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When Does Hanukkah Start and More Facts about Chanukah
accurate summery thank you
Thank you for this article. I have people over every year and make a big Kugel (or noodle pudding) . It's full of cheese and is very rich and sweet. A family favourite.
I am expanding my horizon, per se. I don’t know much about the Jewish or Hebrew traditions of lighting the Menorah. But wanting to learn. No, I am not Jewish. I was watching a movie and it had the lighting of the Hanukah (probably spelled wrong) candles. They light it before Christmas then again before the Passover. I am told that it is light only once a year but others had said twice. Which is it and why? Just curious. Thank you in advance for information.
DVC
The menorah is lit once a year, on each night of Chanukah, which falls out in the winter, often (but not always) around Christmas. There is no tradition for lighting the menorah around Passover; perhaps the movie people had confused the eight-day holidays? Both Chanukah and Passover/Pesach (as well as Sukkot) are eight days.
The menorah is lit each night of Chanukah, one candle being added each night until the last night when all of them are lit, so I suppose saying that the menorah is lit once a year is a mistake - technically it's lit eight times!
By focusing on the authentic history and meaning, this article does justice to the topic of Hannukah. Thank you and kudos, to the author.
I am excited to celebrate this year as this will be something my daughter and I want to teach her children. I long stopped celebrating Christmas because of its roots in pagan worship and isn't, honestly, the birth date of Yashua. Christmas is not even a considered a Holy Day/Feast/Festival day mentioned in the word. Decorating a tree with silver and gold is, but it points to how the pagan worshippers did that. We live in an age where all of this is common knowledge and we are without excuse anymore. I am super excited to honor all of the Holy days that truly honor Him and are not tied to paganism. I hope this helps the world to know that even if you are NOT Jewish and call yourself a true worshipper, these days are beyond "Jewish holidays", they are for everyone who worships the true Creator. Remember the word? Even yhe stranger who chooses this path should honor the way. Shalom!❤️
HalleluYah! I can only hope and pray that more people come out of mystery Babylon. Be careful, though, there are many false traditions in all faith walks.
An example of one to be cautious to question, is where did the candelabra come from? There is no mention of the candelabra in any of the scriptures, only the menorah.
Also, Hannukah is not a commanded feast, it's like July 4th in the states, celebrating national freedom. It's definitely worth celebrating, but as with anything, it can get twisted if doing it for the wrong reasons.
I celebrate all I can, never letting a holiday go to waste.
We too have stopped celebrating Christmas. I wish more people would recognize and stop doing the things of this world. Celebrating Hanukah has become our families new way of staying connected to our savior and creator
The picture shows six candles. It should show eight candles. The difference is very important.
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