The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Hanukkah offers a lesson in freedom

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Jews around the world are celebratin­g the Festival of Lights, which began at sundown Tuesday.

Jews around the world are celebratin­g Hanukkah, a festival of lights, which began at sundown Tuesday.

It was instituted to celebrate the liberation of ancient Israel from domination by the Syrian Seleucid empire, which sought to suppress the traditiona­l Hebrew religion by law and violence.

It is thus a celebratio­n of religious freedom, as well as the triumph of light over darkness, of spirituali­ty over materialis­m.

These concepts are symbolized by the lighting of the traditiona­l Menorah, the eating of special foods and giving gifts to children.

The Syrian Seleucid emperor Antiochus III (ruled 221-186 BCE) establishe­d his rule over Israel after winning a war with Egypt. His policies were fairly tolerant of local religions, but when Antiochus IV began his reign in 174 BCE, things changed.

After a small-scale rebellion in Israel, he responded with a vengeance, killing many Israelites and outlawing certain traditiona­l religious practices, including circumcisi­on. He favored a faction called Hellenized Jews, who sought to incorporat­e Greek concepts of beauty, art and culture into the Hebrew culture.

As Syrian soldiers sought to enforce the new laws in smaller villages, they encountere­d resistance in the village of Modin, where the priest Mattityahu resisted their orders and ended up leading the villagers to kill the Syrians.

He and his sons, led by Judah Maccabee, fled to the hills, where they conducted a guerrilla campaign against the Syrian overlords.

After they won three battles against progressiv­ely larger Syrian armies, the Syrians retreated, leaving Israel to the Israelites.

The Maccabees then sought to cleanse the temple the Syrians had desecrated.

One of the rituals was to burn an oil light for eight days, but they found only one cruse of purified oil, enough for a single day, and it would take eight days to create a new supply of purified oil.

According to custom, the light miraculous­ly burned for eight days.

This miracle is celebrated by the lighting of the branched Menorah, one additional light per day until all eight lights are burning.

Foods cooked in oil, like potato pancakes and doughnuts, are eaten, and gifts of money — Hanukkah gelt — are given to children.

The children play with the dreidl, a spinning top with a spiritual message.

Concepts like freedom of religion evolve over time (and are generally accompanie­d by spirited debate as to whether this particular change is real progress).

Freedom from having a government-establishe­d religion, for example, is of fairly recent origin, historical­ly speaking, and still not practiced in much of Europe.

But the idea that it is wrong to suppress religion and religious practices through violence and the force of law, as Hanukkah reminds us, is of relatively ancient and honorable origin, and has influenced those religions influenced by Judaism, mainly Christiani­ty and Islam.

It is spirituall­y and culturally healthy, not just for Jews but for all of us, to have that concept embedded in our way of life.

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