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Most holidays that the Jewish people celebrate are marked by physical
manifestations of our happiness. These types of celebrations are often
termed as those “of happiness and feasting.” There is always, however, a
spiritual counterpart to the celebration. These spiritual manifestations
of happiness are often termed as those “of thanks and praise.” By the
holiday of Chanukah, however, we find that the underlying expressions of
our celebratory joy are to be primarily spiritual in nature, that the
holiday is “days of thanks and praise.” The obligatory physical
celebration is lacking.
Rav Shlomo Kluger explains that there is another holiday that shares this
feature. If one were to examine the Torah portions concerning the holiday
of Shavuos, one will not find any mention of what occurred on that date in
history: the giving of the Torah to the nation of Israel at Sinai.
Shavuos, according to what is explicitly stated in the Torah, is not
celebrated because it is the anniversary of this most significant date.
Instead, the holiday is called “Yom HaBikkurim,” the day of the first
fruits, when a special offering signifying the start of the harvest is
brought.
The reason for this is straightforward: the Torah was not given to the
nation of Israel to benefit their physical existence. The Torah was given
to the nation of Israel for the benefit of their souls, their spiritual
existence. Physical expressions of happiness would be a most inappropriate
way to recall such an event. However, physical expressions of happiness
are called for when celebrating the beginning of the harvest period, when
we give thanks for G-d for sustaining us. Therefore, Shavu’os, and its
status of a holiday on which happiness and feasting is called for, is
associated only with “Yom HaBikkurim,” and not the giving of the Torah.
The Bach, on Tur Shulchan Aruch (Orech Chayim 670) writes that by
Chanukah, the decrees and troubles that befell the nation of Israel
stemmed from the fact that the people became lazy in their service of G-d.
Therefore, they were punished by having the Greeks issue an edict that
prohibited them from serving G-d at all. They were not allowed to study
the Torah or keep its precepts. The Chashmonaim fought against that edict.
Ultimately, G-d allowed the Chashmonaim to be victorious in their battles.
The nation no longer suffered from the edict against the Torah. Rav Kluger
says that Chanukah is actually akin to that very day when the nation of
Israel originally received the Torah. Because the nation of Israel was now
openly able to accept and embrace the Torah once again, such an event is
on par with the original acceptance of the Torah. Just as that occasion is
one to be celebrated in spiritual fashion, and not inappropriately with
happiness and feasting, so too Chanukah is to be celebrated aptly, with
the requisite thanks and praise.
Text Copyright © 2006 by Rabbi Yehudah Prero and Torah.org. The author has Rabbinic ordination from Mesivta Tifereth Jerusalem, NY.
Chanukah
History Reenacted
By Rabbi Yehudah Prero