Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    A LIGHT BY THE WINDOW

    Who doesn’t love Chanukah?
    Family gathering around the menorah,
    basking in its light, singing together the
    age-old melodies of Haneiros Hallalu and
    Ma-oz Tzur. Soon after, it’s time to take
    seats around the table, enjoy some hot
    sizzling latkes, and play a game or two of
    dreidel. Memories that warm our hearts and
    souls.
    Antiochus IV, leader of the Syrian-Greek
    empire, wished to spread his power and
    influence. His goal was to Hellenize our
    nation, making them one with the Greeks.
    He brought Greek culture to the Holy Land,
    and wanted the people to participate in
    Greek entertainment, take on Greek names,
    dress in Greek styles, and study Greek
    philosophy. To act and even think “Greek”.
    Antiochus waged a war against the Jewish
    soul. He tried to destroy our connection to
    HaShem, crush our spirit, and break down
    the Jewish home. To rob us of all things
    Jewish, a Holocaust of the Jewish soul.

    He enacted edicts forbidding Shabbos,
    Rosh Chodesh, Bris Milah, and Torah
    study. All of them, mitzvos that solidify
    family and home.
    Perhaps, for this very reason, while we
    light the menorah in shul, the Gemara
    (Shabbos 21b) tells us of the requirement to
    light “Ner ish u-beiso”, to bring the
    Chanukah lights into our homes.
    So we kindle the Chanukah lights in our
    bayis, our home. We celebrate that it’s over
    two thousand years since the miracle of
    Chanukah, and the Jewish home still stands
    strong.
    The Greeks desecrated the Beis HaMikdash,
    and left it in shambles. After a major
    cleansing, the menorah was lit. Despite the
    tyranny of the Greeks, there were people
    who never lost their faith, but searched and
    searched until they miraculously found a
    single sealed cruse of pure olive oil. And
    the great Chanukah neis of the small
    amount of oil that was sufficient for just
    one day, yet burned for eight days.

    Within the word Chanukah are
    the letters that spell Kohein –
    Chof, hei, nun. There is also a
    letter ches, whose numerical
    value is eight. The Kohein lit the
    menorah in the Beis HaMikdash,
    a fire that lasted for eight days.
    Each year, come Chanukah, we
    transform our home into a
    mikdash me’at, a sanctuary in
    miniature. We have the great
    z’chus to be a “kohein” of sorts,
    by lighting our personal menorah,
    thereby elevating our souls.
    The menorah was lit with pure olive oil –
    for it is only when the olive is squeezed
    with great pressure that pure oil is extracted.
    So too, with Am Yisroel, when we are
    “squeezed”, when we are challenged, when
    we suffer at the hands of our oppressors, we
    emerge pure and unadulterated. Like the
    light of the menorah, our light shines bright
    and strong.
    The words shemoneh, ha-shemen and
    neshama, are all comprised of the same
    Hebrew letters, hei, mem, nun and shin.
    This is not random, but there is a
    connection between these three words.
    The miracle of Chanukah lasted for
    shemoneh – eight days. It was a miracle
    that came about through ha-shemen – the
    oil. And Chanukah celebrates the victory
    of the Jewish neshama, the soul within
    every Jew, which throughout history
    refuses to surrender to the spiritual
    oppression and persecution by those who
    seek to uproot our emunah and bitachon,
    our trust and faith in HaShem.
    Antiochus understood the power of our
    people. He knew what makes us tick, and
    forbade Torah study. But this didn’t stop
    many a father and son from hiding in
    caves to study Torah. When the Greek
    soldiers would approach the caves, the
    children would quickly pull out their
    dreidels and call out “Only playing”.
    The letters on the dreidel, are nun,
    gimmel, hey and shin, an acronym for
    neis gadol hayah shom, a great miracle
    happened there. They are the very same
    letters that spell the word Goshna – to
    Goshen. The Torah tells us that Yaakov
    readied his family to join Yosef in Egypt,
    by sending Yehudah ahead to Goshen.
    Rashi cites a Midrash that it was to
    establish a place of learning. Yaakov
    understood that the survival of the Jewish
    people lies within Torah learning.
    As the dreidel spins and spins, and then

    falls, so too is the story of our people. We
    too have spun and spun, falling down again
    and again, forced to leave one country and
    settle in another. But wherever we have
    landed, we established places of chinuch,
    Torah learning, for that is the key to our
    survival.
    The word chinuch – education, shares a
    common root with the word Chanukah.
    How do we survive the golus, the exile? By
    taking a lesson from our zeide Yaakov, and
    establishing places of learning.
    Yaakov himself imparted Torah teachings
    to Yosef, a chinuch that served Yosef well.
    In this week’s parsha of Vayeishev, Yosef
    was sold as a slave, ending up in the house
    of Potiphar. When Potipahr’s wife tried to
    seduce Yosef, it was the “D’mus d’yukno
    shel oviv, The image of his father”, an
    image that reminded him of all the Torah
    his father taught him. An image that gave
    him the inner strength to say no and flee.
    Chazal teach that Yosef saw a reflection of
    his father in a window. By placing the
    menorah by our window, we are also
    reminded of our past, the teaching of our
    avos and imahos. Additionally, the bright
    lights of the menorah shining through our
    window sends a powerful message of how
    proud we are of our heritage, how lucky we
    are to be Jews.
    In the brachos preceding the candle
    lighting, we say “Bayamin ha-heim, bizman
    hazeh” thanking HaShem for miracles past
    and present. Recent events in Eretz Yisroel
    have inflicted much pain, sorrow and loss
    of life, but we must also recognize the
    tremendous miracles that have occurred,
    sparing many more from death and
    destruction. While we are now in a time of
    darkness, let us linger by the Chanukah
    lights, reciting extra tefillos, beseeching
    HaShem to illuminate the lives of our
    brothers and sisters in Eretz Yisroel and
    Jewry worldwide.
    Ah Freilichen Chanukah and Shabbat
    Shalom!