Friday, December 30, 2016

What Is Hidden Is Never Lost



Hanukkah has come and almost gone this year.  Locally, I have heard and read very little in our media about this Jewish holiday.  In past years there has been a picture of a menorah on the first day of the holiday as a banner in our local newspaper, and the T.V.  news would feature a segment each night of a large public menorah being lit during the eight days of remembrance.  But here we are on the second to the last day and I see nothing. 

Perhaps this holiday seems absent from me because I’m Christian.  I light our Advent candles, one for the four weeks leading up to Christmas, (a time of waiting and remembering), and then the Christ candle on the 25th of December for the birth of Jesus. 

If I were Jewish I would light a menorah-- one candle each night for 8 days.  When the Jewish people regained their temple from the Syrian army, all the oil for the lamps had been destroyed except for enough for one day.  But that lamp burned for 8 days, which gave them time to make more oil.  This was a sign from God and it is remembered annually during Hanukkah, which means “to dedicate” ( "חנך").

These two traditions blend with a similar kind of ritual of lighting candles, waiting, and remembering.  

So with two days left of Hanukkah, I decided to find the old dreidel (spinning top) is kept in the front room drawer.  (I don’t know where it came from and rarely take it out.) It’s a Hanukkah game and it’s played like this:

The four sides of the top bear four Hebrew letters: nun, gimmel, hey, and shin. Players begin by putting into a central pot or “kitty” a certain number of coins, chocolate money known as gelt, nuts, buttons or other small objects. Each player in turn spins the dreidel and proceeds as follows:
  • nun – take nothing;
  • gimmel – take everything;
  • hey – take half;
  • shin – put one in.


The letters on the dreidel are reinterpreted to stand for the first letter of each word in the Hebrew statement “Neis gadol hayah sham,” which means “A great miracle happened there”.

In my online research I found an excellent article by Rabbi Eliyahu Safran where he writes, “Dreidels are my talisman, my touchstone. They reassure me in the most innocent and delightful way that our miracles will continue.”  

What is hidden is never lost.  Remember the candles and remember the light from them.
Here is Rabbi Safran’s story:


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