Vineyard Gazette Article: Hanukkah Lights the Way to Love and Justice

Hanukkah candles

On Thursday, December 19, 2024, the Vineyard Gazette published an article by Rabbi Broitman, “Hanukkah Lights the Way to Love and Justice.”

Read about it in the Vineyard Gazette.

Full text of the article is re-printed below.


 

What is Hanukkah?

That is how the Talmud opens its discussion of the holiday. You would think their readers would know already. But it turns out that Hanukkah has so many different messages depending on who is telling the story, that it isn’t so simple. There is the message of the triumph of the oppressed over the oppressor. The importance of religious freedom. The power of miracles and the eternity of divine light.

So maybe the question is not “what is Hanukkah” but rather, what is the message of Hanukkah that speaks to you this year?

The message that is speaking to me at this moment lies in the name itself. Hanukkah means “dedication” in Hebrew, and refers to the Maccabees’ re-dedication of the holy Temple in Jerusalem after it had been seized and desecrated by the Seleucid empire under Antiochus IV in the mid-second century BCE.

The desecration of the Temple was extremely traumatic for the Judeans. The Temple was the most holy place in the world for them. The space where they believed the divine presence rested on earth. Yet after the Maccabean rebellion against Antiochus IV was won, the Judeans came face to face with the painful truth that their holy place had become a place of idolatry. It took courage for the Maccabees to re-enter that once-holy space, look at what it had become, and rededicate it so it would once again reflect the divine light.

This may seem like ancient history. Yet it is very much a moral and spiritual struggle for every generation. Paradoxically, it turns out that the things most vulnerable to idolatry are the very things that are the most sacred to us. This idea is related in the book of Exodus as part of the story of the Golden Calf.

When Moses was carrying the tablets of the Ten Commandments and started down the mountain, he saw that the Israelites were worshipping the Calf, and threw down the tablets engraved with God’s handwriting, smashing them to pieces. This is shocking! How could Moses have smashed these holy tablets?

One imaginative interpretation from Jewish tradition is that at the sight of the Calf, the letters flew off the tablets, leaving just the heavy stone. At that point, the tablets were no longer holy. They were just stone.

Holiness, in other words, does not reside in objects themselves, not even the tablets, but rather in the word of God that is heard, wrestled with and lived out in a holy way. When we put an object, a place, an idea or a relationship in its fixed form above the very values that gave them meaning, we end up with idols.

This is the struggle that Hanukkah addresses for all generations including our own. Hanukkah tells the story of the most sacred place becoming a place of idolatry. In this case it was because Antiochus IV worshipped his own power and military might as ultimate. In other cases, it is because of our own veering away from the values that made our spaces sacred in the first place. This is true in our personal lives as well as our collective and national ones.

What Hanukkah, teaches, however, is not only that the sacred can become an idol, but that an idol can be turned back into the sacred. And here is where the meaning of the name “Hanukkah,” or “dedication,” comes in. If we rededicate ourselves to what are truly our highest values, the values that the prophet Amos named as what God requires of us — compassion, justice and humility — we will again make space for the light. What was holy about the Temple was not the building itself, but the loving and just actions of the people coming in and out of it.

I believe this is what the prophet Zechariah means when he relates how an angel shows him a vision of a Menorah. Zechariah does not understand the meaning of the vision, so the angel explains it to him: “Not by might nor by power but by spirit alone” (Zech. 4:3).

When we light our Menorahs or share in the light of other traditions this holiday season, may we rededicate ourselves to those values of compassion, justice and humility. May we put aside the worship of might and power and make room for spirit, love and j

Rabbi’s Reading Group: Books and Ideas for Troubled Times

Rabbi's Reading Group

 

We’ll read and discuss two books as a way to reflect on the past year as well as on the possibilities ahead of us: Noah Feldman’s “To Be a Jew Today” and Shaul Magid’s “The Necessity of Exile.” We will also include selected texts from Torah and Talmud alluded to in these books that speak to issues unfolding today.

All classes are on Sundays.

2025 Classes

Sunday, Jan 5th at 4:00 PM 
Reading: Shaul Magid’s “The Necessity of Exile,”  first half.

Sunday, Jan 12th at  4:00 PM  
Reading: Shaul Magid’s “The Necessity of Exile,”  second half.

All classes are on Zoom only.

Registration is required.

Click Here to Register

 

Hanukkah Coat Drive

Hanukkah Coat Drive - MVHC 2024.jpg

The MVHC Religious School Children are sponsoring a Hanukkah coat drive .

Please donate your used coats to their drive.

Winter Concert & Community Sing

People singing

Winter Concert & Community Sing

Sunday, Dec 22 at 4:00 pm

On Sunday, Dec 22 at 4:00 pm, there will be a Winter Concert and Community Sing at the Hebrew Center with the M.V. Family Chorus directed by Roberta Kirn.

Admission is free and all are welcome.

 

Rabbi on Winter Glow Seasonal Celebrations Panel at MV Museum, Thursday, Dec 5

Winter's Glow Panel Discussion Dec 5 5:00 - 6:30 pmSeasonal Celebrations from Around the World

Martha’s Vineyard Museum

Thursday December 5
5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

On Thursday, December 5, Rabbi Caryn Broitman will be participating in a special panel discussion at the Martha’s Vineyard Museum celebrating the rich diversity of winter traditions observed by Islanders from various cultural backgrounds.  The cost of attendance is:

MVM Members: $15; Non-Members: $25.

The evening will begin with an Indigenous experience shared by Linda Coombs, followed by storytelling about Diwali and Lohri with Uma Datta, Hanukkah and the Jewish “festival of daughters” (Chag HaBanot) with Rabbi Caryn Broitman, Bodhi Day with Barbara Dacey, Winter Solstice with Rebecca Gilbert, and Kwanzaa with Freedom Cartwright. We’ll also explore Christmas traditions and a traditional Brazilian Christmas. Enjoy complimentary coffee, tea, cocoa, and cookies provided by Gina Stanley with your ticket. Come connect and celebrate the season’s warmth and diversity!

 

Register here

A Letter from the Rabbi – November 8, 2024

In memory of Vivian Silver, z”l

Oz V’Shalom, A Sermon for Yom Kippur Morning 5785

I would like to talk to you this morning about two important ideas in our tradition: strength and peace; oz v’shalom. In the Bible, Psalm 29 ends with the verse: H’ oz l’amo yiten; H’ yevarech et amo vashalom. “God will give strength to his people; God will bless his people with peace.” So we might ask, what is the relationship between strength and peace?

Which Side are You On? Empathy and Compassion as a Road to Healing and Peace A Sermon for Kol Nidrei 5785

It’s interesting when we think about our lives and the memories of seemingly mundane things that stick with us. Over the past few months, I have thought of one memory in particular when I was in 7th grade and started to be more tuned in to news. It was 1974, the year after the Yom Kippur war, and I had begun to follow as well as I could the tensions on the borders between Israel and her neighbors. Every strike or harm against Israel affected me. And being a budding young activist who wanted to make a difference, I decided to write petitions against actions the Arab countries were taking against Israel, and to get my classmates to sign them.

L’Dor Vador, Halleluya A Sermon for Rosh HaShanah 5785

Look around you for a moment.  There are people in our community from young children to elders approaching their 100th year.  What a miracle that all these generations are here together, celebrating our 3000-year-old tradition on this New Year.  L’Dor vador, from generation to generation.”   Halleluya.

I want to talk about this idea of l’dor vador today.  For if there is one phrase from our liturgy that speaks to people universally, it is that phrase—L’dor vador.

A Letter from the Rabbi – September 6, 2024

In memory of Vivian Silver, z”l