Arts & Entertainment 'The Maccabees' Sister' Capturing the Moon, a collection of classic and modern Jewish folktales retold, offers this Chanukah story. Rabbi Edward Feinstein Special to the Jewish News There are certain people who see the world through God's eyes. They feel God's pain and distress, and they call upon the rest of us to help pturing the Moon iznard16.4G-ncirseisi fL;b:s God make the world right. We call such people prophets or sages or seers. Sometimes they are celebrated as heroes. Sometimes they are never recognized for the work they do to change the world. W e know of great Mattathias and his brave sons, the Maccabees: Judah, Eliezer, Simon, Yochanan and Yonatan. We know that they fought the Greeks, liberated the Holy Temple from idolatry and returned Israel to the worship of God. We know the story of the lights — the miracle of the menorah — in which one tiny jar of oil burned for eight nights, demonstrating that God had returned to the midst of the Jewish people. We know that the Maccabees minted coins and cele- brated God's miracles in rescuing the Jews. But we forget that the Maccabees had a sister. Her name was Dinah. And it was because of her that all those miracles came to be. Dinah is the real hero of the Chanukah story. So let's remember how it happened. When Antiochus and the rest of the Greeks brought idols into the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, the Jews did not protest. There was a harvest to bring in, RETOL D B\' Rabbi .dwa rd • -einstem In Capturing the Moon (Behrman House Publishing: $22), California-based Rabbi Edward Feinman narrates 36 tales that transmit Jewish culture and inform Jewish values, concluding each with questions that explore the stories' themes. crops to store before the winter. Everyone was too busy to protest. When the Greeks made the Jews of Jerusalem bow down and worship the idols and forced them to abandon their study of Torah, the rites of the Covenant and the worship of God, no one said a thing. There were families to raise, chil- dren to teach, elders to care for, homes to tend to. Who had time for politics? When the Greeks brought their idols to the towns of Judah and forced Jews to abandon the God of their ancestors and bow low to Zeus, no one stood up and protested. Who needed the trouble? Who wanted to face down armed soldiers? After all, they were only farmers. "Better to keep quiet," they thought, "lay low, attract no attention, in the hope that the Greeks will go away" But the Greeks didn't go away. Instead, Antiochus and the Greeks pushed forward through the towns and villages of Judah, destroying the faith of Israel. And still no one did anything. Once the harvest was in, it was time for the village feasts. The farmers and their families gathered to celebrate the bounty of the land and the blessings of God. In the town of Modi'in, the town of Mattathias and his family, Jewish farmers and craftsmen, shopkeepers and laborers, came together for a night of celebration. With singing and dancing and feasting, they gave thanks for all God had given them. The presence of Antiochus and his armies in the land was soon forgotten. Thoughts of the desecration of the Holy Temple were replaced by the pleasures of the joyful feast. Only Dinah remembered. Only Dinah could feel the shame of the Holy Temple as if it were in her own body. And she could feel the evil of Antiochus that crept upon the Land of Israel as if it crept along her own arms and legs. Why could no one else feel it? Why did no one else care? She cried out to her brothers, erusalem has been ruined, and our Temple has been wrecked! Why don't you do something?" They laughed at her. "Little sister, what could we do? We are farmers; they are sol- diers. Besides, tonight is the feast. All year we have waited for the feast!" "How can you feast? How can you cele- brate? Can't you feel the evil that has come upon our land?" she inquired. Again they laughed at her. "Little sister, you sound like a prophet! Go and play with the girls, and let us enjoy our feast!" But Dinah did not give up. She faced her brothers and pleaded: "Judah, you are the bravest. Are you afraid to fight these Greeks? Eliezer, no man is mightier than you. Why are you suddenly so weak? "Simon, you are the wisest of us. Can you not see what is coming this way? Yochanan, Yonatan, you are the most loyal and the The Maccabees on page C16 December 18 • 2008 C15