Page Six THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 24, 1943 Quips and Quirks for Hanukah MI/ By SIDNEY B. HOENIG INTRODUCTION: Jews always have had a 'gift for escaping the mental torture of per- secution through imaginative and speculative sorties into the lore and history of the past, seeking even in Holy Writ for hidden symbols. If Israel was the chosen of nations, possessed of a divine mandate, then somehow the shadow of coming events must be lurking in every page, nay in every letter, of sacred writing. Thus the medieval Jews amused themselves with anagram and word play and mystical interpretation of numbers and of letters; and with riddles and conundrums — all with that pinch of levity that made them true for the moment, but yet, as in any old man's tale, never to be ac- cepted as "really true." A Riddle with A Fourfold Answer THE MAN-OF-OLD asked the Child-of-Today: "Why did the first Hanukah fall on the twenty-fifth day of the month Kislev?" The Child-of-Today made reply: "Because Judah the Maccabee drove Antiochus from Jerusalem and rededi- cated the Temple, and the oil intended for one day burned for eight." The Man-of-Old smiled and said: "But why did all this happen on that particular day? You know, his- tory has a way of repeating itself. Per- haps the victory and the dedication fell on the anniversary of a past event. Let us see." Whereupon man and child traveled back until they found themselves at the beginning of time in the Garden of Eden. And lo and behold, they came upon an answer to part of the riddle! And the man set it down to be told again and again on Hanukah to the little ones of Israel as The Legend of the Winter Solstice: I The Garden of Eden was flooded with sunshine. The trees grew and flourished. The birds sang. The flow- ers budded and bloomed, and the heart of Man was glad. At length there came a day when Adam paid heed to the whispers of Eve. He ate of the for- hidden fruit. And Man and Woman were driven from the Garden to eat bread in the sweat of their brow. During the day the sun warmed the earth. When the coolness of evening came and the clay's task was ended, Adam and Eve sat quietly in the shade to eat of the bread of their toil. Suddenly Adam noticed that the sun set earlier. Darkness followed quickly. Nights became longer, days shorter. Was this some new punishment? Alarmed, the Man and Woman fasted and prayed. A week passed—the sun withdrew yet earlier. Adam and Eve became terrified. Was darkness to creep farther and farther upon earth and devour all living? Lo, a miracle! On the morrow the sun tarried longer, and on the morrow, and on the morrow after. Days grew steadily longer, nights shorter. Then Adam laughed aloud at his fears. - And he and Eve feasted and made merry. They kindled fires of thanksgiving. For they knew that all was as it had been, and would ever be —that the lights in the heaven were fixed in their courses for signs, and for seasons, for days and for years, and that while the earth remained, seed time and harvest, cold and heat, sum- mer and winter, and day and night would not cease. Now the day that Adam celebrated by kindling fires of thanksgiving fell in mid-winter when the sun, they tell us, reaches a point farthest from the middle of the earth and appears to pause and then returns on its course. And this day is the twenty-fifth of the month Kislev. It is the Winter Solstice. the Feast of Antiochus into the glad- ness of the Feast of Lights." II "This is only the first portion of our answer," said the Man-of-Old.. "Let us move forward through the years." So they fared forth and joined their peo- ple in the wilderness on the trek from Egyptian darkness into the light of freedom. The Child-of-Today asks, "Is there any new portion for our own time? Has the twenty-fifth of Kislev ever given occasion for a new dedication?" And they beheld the children - of Israel assembled, awed and expectant. For all the work of the tabernacle was finished. And Bezalel and the wise- hearted men who had wrought with him brought the tabernacle unto Moses, and all its furniture; the ark of the testimony, and the ark cover; the table, all the vessels thereof, and the showbread; the pure candlestick, the lamps thereof, even the lamps to be set in order, and all the vessels there- of, and the oil for the light— And it was the twenty-fifth day of the month Kislev. III So, with two portions of the answer to their riddle, the questing pair traveled farther, for- ward through the years to a second redemption, the ..de- liverance from the night of exile in Babylon. And the people were gathered before Nehemiah and the priests. Upon the restored altar they put the slime that had re- mained in the pit. In it, sev- enty years before, the priests had hidden the sacred oil from the invader, and the earth of the pit had pre- served this oil against what time the altar would be re- stored. The Man-of-Old said, "History does not explain everything. It was on the twenty-fifth day of the month Kislev in our time—we call it the tenth of December of the year 1918 — that a British general, by the name of Al- lenby, led the victorious forces of the Allied armies into the city of Jerusa- lem and delivered it." MYSTIC LETTERS The Man-of-Old asked the Child-of- Today: "Why was Judah called Maccabee?" "Because," said the Child-of-Today, "Judah used as his battle cry: ,tz Who is M i ;Iv= Like K amoka B aelim I hvh (Adonai) , Thee tr,51tz , Among their god /, 0 Lord! IV "Now," said the Man-of-Old, "let us seek in the time of the Maccabees for the final portion of our answer. Is it not possible that there was some event on the twenty-fifth day of Kislev from which Judah and his soldiers drew the renewed courage that brought the small band to victory, and the Temple to its former state?" And so they took up their quest, and found the people of Judiea in great distress. For the Syrian tyrant had de- clai ed a special feast, and had com- manded that all the inhabitants of the land worship on the altars which he had set up in the holy places. The faithful among the Jews were tortured because they would not forsake the faith of their fathers. And the king commanded that this day be called the Feast of Antiochus., And it was the twenty-fifth day of the month Kislev. And so it was that when the Child- of-Today had the four portions of the answer to his question, he found that the enigma was solved. "You see," said the Man - of - Old, "History does not explain everything. The day when the sun gave promise of renewed life to the sleeping earth, the Tabernacle was dedicated by Moses; and that also was a Hanukah— a day of dedication. Centuries later, on that day, a redeemed people re- turned from Babylonia, behind a mir- acle of sacred oil upon the restored altar. That likewise was a Hanukah—a day of dedication. "It was that day which the Macca- beans chose to rededicate_ the defiled altar, and so to. turn the mourning of Hann 1311 "They rested". The Man-of-Old exclaimed, "Good! I can think of the next— twenty-five Rah r; (In Hebrew every letter has a nu- merical value). The child was gleeful—"They rested from battle on the twenty-fifth (of Kislev)." MYSTIC NUMBERS "Let us see," said the Man-of-Old, "whether we can find any forecast of Hanukah in the early stories through the numerical value of the Hebrew letters." The Child-of-Today replied in glee, "Let us go back again to the beginning of time. Is there any reference to Hanukah in the story of creation?" The Man-of-Old smiled and sadi: "In the account of creation are the words Yehi Or, 'Let there be light!' Y H y (Yod) equals la (He) equals 5 (Yod) equals 10 YHY (yehi) equals 25 The sum of the Hebrew letters in Yehi, 'Let there be,' is 25. Thus the sentenceYehi Or means 425 light.' This we can interpret to mean on the 25th day of the month there is to be light." "When you are older," said the Man-of-Old, "and read the Gemara, a part of the Talmud, you will discover that the thirty - six candles used during the whole eight days of Hanukah equal the number of treatises in the Gemara. , Suddenly the sun, which was hidden behind the clouds, burst forth in all its majesty. Its rays beat down Upon the altar and lo, the residue of the oil burst into flame. Priests and people marveled at this . wondrous sight, and Nehemiah decreed that henceforth a period of prayer and feasting and re- joicing should be held throughout all the genera- tions of Israel on the anni- versary of the days on which the altar and the rebuilt temple had been dedicated. And this day was the twenty - fifth day of Kislev. it?" The Child - of - Today was sorely puzzled. At last he said, "I can think of one word— "And so we have the lights of Hanukah foreshadowed in the Bible and hinted at by the Talmud." The Shamthash-Candle "Is there any hidden sign about the Shammash-Candle, the one that lights the oth- ers?" asked the Child-of-To- day. TYPICAL HANUKAH HOME CEREMONY The first letters of the Hebrew words spell mkbi or Maccabee." "I know another answer," said the Man-of-Old. "Let us take the final consonants of the words- Abraha M CrriZti Isaa K Jaco B Zipv4 priv Thus the names of the three patriarchs yield the main consonants of the He- brew word Makkeb meaning Hammer, as some say Judah was called. a The Child-of-Today countered with question to the Man-of-Old: "Can you make an anagram from the name of Judah's family the Has- moneans?" "I think I can," said the Man-of- Old. H Hodesh—the New Moon, to signify the Jewish Cal- endar. nztv s Sabbath—the day of hal- lowed rest. M Mo'adim—Festivals. N Nebuah—Prophecy. A tptt,ri 11r1 4 Y Abot—The Tradition of the Patriarchs. Yihud—Monotheism. These are the principles for which the Maccabees fought." "I think I can find you one," said the Man-of-Old, "take a pencil and figure it out. When Jacob met Esau, the Bible tells us 'The sun shone for him' Va-yizrah 1 0 (rztntvn 15 ri-M1) hashemesh (Gen. 32.32). The Hebrew Lo (for him) consists of the letters Lamed Vav equals 30 1 equals 6 The sum of these is thirty-six. Now, if instead of ha-shemesh, the sun, we put ha-shammash, (Shemesh and Shammash look alike in the consonan- tal Hebrew text.) We can read it, 'The shammash shone for thirty-six com- rades.' " "I prefer the explanation," said the Child, "which tells us that since we are forbidden to use any of the candles for any other purpose than to have them shed light for our feast, we must take an extra one to kindle them and to protect them." Hanukah Games Games have been a characteristic feature of Hanukah. Even games of chance, usually frowned upon, were permitted, provided, of course, that they did not degenerate into gambling. Chess, dominoes and riddles (ketowes) which depended upon numerical values of words were encouraged. The most popular children's game, however, was with the Top (Drehdel- Trendle, Galgelon.) A square top is used. On each side is inscribed one of the four Hebrew letters: Nun, Gimel, He, Shin. "Have you any way of playing with the word rvri Hanukah?" asked the Man-of-Old. "Do you think you could make two Hebrew words out of These are regarded as the initial let- ters of the sentence Nes Gadol Hayah Sham. It means: (Continued on Page 7)_