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Chanukah or
Hanukkah
Light Over Darkness
Chanukah commemorates the
rededication of the Temple in
Jerusalem
after a group of Jewish warriors
defeated the occupying mighty
Greek armies.
Under Syrian
Rule
More
than 2000 years ago there was a
time when the land of Israel was
part of the Syrian-Greek Empire,
dominated by Syrian rulers of
the dynasty of the Seleucids.
In order to relate the story
that led up to Chanukah, we
shall start with Antiochus III,
the King of Syria, who reigned
from 3538 to 3574 (222-186 B.C.E.).
He had waged war with King
Ptolemy of Egypt over the
possession of the Land of
Israel. Antiochus III was
victorious and the Land of
Israel was annexed to his
empire. At the beginning of his
reign he was favorably disposed
toward the Jews and accorded
them some privileges. Later on,
however, when he was beaten by
the Romans and compelled to pay
heavy taxes, the burden fell
upon the various peoples of his
empire who were forced to
furnish the heavy gold that was
required of him by the Romans.
When Antiochus died, his son
Seleucus IV took over, and
further oppressed the Jews.
Added to the troubles from
the outside were the grave
perils that threatened Judaism
from within. The influence of
the Hellenists (people who
accepted idol-worship and the
Syrian way of life) was
increasing. Yochanan, the High
Priest, foresaw the danger to
Judaism from the penetration of
Syrian-Greek influence into the
Holy Land. For, in contrast to
the ideal of outward beauty held
by the Greeks and Syrians,
Judaism emphasizes truth and
moral purity, as commanded by
G-d in the holy Torah. The
Jewish people could never give
up their faith in G-d and accept
the idol-worship of the Syrians.
Yochanan was therefore
opposed to any attempt on the
part of the Jewish Hellenists to
introduce Greek and Syrian
customs into the land. The
Hellenists hated him. One of
them told the King’s
commissioner that in the
treasury of the Temple there was
a great deal of wealth.
The wealth in the treasury
consisted of the contributions
of "half a shekel" made by all
adult Jews annually. That was
given for the purpose of the
sacrifices on the altar, as well
as for fixing and improving the
Temple building. Another part of
the treasury consisted of
orphans’ funds which were
deposited for them until they
became of age. Seleucus needed
money in order to pay the
Romans. He sent his minister
Helyodros to take the money from
the treasury of the Temple. In
vain did Yochanan, the High
Priest, beg him not to do it.
Helyodros did not listen and
entered the gate of the Temple.
But suddenly, he became pale
with fright. The next moment he
fainted and fell to the ground.
After Helyodros came to, he did
not dare enter again.
The Madman
A short time later, Seleucus was
killed and his brother Antiochus
IV began to reign over Syria (in
3586 - 174 B.C.E.). He was a
tyrant of a rash and impetuous
nature, contemptuous of religion
and of the feelings of others.
He was called "Epiphanes,"
meaning "the gods’ beloved."
Several of the Syrian rulers
received similar titles. But a
historian of his time, Polebius,
gave him the epithet Epimanes
("madman"), a title more
suitable to the character of
this harsh and cruel king.
Desiring to unify his kingdom
through the medium of a common
religion and culture, Antiochus
tried to root out the
individualism of the Jews by
suppressing all the Jewish Laws.
He removed the righteous High
Priest, Yochanan, from the
Temple in Jerusalem, and in his
place installed Yochanan’s
brother Joshua, who loved to
call himself by the Greek name
of Jason. For he was a member of
the Hellenist party, and he used
his high office to spread more
and more of the Greek customs
among the priesthood.
Joshua or Jason was later
replaced by another man,
Menelaus, who had promised the
king that he would bring in more
money than Jason did. When
Yochanan, the former High
Priest, protested against the
spread of the Hellenists’
influence in the Holy Temple,
the ruling High Priest hired
murderers to assassinate him.
Antiochus was at that time
engaged in a successful war
against Egypt. But messengers
from Rome arrived and commanded
him to stop the war, and he had
to yield. Meanwhile, in
Jerusalem, a rumor spread that a
serious accident had befallen
Antiochus. Thinking that he was
dead, the people rebelled
against Menelaus. The
treacherous High Priest fled
together with his friends.
The Martyrs
Antiochus returned from Egypt
enraged by Roman interference
with his ambitions. When he
heard what had taken place in
Jerusalem, he ordered his army
to fall upon the Jews. Thousands
of Jews were killed. Antiochus
then enacted a series of harsh
decrees against the Jews. Jewish
worship was forbidden; the
scrolls of the Law were
confiscated and burned.
Sabbath rest, circumcision
and the dietary laws were
prohibited under penalty of
death. Even one of the respected
elders of that generation, Rabbi
Eliezer, a man of 90, was
ordered by the servants of
Antiochus to eat pork so that
others would do the same. When
he refused they suggested to him
that he pick up the meat to his
lips to appear to be eating. But
Rabbi Eliezer refused to do even
that and was put to death.
There were thousands of
others who likewise sacrificed
their lives. The famous story of
Hannah and her seven children
happened at that time.
Antiochus’s men went from
town to town and from village to
village to force the inhabitants
to worship pagan gods. Only one
refuge area remained and that
was the hills of Judea with
their caves. But even there did
the Syrians pursue the faithful
Jews, and many a Jew died a
martyr’s death.
Mattityahu
One day the henchmen of
Antiochus arrived in the village
of Modin where Mattityahu, the
old priest, lived. The Syrian
officer built an altar in the
marketplace of the village and
demanded that Mattityahu offer
sacrifices to the Greek gods.
Mattityahu replied, "I, my sons
and my brothers are determined
to remain loyal to the covenant
which our G-d made with our
ancestors!"
Thereupon, a Hellenistic Jew
approached the altar to offer a
sacrifice. Mattityahu grabbed
his sword and killed him, and
his sons and friends fell upon
the Syrian officers and men.
They killed many of them and
chased the rest away. They then
destroyed the altar.
Mattityahu knew that
Antiochus would be enraged when
he heard what had happened. He
would certainly send an
expedition to punish him and his
followers. Mattityahu,
therefore, left the village of
Modin and fled together with his
sons and friends to the hills of
Judea.
All loyal and courageous Jews
joined them. They formed legions
and from time to time they left
their hiding places to fall upon
enemy detachments and outposts,
and to destroy the pagan altars
that were built by order of
Antiochus.
The Maccabees
Before his death, Mattityahu
called his sons together and
urged them to continue to fight
in defense of G d’s Torah. He
asked them to follow the counsel
of their brother Shimon the
Wise. In waging warfare, he
said, their leader should be
Judah the Strong. Judah was
called "Maccabee," a word
composed of the initial letters
of the four Hebrew words Mi
Kamocha Ba’eilim Hashem,
"Who is like You, O G-d."
Antiochus sent his General
Apolonius to wipe out Yehuda and
his followers, the Maccabees.
Though greater in number and
equipment than their
adversaries, the Syrians were
defeated by the Maccabees.
Antiochus sent out another
expedition which also was
defeated. He realized that only
by sending a powerful army could
he hope to defeat Judah and his
brave fighting men.
An army consisting of more
than 40,000 men swept the land
under the leadership of two
commanders, Nicanor and Gorgiash.
When Judah and his brothers
heard of that, they exclaimed:
"Let us fight unto death in
defense of our souls and our
Temple!" The people assembled in
Mitzpah, where Samuel, the
prophet of old, had offered
prayers to G-d. After a series
of battles the war was won.
The Dedication
Now the Maccabees returned to
Jerusalem to liberate it. They
entered the Temple and cleared
it of the idols placed there by
the Syrian vandals. Judah and
his followers built a new altar,
which he dedicated on the
twenty-fifth of the month of
Kislev, in the year 3622.
Since the golden Menorah had
been stolen by the Syrians, the
Maccabees now made one of
cheaper metal. When they wanted
to light it, they found only a
small cruse of pure olive oil
bearing the seal of the High
Priest Yochanan. It was
sufficient to light only for one
day. By a miracle of G-d, it
continued to burn for eight
days, till new oil was made
available. That miracle proved
that G-d had again taken His
people under His protection. In
memory of this, our sages
appointed these eight days for
annual thanksgiving and for
lighting candles.
After Chanukah
The brightness of the first
Chanukah light had dwindled
down. But the holy fires on the
altar burnt again in the Beit
Hamikdash, from morning to
morning, as prescribed by the
Law. The priests were again
busily officiating in the old
customary ways, and day in, day
out they prepared the offerings.
Order and peace seemed
established.
The Jewish farmer longed to
return to his land after two
years of hardship, privation and
danger in the victorious Jewish
army. It was high time to break
the ground and to till the soil,
if the barley was to grow and
ripen in time for
"Omer-offering" on Passover. The
Jewish farmers had left their
ploughs to rally about the
heroic Chashmonaim. The first
victories had drawn even the
hesitant into the ranks of the
enthusiastic Jewish rebels, led
by the sons of Mattityahu.
Farmers had forsaken their land,
merchants and tradesmen their
stores and shops. Even Torah
students had emerged from the
four walls of the Bet Hamidrash
to join the fight against the
oppressors.
But the songs of victory,
which had filled the reclaimed
Holy Temple with praise and
gratitude for the merciful G-d,
had ceased. The goal of the
battle seemed reached, and Torah
again was supreme law in Israel.
One man, though, realized
that the time for a return to
normal living had not yet come.
Israel could not yet afford to
relax; it would have to stand
ready and prepare to carry on
the fight against the
overwhelming odds of the enemy.
This man was Yehuda Maccabi. His
name was upon everyone’s lips
and in every Jewish heart. He
was admired as a hero, as a man
with the heart of a lion and the
simple piety of a child; as the
one whose mighty armies fought
and conquered, yet who never
failed to pray to G-d, the
Master of all battles, before he
entered the fray.
It was not the spirited
warrior’s joy that made Yehuda
Maccabi stay in camp. His heart,
too, longed to return to his
former peaceful life, to Modin,
the quiet town of priests, which
held the grave of his adored
father. Bloodshed and battle
meant a hard and unwanted
profession for the men of Judea,
who preferred peace to strife.
Yet this was no time for
relenting. Not only had he to
stay, but with all the
persuasion of his magnetic
personality he had to hold back
his comrades-at-arms.
His own reasoning and his two
wise brothers, Shimon and
Yonatan, told him that only the
first phase of this war of
liberation had passed. Hard and
desperate times were yet to
come. Clever enemies merely
needed an extended lull to
prepare new assaults with more
troops and better equipment. And
there were enemies all about
Judea, besides the defeated
Syrians.
The neighboring countries
begrudged the dazzling victories
of the small Jewish armies. They
would much rather have seen the
people of Judea oppressed and
humiliated, than armed and
spirited, a threat to their own
lands. Whence had come the
sudden source of strength,
courage and fortitude? What was
there in this nation that made
history in proud seclusion and
isolation from other nations?
Old hatred was revived. The
descendants of Edom, the
Idumenas, the Ammonites, the
Philistens and Phoenicians, they
all revived their ancient
jealousies.
Messengers arrived from
Gilead. The pagan people joined
forces to destroy Judea. From
Galilee came the bad news of
similar evil intentions and
active preparations in Ptolomais,
Tyre and Zidon. The messengers
found Yehuda Maccabi already at
work. Fortifications had to be
thrown up around Zion. Towers,
walls, battlements and moat had
to be constructed opposite the
fort stil held by their worst
enemies, the Hellenistic Jews,
under the leadership of the
false priest Menelaos. These
hated everything Jewish, and
lived in the hope of the return
of the Syrian masters. Yehuda
Maccabi prepared Jerusalem
against them and against
imminent assault by the troops
of Antiochus. Under his
supervision the Jewish people
worked feverishly to refill
their arsenals and turn the
whole country into a stronghold.
Once this most important task
was accomplished, Yehuda Maccabi
led his freshly trained troops
to the aid of the regions and
villages harassed by the
spiteful neighbors of Judea. He
drove the Idumeans from Hebron,
which they had annexed, and he
punished the people who had
acted with hostility towards the
Jewish settlers. Then he led his
army across the Jordan River
against the Ammonites. Their
capital fell before the furious
onslaught of the Jewish troops,
and so did their fortress,
Yaeser.
Yehuda’s brother Shimon led
an army north to aid the plagued
Jews of Galilee. He defeated the
enemy and cleared the Jewish
land. At his urging, a great
many of the Jewish settlers who
had fled to Jerusalem, returned
to rebuild in safety what had
been destroyed during the years
of weakness. Yehuda Maccabi and
Yonatan joined forces and
marched agianst Gilead, where
they were met with the toughest
resistance. By Shavuot, this
campaign was successfully
concluded.
Judea was again free, and all
parts captured by the
neighboring nation had been
recovered. Celebrations and
festivity transformed Jerusalem
and the Holy Temple, hardly half
a year after the victories over
the Syrian armies. The Jewish
people expressed their joy and
gratitude to G-d in the form of
psalms and offerings. For He had
restored glory and liberty to
the Jewish land.
Story From:
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