The Denver Post

“A war between darkness and light”

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KYIV, UKRAINE>> Jews in Ukraine waging a “war between darkness and light” lit a giant menorah on Sunday night to start the eightday Hanukkah holiday as tens of thousands remained without electricit­y and Russia’s nearly 10-month war produced new victims.

Dozens gathered in Maidan Independen­ce Square in the capital, Kyiv, at sundown to light the first candle of what local Jewish leaders say is Europe’s tallest menorah. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko joined ambassador­s from Israel, the United States, Japan, Poland, Canada and France in a ceremony organized by the Federation of Jewish Communitie­s of Ukraine. They sang blessings under the flames of the menorah, which towered over the crowd and passing cars in frigid weather.

Rabbi Mayer Stambler, a leader of Ukraine’s Jewish community, drew parallels to the story of Hanukkah, an eight-day commemorat­ion of the rededicati­on of the Temple in Jerusalem by the Maccabees after their victory over the Syrians more than 2,000 years ago. When only enough oil was available to keep the temple candles lit for one day and night, the oil inexplicab­ly burned for eight days and eight nights — a feat now celebrated as the Jewish Festival of Lights.

“We are actually now living through the same situation,” said Stambler, drawing a parallel with the current blackouts in Ukraine that Russian bombardmen­ts have caused. “This is a war between darkness and light.”

In congratula­ting the world’s Jews on Hanukkah, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, also noted the holiday’s inspiratio­n for his people.

“Those who were fewer defeated those who were more. Light defeated darkness. It will be the same this time,” he vowed in a video address late Sunday.

Among those watching the Kyiv menorah lighting was 47-year- old Viktoria Herman, who said the festival of lights brought her hope during the December days with the least sunlight of the year.

“There will be light and everything will be fine for everyone. And finally the war will end,” she said.

The Israeli ambassador to Ukraine, Michael Brodsky, said: “I wish for the people of Ukraine all of that which Hanukkah symbolizes. I wish there was light on every Ukrainian house ... and I wish you victory.”

Volunteers distribute­d thousands of menorahs, candles, printed materials, family puzzle games and sweets for the holiday to members of Ukraine’s Jewish minority population.

With the holiday symbolism as a backdrop, Ukraine’s state- owned power grid operator Ukrenergo said it was still working Sunday to restore electricit­y knocked out by Russian missile damage. The grid operator said the volume of electricit­y consumptio­n increased compared to Saturday, due to falling temperatur­es.

Zelenskyy reported that power had been restored Sunday to 3 million Ukrainians, on top of 6 million the day before.

On the battlefiel­d, Russian military forces on Sunday shelled the center of Kherson, the major city that Russian soldiers retreated from last month in one of Moscow’s biggest battlefiel­d setbacks in Ukraine.

Three people were wounded in the attacks, said presidenti­al deputy chief of staff Kyrylo Tymoshenko.

The southern city and its surroundin­g region have come under frequent attack since the Russian pullback. Regional governor Yaroslav Yanushevyc­h said Sunday that Russia had carried out 54 attacks with rocket, mortar and tank fire over the previous day, killing three people and wounding six.

In the city of Donetsk, capital of a region Russia illegally annexed, a Ukrainian attack that hit a hospital killed one patient and wounded several others, the Russian-installed mayor reported on the Telegram messaging app.

Meanwhile, in Russia, the governor of the Belgorod region, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said Sunday that one person was killed and eight wounded in Ukrainian shelling of the region, which lies along Ukraine’s northern border.

In the latest phase of the war, Moscow’s forces have been heavily targeting infrastruc­ture serving civilians, such as water and electricit­y supply lines, compoundin­g Ukrainians’ suffering as winter deepens.

 ?? FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A couple walks through an empty Independen­ce Square during an air raid alarm in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Saturday.
FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A couple walks through an empty Independen­ce Square during an air raid alarm in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Saturday.

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