his wife, Feigie, moved to Sykesville to start Chabad of Carroll County in 2012, they found a Jewish population of about 3,000, but no full-time rabbi and little community coherence. The center runs Jewish activities such as charity drives and children’s classes, and the community of faith is growing.

Its Lego menorah stands at the Sykesville Town House beside a metal one “for grown-ups,” Cohen says, symbols of the community’s present and future vitality.

Like Hanukkah itself, Rabbi Kushi Schuster of the Harford group says, the act will cast light into darkness.

“This is all about inspiratio­n, about giving people strength and making them part of a larger community,” he says. “That’s what I find people respond to.”

 ?? KENNETH K. LAM / BALTIMORE SUN / TNS ?? More than 60 children from the Chabad Jewish Center of Carroll County, Maryland, built a 6-foot tall menorah using hundreds of LEGO pieces, the brainchild of Rabbi Sholly Cohen.
KENNETH K. LAM / BALTIMORE SUN / TNS More than 60 children from the Chabad Jewish Center of Carroll County, Maryland, built a 6-foot tall menorah using hundreds of LEGO pieces, the brainchild of Rabbi Sholly Cohen.

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