Monday, November 29, 2021

Happy "Early" Hanukkah!

 


                                                      Eight Branches of Hanukkah -- Zoriy Fine 

Hanukkah! How could that be? It sneaked up on me this year -- Adam, my friend, why didn't you give me the heads up?!

Hanukkah, a Jewish celebration of the miracle of light, is one of those moveable feasts, as are so many in different religions, including Christianity. I checked and while this year Hanukkah began last evening, November 28th, in 2019 it began on December 22nd, nearly a month later. Our menorah lives in one of our boxes of Christmas decorations because the two celebrations coincide so often. 


If we hadn't been asleep at the dreidel this year we would have searched out one of our favourite childrens' books Herschel and the Hanukkah Goblins which we read with our kids and now with grandchildren. Two who love this book were with us on the weekend, so we missed that opportunity. 

Something showed up in my email inbox this morning about dreidels created for Jews in China, a reminder that the Jewish diaspora is evident it what we might think are unlikely places. I'll include the news release below, but I'll also wish any Jewish readers a Happy Hanukkah!

Shavei Israel produced hundreds of Dreidels with Mandarin text for Chinese Jews
Kaifeng, China (November 29, 2021)  – In honor of Chanukah, the Jerusalem-based nonprofit Shavei Israel designed and produced hundreds of Dreidels with Mandarin lettering for the Chinese Jews of Kaifeng, China, as well as for 20 members of the community who have already made Aliya to Israel with the organization's assistance. Kaifeng is a city in the central Chinese province of Henan located southwest of Beijing and is home to hundreds of descendants of a once-thriving Jewish community that resided there for well over a millennium. The Dreidels are probably the first ones which has Chinese text on them which appears as follows:
伟大的 - Big; 奇迹 - Miracle, 发生过 - Happened; 这里曾 - here.
 
According to Shavei Israel’s Founder and Chairman Michael Freund, the first Jews to have settled in Kaifeng, one of the ancient imperial capitals of China, were Iraqi or Persian Jewish merchants who traveled along the Silk Road in the 7th or 8th century CE. The community grew and prospered, and in 1163 built a large synagogue, which was renovated repeatedly down through the centuries. “At its peak, during the Ming Dynasty, Kaifeng had as many as 5,000 Jews,” said Freund.
Freund explains that widespread intermarriage and assimilation eventually set in, and the death of the community's last rabbi in the early 19th century heralded the community’s demise as a collective entity. The synagogue, which had stood for 700 years, was destroyed by a series of floods that struck the city in the mid-19th century. According to him, there are currently an estimated 1,000 people in Kaifeng who are identifiable via family trees and genealogical records as descendants of the city’s Jewish community.
 
“The Chinese Jews of Kaifeng are a living link between China and the Jewish people,” said Freund. “Despite the severe restrictions imposed on them by the Chinese government in recent years, the Chinese-Jewish descendants are anxious to learn more about the heritage of their forefathers and we hope these Chinese-language Dreidels that we’ve prepared for them will give them a dose of happiness and light during Chanukah.”





2 comments:

Bagel Tech said...

To be completely honest David... It snuck up on me too!! The Channukah story of the oil for the Everlasting light lasting for eight days is a miracle story. I remember hearing the story read aloud by my mother, as we lit the Menorah every night. It was a heart warming and soulful holiday for my family, and I'm sure many other Jews.

While this is a relatively minor holiday on the Jewish calendar, it's one of my favorite. :)

David Mundy said...

Okay Adam, I'm giving you Hanukkah (or phlegmy Channukah) absolution -- it's a thing I just made up. I'm glad for your happy childhood memories, which are never minor.