Holidays

Hanukkah

The eight-day winter festival commemorating the Maccabean victory and the miracle of the oil.

Holidays  ·  3 minute read

Photograph

Summary. Hanukkah, the 25th of Kislev through the 2nd or 3rd of Tevet, commemorates the Maccabean victory over the Seleucid Greek empire in the 2nd century BCE and the miracle of the oil that lasted eight days when only one day's worth was available. The central mitzvah is the lighting of the Hanukkiah (the nine-branched candelabrum), one light on the first night and an additional light each subsequent night, with the shamash (servant light). Other practices include the eating of fried foods (commemorating the oil), the recitation of Hallel, the addition of Al Hanissim in the Amidah and Birkat Hamazon, and the playing of dreidel.

The Historical Hanukkah

In 167 BCE, the Seleucid Greek emperor Antiochus IV Epiphanes outlawed Jewish practice and desecrated the Beit HaMikdash. The priestly Hasmonean family — Mattityahu and his five sons (Yehudah "Maccabeus" prominent among them) — led a revolt. By 164 BCE the Temple was retaken and rededicated. The Books of Maccabees I and II (preserved in the Apocrypha, not in the Jewish canon, but extensively read by historians) tell the story. The eight-day festival of dedication (chanukah literally means "dedication") was established to commemorate the victory.

The Miracle of the Oil

The Talmud (Shabbat 21b) provides the famous "miracle of the oil" account: on rededicating the Temple, only one cruse of pure olive oil — bearing the seal of the High Priest — was found, enough to fuel the Temple menorah for a single day. By a miracle, the oil burned for eight days, until new oil could be pressed and consecrated. The Sages established the eight-day festival to commemorate the miracle. (The Books of Maccabees themselves do not contain this story; it appears first in the Talmud, several centuries later.)

The Hanukkiah

See the Going Deeper chapter on the Hanukkiah for the detailed treatment. The mitzvah is to light one Hanukkiah per household at minimum (the Talmud's mehadrin standard is one Hanukkiah per person, lighting an increasing number of lights each night — the Hillel/Shammai debate is preserved in Talmud Shabbat 21b, with Hillel's view of the ascending count prevailing). Light after nightfall, in a window or doorway, with the recitation of the blessings.

Al Hanissim

Throughout Hanukkah, an insertion is added to the Modim (thanksgiving) blessing of the Amidah and to the Birkat Hamazon: Al Hanissim ("For the miracles"), recounting the deliverance and the dedication. The same liturgical insertion is added on Purim. The phrasing emphasizes "in those days, at this time" — the miracle is not only past but ongoing in our remembrance.

Customs of the Home

Fried foods — latkes (potato pancakes), sufganiyot (jelly doughnuts), other fried items. The oil-frying commemorates the miracle of the oil.

Dreidel — a four-sided spinning top with Hebrew letters nun, gimel, heh, shin (in Israel: nun, gimel, heh, peh), said to stand for "nes gadol haya sham/poh" ("a great miracle happened there/here").

Gelt — small amounts of money (or chocolate coins) given to children. Some sources connect to the Hasmonean coins; others to the medieval practice of teachers' fees.

Singing — Maoz Tzur ("Rock of Ages") is the standard Ashkenazi after-lighting song; HaNerot Halalu the universal text.

Where Denominations Diverge

Universal across all denominations. Chabad's outreach has been particularly impactful in establishing public Hanukkah celebrations (large outdoor menorot in city squares worldwide). Reform observance is essentially identical to Orthodox in the home rituals; Reform congregations often have a Hanukkah party rather than a full liturgical observance. The 25th of Kislev to the 2nd-3rd of Tevet is identical across all communities.

Sources

Talmud Bavli, Shabbat 21b–24a — the canonical Hanukkah passage.

Megillat Antiochus (medieval).

Books of Maccabees I and II (Apocrypha; preserved in Christian canon).

Rambam, Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Chanukah.

Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 670–685.

Further Reading

Yitz Greenberg, The Jewish Way — Hanukkah chapter.

Philip Goodman, The Hanukkah Anthology.

Hayim Soloveitchik, "Catastrophe and Halakhic Creativity: Ashkenaz – 1096, 1242, 1306, 1298," Jewish History 12:1.