Saturday, December 8, 2012

How $83 Can Be Worth Millions

My Menorah Day One


Tonight begins Chanukah.  A minor Jewish holiday that celebrates the Jewish victory over the Greeks.

From Chabad:
Chanukah -- the eight-day festival of light that begins on the eve of the 25th of the Jewish month of Kislev -- celebrates the triumph of light over darkness, of purity over adulteration, of spirituality over materiality.

More than twenty-one centuries ago, the Holy Land was ruled by the Seleucids (Syrian-Greeks), who sought to forcefully Hellenize the people of Israel. Against all odds, a small band of faithful Jews defeated one of the mightiest armies on earth, drove the Greeks from the land, reclaimed the Holy Temple in Jerusalem and rededicated it to the service of G-d.

When they sought to light the Temple's menorah (the seven branched candelabrum), they found only a single cruse of olive oil that had escaped contamination by the Greeks; miraculously, the one-day supply burned for eight days, until new oil could be prepared under conditions of ritual purity.

To commemorate and publicize these miracles, the sages instituted the festival of Chanukah. At the heart of the festival is the nightly menorah (candelabrum) lighting: a single flame on the first night, two on the second evening, and so on till the eighth night of Chanukah, when all eight lights are kindled.

On Chanukah we also add the Hallel and Al HaNissim in our daily prayers to offer praise and thanksgiving to G-d for "delivering the strong into the hands of the weak, the many into the hands of the few... the wicked into the hands of the righteous."

Chanukah customs include eating foods fried in oil -- latkes (potato pancakes) and sufganiot (doughnuts); playing with the dreidel (a spinning top on which are inscribed the Hebrew letters nun, gimmel, hei and shin, an acronym for Nes Gadol Hayah Sham, "a great miracle happened there"); and the giving of Chanukah gelt, gifts of money, to children.
To put it simply, consider how impossible it was for the Maccabees to have not only fought the Greeks, but to have beaten them.
Imagine a group of Chassid Jews,  students and teachers in a Yeshiva.  These men never studied tactics, never took up arms, couldn't fire a gun or fight hand-to-hand.

Now imagine the US government telling these men they have to worship another religion.

Imagine this group of Yeshiva students taking up weapons, taking on the US military and WINNING!!!
That is Chanukah.

Hanukkah: Out of the Darkness



If you cannot see the video click here.

I am reminded that Holiday Foods (Both Chanukah and Christmas) have no calories.  At least that is what I was told.





Happy Chanukah!!!!!

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