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Chanukah is one of the most widely known and celebrated holidays
of the year. It is festive, joyous, and family-oriented. It begins
on the 24th of the Hebrew month of Kislev: a significant time
of year--at least in the Northern Hemisphere--when the days are
the shortest, and the climate the coldest.
In the summer months, people are generally more outgoing and
in brighter moods. As the sunlight begins to decrease, people
tend to become more introspective. The autumnal Hebrew month
of Tishrei (occurring around September and October) is saturated
with holy days such as Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and the festival
of Sukkos. The next month, Cheshvan, has no holidays at all,
and it is typically rainy and cold. This is when people are drawn
further inward, and many desire to spend time alone. Kislev continues
becoming darker and colder. People tend to retreat into their
warm homes, and due to a subtle hibernation instinct in humans,
we may actually sleep more than usual. Kislev culminates with
the Winter Solstice, the longest night of the year. The following
night is therefore minutely shorter--the first glimmer of light
begins to re-awaken. At this season there's a natural desire
to join with family and friends and celebrate.
Every yom tov (Jewish holy day) has a natural, seasonal
explanation, as well as a historical and spiritual story that
gives rise to the celebration. When the Torah speaks of Pesach
(Passover), for example, it defines the celebration as a commemoration
of the story of the Exodus from Egypt. However, the Torah also
says Pesach is to be celebrated in "the month of Aviv"
(the first month of Spring), when harvesting begins. Thus, the
content of the day--the narrative-- is understood within a particular
context, a specific season, with all its physical and psychological
qualities. Before exploring the depths of the content of Chanukah,
let's first delve more into the context, and the intricate interconnection
between Chanukah and its month and season.
- Re-awakening Light:
- When the Talmud, in Tractate Shabbos, begins to discuss Chanukah,
it first mentions the story: one small jug of oil, intended to
burn for one night, lasted eight nights. Then it says, "On
the following year they--our sages--established these days as
holy days for singing praise and offering thanks." In other
words, the sages didn't celebrate the miracles of Chanukah right
away. Only when the season came around again, did they perceive
the nature of the previous year's events. They sensed that the
energies of these miracles were 'established'--the miracles re-manifested,
in a spiritual way, on the same dates of a following year. By
confirming the fact of this reappearance, our sages empowered
us also to tap into the miraculous energy of Chanukah that appears
each year.
Why do we celebrate the miracles of Chanukah and not other
miracles? Why is there no holiday commemorating the manna or
the miraculous well of Miriam? The answer is, we only celebrate
past events when they can be re-experienced in the present.
It would seem that the annual re-appearance of the miraculous
energy of Chanukah is due simply to the cyclical patterns of
time--there are certain patterns that rotate and return each
year at the same time. However, in Jewish spirituality, we sense
a linear movement of time as well. Time is always progressing
forward towards a spiritual culmination. Therefore, unlike the
natural patterns of the year, the energies of Chanukah progress
toward a culmination, revealing something completely new each
year. This linear movement joins the cyclical movement of nature
to form an upward-spiraling, reawakening, ever-new light of Chanukah.
- The Name of the Month - Trust and Hope:
- Kislev is the ninth month of the year, counting from Nissan.
In the Torah we find that the root of the word Kislev means 'trust'
and 'hope': "Did I place my kili (my hope) in gold
?"
(Job, 31:24) "
And they placed in Hashem their kislam
(their trust)." (Psalms, 78:7)
Kislev therefore illustrates the issue of trust. When you
make an appointment to meet someone, and they haven't yet arrived,
you can't see them or know for certain that they'll arrive on
time. You can only see or envision their arrival by means of
trust. When our days are dark and cold, we may not see the light
and warmth of life clearly. Many people struggle with "seasonal
affective disorder", a form of depression attributed to
the diminished sunlight of Winter. After the Winter Solstice,
the glimmer of light that arrives really does spark in us a trust
in a brighter future.
In terms of the historical narrative of Chanukah, the Hasmonians
had tremendous bitachon to stand up to their Roman oppressors.
Despite the darkness of their time, they trusted in the miraculous.
This inspired them to look at a defiled Temple and envision its
re-purification. Because of this trust, their eyes were open
enough to find a small measure of oil with which to kindle the
Menorah.
Writing some two hundred years after the re-dedication of
the Temple, Josephus calls Chanukah "the Festival of Lights".
Although his historical accuracy is debatable, and he doesn't
even mention the miraculous oil, we can learn about Chanukah's
theme of trust and hope from his account: "Perhaps the reason
(for the name "Festival of Lights") is that a freedom
beyond our hopes appeared to us, and so this was the name given
to the festival." (Antiquities VII:7.)
- The Letter of the Month:
- Every point in the calendar has a unique energy, symbology,
and opportunity for growth. The ancient text, Sefer Yetzirah,
teaches that the month of Kislev corresponds to the letter Samach,
the astrological sign of Keshes or Sagittarius, and the rectification
of "sleep". What can we learn from these correspondences?
The letter Samach literally means 'to support or uphold'.
When people have a deep trust that they are supported, even if
they fall into darkness, they are able to bounce back.
- The Sign of the Month:
- Sagittarius is a centaur with a drawn bow. A drawn bow is
similar to the above image of 'bouncing back'. The arrow is drawn
backwards, and great tension is created. The bowsman trusts,
however, that the deeper the arrow regresses, the further it
will fly when released.
-
- The Sense of the Month:
- Sleep, also, involves 'descending' into unconsciousness and
vulnerability. An environment that is not trustworthy may keep
a person from falling asleep. We tend to sleep only when we can
trust that we will awaken.
When Sefer Yetzirah mentions "sleep", it
categorizes it as one of several chushim, 'senses'--as
in the senses of smell and sight. What does this mean? Some people
have a chush--a refined 'sense' or taste for the art of sleeping.
In contrast, others have a utilitarian relationship with sleep;
they sleep because they're tired or they seek an escape from
the waking state. A 'gourmet' sleeper has deeper trust in Divine
support, as the Book of Mishlei says, "If you rest, you
will not worry; you will lie down and your sleep will be pleasant
,
for you will trust Hashem." (Mishlei 2)
When we lack trust, our minds are filled with self-centered
worries, doubts, and the unfinished business of the day. This
prevents deep, pleasant rest, and we may not 'bounce back' or
awaken with energy for the next day. Therefore, to rectify the
'sense' of sleep, to make our sleep more G-d-centered and "pleasant",
we must refine our faculty of trust.
- Prophetic Visions of Chanukah:
- A few hundred years before the Chanukah story, the First
Temple fell and Jewish sovereignty was stripped from the Land
of Israel. One 24th of Kislev during this dark time, the prophet
Chagai spoke to his broken People. His words inspired them to
expect and envision the magnificent rebuilding of the Temple.
Chagai spoke to the priests of the laws of purity--a prophetic
hint, perhaps, to the pure jug of oil that would be found in
the future, on the same date. Despite the bleakness of Winter,
and the trauma and opposition they had survived, the People were
filled with so much Divine trust, that they immediately began
to rebuild the Temple.
Another prophet of those difficult times, Zechariah, transmitted
to the People an image of purity and grandeur: he prophesied
about a menorah of pure gold, flowing continuously with holy
oil. Thus, long before the Chanukah story, the menorah became
a symbol of hope and light. Many centuries later too, the menorah
became the symbol of the Jewish People, and a major theme in
synagogue art and architecture.
- A Primordial Chanukah:
- The Talmud (Avodah Zarah, 8a) tells of a celebration of light
during the time of year that would later become Chanukah.
"When Adam--who was created in the beginning of the year,
on the first day of Tishrei--noticed that during the first three
months of his life, the days were getting gradually shorter,
he said, 'Woe is to me! Because I've sinned, the world around
me is being darkened and is returning to its state of chaos and
confusion; this must be the kind of death which has been sentenced
to me from Heaven!' He took upon himself to pray, fast, and look
within. After eight days, he noticed the Winter Equinox (the
Tekufas Teves, the season of the month of Teves), and saw that
indeed the days were beginning to lengthen again. "So this
is the way of the world!" he exclaimed, and he celebrated
for eight days."
- The Darkest Night:
- The Winter Solstice generally occurs during the last week
of Kislev. Therefore, not only does the week of Chanukah contain
the longest night of the year, but at the end of a lunar month
the nights have virtually no moonlight.
A student of the Baal Shem Tov named Rabbi Yakov Yosef determined,
through complex calculations, that the night of the Chanukah
victory and the re-lighting of the Menorah was precisely the
longest night of the year. This deepest darkness sets the stage
for the greatest possible revelation of light.
- Divine Light:
- The light that comes from fire is dependent on the burning
and destroying of something else. Divine light, however is self-derived.
At the Burning Bush, Moshe encounters Divine light. It shines
like a fire, and yet the bush is not consumed. This light doesn't
necessarily take away the darkness--it somehow shines within
the darkness. This is the "Ohr HaGanuz", the
'Hidden Light', the Divine light that burns within the darkness
of Creation, yet doesn't consume Creation. It is the light of
Chanukah revealed in the darkest nights of the year and the darkest
times of exile. Thus, the small jug of oil lit by the kohanim
didn't consume any oil.
When people are inspired they can rise to meet great challenges.
These are times when the pure "oil" of a person's soul
shines brightly. Sadly, however, such peak experiences of inspiration
wane, and most people return to the comfort of darkness.
The "miracle" of Chanukah was that the Jews were
able to shine brightly for eight nights, extending beyond the
natural cycle of a week. If Chanukah began on a Sunday, the last
night was also Sunday again, and yet they were illumined as if
it were the first night. The brilliance actually filled them
throughout the whole year, and therefore they established that
the inspiration and illumination of Chanukah would continue to
manifest every year, for all generations. Every Chanukah is a
special time for revealing the Hidden Light. Unlike all the Torah-based
holidays, however, at the end of the Rabbinic holiday of Chanukah
there is no havdalah, or ritual of separation. May we never separate
from the timeless light of Chanukah. May it permeate every moment
of our lives.
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