Hanukkah (also spelled “Chanukah”) is an eight-day Jewish festival which begins this evening at sundown. The festival commemorates events that took place in Judea more than 2,000 years ago, when the Syrian king Antiochus ordered the Jews to abandon the Torah and publicly worship the Greek gods. This act provoked a rebellion led by Judas Maccabeus, climaxed by the retaking of the Temple in Jerusalem, which had been desecrated by the Syrians. In an eight-day celebration, the Maccabees (as the rebels came to be known) cleansed and rededicated the Temple (Chanukah means “dedication”). According to the Talmud, there was only enough consecrated oil to relight the candelabra for one day, yet, miraculously, it remained lit for eight days. The central feature of the observance of Chanukah is the nightly lighting of the Chanukiah, an eight-branched candelabra with a place for a ninth candle, the shammes, used to light the others. One candle is lit on the first night of Chanukah, and an additional candle is lit on each successive night, until, on the eighth night, the Chanukiah is fully illuminated. Learn more about Hanukkah and see recipes!
Daily Calendar for Friday, December 24, 2027
Explore Other Dates on the Calendar
Daily Calendar
View daily calendar information including holidays, advice, and daily features.
Friday, December 24, 2027
Born
- Kit Carson (frontiersman) –
- Eliza Cook (poet) –
- Juan Ramon Jimenez (poet) –
- Charles Wakefield Cadman (composer) –
- Howard Hughes (industrialist, aviator, and movie producer; born in Houston, Texas) –
- Ava Gardner (actress) –
- Mary Higgins Clark (author) –
- Robert Joffrey (dancer) –
- Ricky Martin (singer) –
- Ryan Seacrest (television host) –
- Pepper (Bolivian gray titi monkey) –
Died
- Peter Lawford (actor) –
- Michael Vale (actor) –
- Cheetah (chimpanzee sidekick in the Tarzan movies of the early 1930s) –
- Charles Durning (actor) –
- Jack Klugman (actor) –
Events
- Treaty of Ghent signed between the U.S. and Great Britain, ending the War of 1812 –
- Stille Nacht (Silent Night) first performed, Oberndorf, Austria –
- Clement Moore’s “A Visit From St. Nicholas” likely written –
- The Eggnog Riot began at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York –
- First great fire of San Francisco –
- Two-thirds of the collection of the Library of Congress (35,000 volumes) and a portion of the Capitol were destroyed by fire –
- Canadian-born Reginald A. Fessenden sent the first extended radio broadcast from Brant Rock, Massachusetts –
- O Holy Night was played on the world’s first radio program broadcast, from Brant Rock, Massachusetts –
- Unofficial Christmas truce began in areas of the Western Front during World War I –
- CONAD (later, NORAD) began to track Santa Claus –
- Catcher Jason Varitek was named captain of the Boston Red Sox –
Weather
- Chicago set a record low temperature of -23 degrees F –
- In Fairfield, Montana, the temperature dropped from 63 degrees F at noontime to a chilly 21 degrees below zero F at midnight –