HOLIDAYS OZZIE NOGG Special to The Jewish News I t's Chanukah time! We all know the characters and the plot. Wicked An- tiochus vs. the brave Mac- cabees in a struggle for religious freedom. The victory of the few over the many. The Temple rededicated! The miraculous cruse of oil! What more can be said? Let's retell the eight day festival that began Dec. 11. Maybe we'll find something new. After Alexander the Great conquered Palestine, Greek culture and customs swept the land. By 176 BCE, when Antiochus IV became king, Hellenism was the vogue, helped in large measure by the Jewish High Priests themselves. The priests built gymnasia, ignored their sacred duties and encouraged the Jews to adopt Greek ways. Many aristocrats and intellectuals were so seduced by Greek culture they seemed ready to give up their Torah and even their God. Of course, many Jews resisted, from students and teachers to farmers and a par- ticularly pious group of Hasi- deans (not to be confused with the Chasidim of later days). Antiochus had his own pro- blems. The unification of his polyglot kingdom was prov- ing difficult, so he turned his frustration on the Jews, determined to shove Hellenism down their throats. He sacrificed pigs in the 'Thin- ple, banned kashruth, and outlawed circumcision and ew Insights A retelling of the familiar Chanukah story reveals some new insights. the observance of Shabbat. Hundreds of devout Jews were martyred rather than betray God's command- ments. A revolt was in the making. The revolt started in earnest when Mattathias the Hasmonean killed a fellow Jew who was about to bow at a heathen altar. Mattathias and his five sons fled to the hills, where they were joined by Hasideans and other "zealots:' For three years, this rag-tag army, led by Mat- tathias' son, Judah the Mac- cabee, battled the Syrian legions. In 165 BCE, the Maccabees recaptured Jerusalem, reclaimed the Dmple, built a new altar and on 25 Kislev three years to the day after Antiochus pro- faned it, the Temple was re- dedicated. For eight days the people celebrated in the man- ner of the Feast of Booths. They carried branches and palms and recalled how they had been fugitives in the mountains. Then they decreed that all Jews should keep these eight days every year. What's wrong with this pic- ture? There is no mention of the oil! The miracle is mis- sing! According to the above his- torical account from Mac- cabees I and II, Chanukah is celebrated for eight days NOT because a cruse of oil miraculously burned longer than expected but because the Jews (who couldn't pro- perly observe Sukkot while fighting the Syrians in the hills) were NOW able to observe a feast of rededica- tion patterned on Sukkot — the festival, by the way, on which both the 1st and 2nd Temples were originally dedicated. So why the "oil story," and how did Chanukah become the Feast of Lights? , Among the theories: (1) Originally the festival marked the winter solstice. The Egyptians tried to rekin- dle the sun by burning oil lamps outside their homes all night, and the Jews, also yearning for light at this darkest time of the year, simply copied their neighbors and this pagan ritual wound up, centuries later, as candles in the winter-time festival of Chanukah. (2) The candles are minia- ture versions of the huge, flaming menorot and bon- fires used in early Sukkot celebrations. It was up to the rabbis to bring God into all these theories, and about 300 years after the Maccabean victory, the legend of the oil was born. Here's the scenario, as found in the Gemarah. "What is Chanukah?" ask the Rabbis. They answer that the Chanukah feast starts on 25 Kislev and lasts for eight days. They mention the Mac- cabees (briefly) and go on to describe the discovery of the one pure cruse of oil and the divine miracle that followed. In a few sentences, the rab- bis reduced the Maccabees to bit players and made the miracle of the oil, symbolic of God's endless wonders, the star of the show. They reminded the people that Judah and his men didn't win on their own and that nothing comes without God's help. Scholars feel that this down- playing of the Maccabees reflects the rabbis' distaste for the celebration of military victories and their disap- proval of the later Hasmo- neans. Although Mattathias and his sons fought for Jew- ish survival, their descend- ants adopted Greek ways, abused their power, and op- pressed their own people. So this year, when you light the first candle, rethink the Chanukah characters and plot. Antiochus and the Mac- cabees certainly head the bill. But remember the assimi- lated, Hellenized Jews who played a part in the things that befell us. Remember, also, the Has- moneans, who ended up fight- ing among themselves and with other Jews over who was more priestly, more royal and more right. During the week, remember that as we add each addi- tional light we grow in holiness. When the lights of Chanukah increase, said Hillel, the light of Judaism in- creases to dispel the darkness of the world. Finally, when all the candles are blazing, remember the cruse of oil. It has burned far longer than eight days. Despite enemies from without and enemies from within, the flame of Jewish survival has never gone out. And that is the true miracle. 0 Ozzie Nogg is a writer in Omaha, Ne. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 47