web analytics
May 25, 2013 /16 Sivan, 5773
At a Glance
Judaism
Sponsored Post
The Tosfos Yomtov was convinced that the death of 300,000 –600,000 Jews during the Chmielnicki massacres of 1648-49 were because of improper Tefila. Communicated: Tefilla

Chillul Tefila Bifarhesia, as well as halachicly challenged verbiage and dress, are external manifestations of a critical lack of personal yiras shomayim which has lethal consequences.



The Fighting Light of Chanukah

tell a friend
Light at Chicago Union Station 1943

For an entire generation, the ancient Judeans waged a struggle for freedom, which, in terms of intensity, has almost no parallel in all human history. It was among the first recorded wars of national liberation and it laid a model for nearly every revolution that followed. With an unbreakable faith and willingness to sacrifice, a handful of valiant Hebrew guerrillas forged the eternal covenant that resistance to tyranny is the highest and truest obedience to HaShem.

In those years, the cultural imperialism to which the Seleucid Empire aspired was at its peak. Hellenist philosophies and values were brought to Jerusalem by means of harsh edicts and the daggers of foreign soldiers. The victimization of the weak, rampant debauchery and the desecration of the Temple were the pinnacles of the enlightened Greek culture bestowed upon Judea. In Jerusalem, the urban upper class yearned to be citizens of Antioch and to transform their ancient city into an enlightened Greek Polis. When the uprising began, it arose from the mountain folk who remained loyal to G-D’s Torah and to the spiritual heritage of their fathers. They were led by the Hasmoneans – Matityahu ben Yohanan HaKohen and his five courageous sons. The flame of revolt was kindled in Modiin and quickly spread throughout the hills of Judea. After Matityahu’s death, his third son Yehuda inherited command. He became the Maccabee and his guerrilla army moved in two channels that were in fact one – war upon the foreign Hellenist culture and war against the Seleucid occupation of Judea. Two wars with one goal of Hebrew independence in Eretz Yisrael.

The Maccabean revolt was not merely a struggle to revoke harsh decrees or secure freedom of worship. According to Torah Law, national independence and political sovereignty over Eretz Yisrael is the foundation for proper religious observance (see Mishnah Torah Hilchot Chanukah 3:1, Pesikta Rabati 34, Magid Mesharim Parshat Vayikra and Chesed L’Avraham 3:7). HaShem’s Divine blueprint for history demands that Israel be an independent nation in full borders.

The Hasmoneans were ferociously determined. After several Judean victories and the liberation of Jerusalem, the Seleucid Syrian-Greeks offered a truce. Freedom of worship would be restored to the natives in exchange for ending their violent revolution. There were some within Israel naïve enough to be content and halt the fighting. A misunderstanding of Torah caused those weak in spirit and tired of war to believe that they had already achieved their objectives. The Hasmonean faction, however, understood that they were required by G-D’s Law to liberate their country and not simply live within it as pious individuals under a foreign regime. They also knew that without complete national independence, there could be no lasting peace or full freedom of worship as the spirit of Greece could again seek to dominate Judea. Yehuda declared that the revolution must continue until complete political independence could be won. After nearly three decades of bitter guerrilla warfare, the Hasmoneans triumphed and the Kingdom of Israel was restored for over two hundred years (Hilchot Chanukah 3:1).

The devout heroism of Matityahu and his sons awakened within their people aspirations for independence. This desire for liberty – which had not strongly surfaced prior to the oppression – was catalyzed by the cultural persecution of Syrian Greeks. Political independence was eventually declared and this declaration itself served as a barrier against the forces of Hellenization as the very desire for national freedom psychologically impedes assimilation into the culture of an occupying power. Yet without Matityahu and his sons – the holy warrior priests who imbued the political ideal with spiritual content – the revolution would have lacked sufficient force to keep fighting and withstand the prolonged hardships of war. This is demonstrated through the miracle of the oil. The pure cruse with the seal of the High Priest shone brightly in the Menorah, its light permeating the soul of the Hebrew Nation and bestowing upon Israel the strength to fight on.

Perhaps the most important lesson of Chanukah is that light is not merely another creation but rather Creation’s ultimate goal. The Maharal of Prague teaches in Ner Mitzvah that the world was created deficient so that it could perfect itself and be perfected through mankind. Human beings are given free will in order to choose to participate in bringing the world to its goal. Being perfect and complete, by definition, requires one to lack nothing – including the ability to experience the phenomena of perfecting and completing oneself. At first glance it would appear paradoxically impossible for an already perfect and complete being to experience becoming more perfect or complete. But true perfection and completeness by their very definitions must not exclude any capabilities. The way in which HaShem – the timeless and all encompassing ultimate Reality without end – achieves the experience of becoming more perfect and more complete is through human beings, who are all expressions of their Divine Source (similar to the relationship between the thought and the thinker). As human beings perfect themselves and grow, HaShem “experiences” perfection and growth. We were all created deficient so that He would – through us – experience self-improvement. The more we become aware of this incredible reality, the closer our world comes to fundamental perfection. And as the main protagonist in the drama of human history, Israel is tasked with revealing this truth, thereby bringing the world ever closer to its predestined ideal state.

tell a friend

About the Author: Yehuda HaKohen teaches history at several Jerusalem institutions and is a seasoned activist for indigenous rights in the Middle East and a vocal opponent of attempts to shrink Israel's borders. Yehuda organizes grassroots Jewish-Arab dialogue meetings for the purpose of fostering mutual acceptance and understanding.


You might also be interested in:


one comment so far

You must log in to post a comment.

One Response to “The Fighting Light of Chanukah”

  1. Ariana says:

    Equating the Western World with “Edom” has no basis in fact. Edom was Semitic tribe that originated in the Middle East. Any descendants of Edom would probably be Arab Muslims now. During Roman times, Edomite descendants were used by Rome as puppet rulers over Judea; however, the Romans themselves were of Greek descent and were not Edomites or Semitic. The Western World is not Edom or Edomite or even close.

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Current Top Story
Sayed Nasrallah Speech
Nasrallah Vowing to Sustain Assad’s Regime (Dubbed Video)
Latest Judaism Stories
Leff-052413

Do you say Shema before you go to sleep? I’m sure you do.

But perhaps you, like many, feel too tired at night to say the entire tefillah of Kri’as Shema as it appears in the siddur. If you do say the entire tefillah, you will recognize a pasuk in this week’s Haftorah. And if you don’t say the whole Kri’as Shema al Hamitah, perhaps after this column, you’ll re-consider and find yourself connecting with the following very comforting pasuk.

Niehaus-052413

The sand is rapidly running through the hourglass, as the centrifuges in the secret Iranian nuclear plants spin furiously. It is quite clear that the Iranians are on the brink of attaining nuclear capability, and we are well aware of the danger that would face Klal Yisroel in that event, chas v’sholom. All the sanctions, threats, and computer worm attacks do not seem to be stopping them, and it is terrifying. And when we see how vulnerable we are to terrorist attacks anywhere in the world, we become even more terrified.

The-Shmuz

Miriam spoke disparagingly about Moshe Rabbeinu. Because of this, she contracted tzaras, and for seven days she was sent outside the camp of Israel.

Business-Halacha-logo

Samuel Scherr was a very successful businessman. He also was generous and would share of his wealth with others. In this way, he became the uncle of favor to his nieces and nephews, whom he would frequently shower with gifts.

Detached Or Unrelated
‘He Made An Asheirah Tree Into a Ladder…’
(Eruvin 78b)

In this week’s parshah we read about the individuals who were tamei and thus could not bring the korban Pesach. They approached Moshe Rabbeinu and asked him whether there was anything they could do to bring the korban. Ultimately, Hashem told Moshe that they should bring a korban a month after Pesach, on the 14th of Iyar.

Question: As Shavuot is fast approaching – a holiday on which we dwell on the story of Ruth and the origins of the royal house of David – I was wondering if you could help me resolve something. Some people say that Rabbi Yehudah HaNassi, the redactor of the six orders of the Mishnah and a scion of King David, purposely kept any mention of Chanukah and the Hasmonean kings out of the Mishnah because the Hasmoneans improperly crowned themselves and ignored the rule that all Jewish kings are supposed to come from the tribe of Yehudah. Is this true?

Menachem
(Via E-Mail)

One of the thirty-nine prohibited melachot on Shabbat is carrying an object from a private domain, reshut hayachid, to a public domain, reshut harabim, or carrying an object a distance of four amot, six to eight feet, in a reshut harabim. The Torah does permit, however, carrying within the reshut hayachid itself. The definition of a reshut hayachid and a reshut harabim is crucial, therefore, to the laws of carrying on Shabbat.

Question: The Midrash notes that the song the Jews sang after they crossed the Red Sea (“Az Yashir”) was unique; its likes had never been heard before in the world. Our Sages even refer to it as a shirah chadashah, a “new song.” What made “Az Yashir” so unique and in what sense was it a “new song”?

The rav was not a wealthy man, but earned enough to live comfortably. He earned his money by serving as the rav of a religious community in Yerushalayim. He also received some royalties from sefarim he had written over the years. He was well known, and many people approached him for a berachah, advice and help. They were not turned away.

Tanach, the Hebrew Bible, is remarkable for the extreme realism with which it portrays human character. Its heroes are not superhuman. Its non-heroes are not archetypal villains. The best have failings; the worst often have saving virtues. I know of no other religious literature quite like it.

Last week I shared a letter from a newly observant Jewish woman. She and her husband reside in a small suburban community outside of Los Angeles. Last year they came to consult with me on a personal religious issue. While they were both ba’alei teshuvah, there was one fine difference between them. He had become a ba’al teshuvah earlier than she and was therefore somewhat more settled in an observant lifestyle.

I watch my children use blocks to build a large structure, observing the trepidation with which they add each block. As the structure becomes larger there is a greater risk of it collapsing, thus bringing an end to an hour of playful labor. I anticipate what will happen when one child adds a block to the top floor, compromising the integrity of the building and resulting in the collapse of the entire structure. The argument that ensues is predictable, as each child blames the other for “ruining” the fun. As an adult, I wonder about the need to attribute blame. Will assigning blame be instrumental in rebuilding the structure?

In this week’s parshah the Torah discusses the halachos of when one steals from another and when confronted in beis din, the thief swears falsely with his denial that he stole. This parshah was already taught in parshas Vayikra; however, there are two halachos that the Torah adds in this parshah to this topic.

In order to carry from one’s home into the street (even when the area is enclosed by a properly constructed eruv), the eruvin ceremony must be performed. This ceremony involves the placing of food in one designated home on behalf of all Sabbath observers in the enclosed area. In order for the eruvin ceremony to be valid, however, it must be performed on behalf of all owners of streets and homes in the enclosed area.

More Articles from Yehuda Hakohen
In prayer

According to the Ramban, the verse “your foes who dwell upon it will be desolate” (Vayikra 26:32) is a partial blessing within the curse that guarantees through all generations that the Land of Israel will not receive any foreign nation in place of her true indigenous people.

Jewish men studying at a yeshiva

In both the company of fellow Jews and in the presence of gentiles, we must be relentlessly careful to conduct ourselves with morality, consideration towards others and honest financial dealings. A Jew must always be conscious that the Hebrew Nation represents HaShem in this world and that Israel is a direct reflection of His Divine Ideal.

Israel must demonstrate confidence in ourselves and an iron determination to defy our antagonists. Mordechai teaches that it is not through appeasement that one achieves peace but rather through strength, self-assurance and unequivocally firm resistance to tyranny and injustice.

While the transgression of the Golden Calf had caused Aharon to feel a sense of distance from HaShem, the miluim was intended to bring him close again through spiritual perfection. The priestly vestments play a central role in this process and great detail is offered in describing them.

The Jewish nation has no such concept as “religion” in the formal sense of the term, as we reject the notion of anything lying outside the realm of HaShem. It is Israel’s mission to elevate every sphere of Creation by infusing it with kedusha and bringing it to its highest potential in our world.

As Israel experiences a national rebirth on our native soil, the forces of evil are gathering all of their strength to wage a final war to stamp out our light.

    Latest Poll

    If you could only choose one of the following scenarios regarding Chareidi IDF service, which would you choose?





    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...

Printed from: http://www.jewishpress.com/judaism/holidays/the-fighting-light-of-chanukah/2011/12/22/

Scan this QR code to visit this page online:

Close