Last week, Jill Miller Zimon, a writer from Pepper Pike, Ohio, attended her daughter’s school band concert. Four bands and orchestras performed.
“All four played `Hanukkah, Oh Hanukkah,”‘ said Zimon, laughing. “I thought I was going to tear my hair out.”
Zimon, who’s Jewish, doesn’t think that would have happened a few decades ago. One public-school band playing a Hanukkah number would have been a surprise, let alone four on the same program. But back then, you couldn’t find Hanukkah greeting cards, or Hanukkah wrapping paper or Hanukkah postage stamps.
Now, of course, you can. And for that you can thank Adam Sandler.
Over the past 15 years or so, something has happened to the Jewish Festival of Lights, which began Sunday (Dec. 21) at sundown. The eight-night holiday, a minor one on the Jewish religious calendar, has gone from getting token attention in American culture to receiving its own prominent spot on the nation’s holiday mantel.
You can see it everywhere, from a punk band releasing a Hanukkah album to synagogues hosting No Limit Texas Dreidel tournaments.
Turn on the TV and there’s PBS airing a prime-time Hanukkah music special. There’s Jon Stewart on Comedy Central singing “Can I Interest You in Hanukkah?” There’s Marge on “The Simpsons” shopping at Shlomo’s Judaica Dreidel Blowout Sale.
You can even tune your Sirius-XM radio to channel 3 for Radio Hanukkah, a station dedicated to the holiday.
“Hanukkah seems to have a popularity that it didn’t have previously,” said Rabbi Stephen Weiss of B’nai Jeshurun Congregation in Pepper Pike. “When I think back to my youth and growing up, Hanukkah was an important family time and still is. … You would not hear comedians talking about Hanukkah like you do today. Or Hanukkah being a theme on a sitcom episode. You would never have seen those kinds of things.”
All that changed the night of Dec. 3, 1994.
On NBC’s “Saturday Night Live,” Sandler, guitar in hand, introduced his number: “When I was a kid, this time of year always made me feel a little left out … so I wrote a brand new Hanukkah song for you Jewish kids to sing, and I hope you like it.”
Turns out, everyone did.
“The Chanukah Song” — a hilarious tally of Jewish celebrities mixed with forced rhymes (Hanukkah and “gin-and-tonic-kah”) — became an instant (and enduring) favorite, on the radio and at holiday parties.
Since then, the song and its two sequels have found a unique spot in the canon of American holiday music.
But the song was more than just popular, says Dianne Ashton, a religious studies professor at Rowan University in New Jersey. It inspired other Jewish entertainers to incorporate their Hanukkah experiences in their work, something few had done before.
“Once one person breaks the ice, then other people can say, `Oh yeah, I can create something about Hanukkah, too,” said Ashton, who is writing a book about the history of Hanukkah in America. “But somebody has to begin it, and I think it was Adam Sandler who really made it a national thing.”
With Jews accounting for only about 2 percent of the population, the song also served as a funny, positive introduction to the holiday for Americans who didn’t know any Jews and who thought a latke was something you ordered at Starbucks.
The holiday’s acceptance in mass culture marks the end of a conscious effort, started in the 19th century, to give American Jewish children a holiday parallel to Christmas, according to Ashton.
Hanukkah commemorates the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem in
163 B.C. after a victory by the Jewish Maccabees over the Greeks. Upon taking back the temple and lighting its flame, the Maccabees had enough oil for only one day, yet, as the story goes, the flame burned for eight.
Until the late 19th century, the holiday was celebrated modestly in Jewish homes, with an adult male lighting candles and reciting the blessing. Socializing and feasting probably also were part of the celebration, said Ashton.
It’s hard to tell exactly how things were celebrated because there’s almost no record of it. In her research, Ashton found no mention of Hanukkah in old diaries and letters. Instead, they mentioned the Sabbath, Passover and other, more significant, holidays.
All that started to change in the 1870s — in Ohio of all places.
Because of Cincinnati’s large German population, the traditions of Santa Claus, trees and giving gifts were everywhere. Not wanting Jewish kids to feel left out, Cincinnati rabbis Isaac Mayer Wise and Max Lilienthal began holding Hanukkah festivals in the synagogue.
“Lilienthal said, `Our children shall have a grand and glorious Hanukkah festival as nice as any Christmas festival,”‘ according to Ashton. The rabbis then took their mission of promoting Hanukkah nationwide, urging other congregations to celebrate the holiday.
The renewed Hanukkah took root in the Jewish community. It remained an afterthought, however, in American culture. Until now.
Sandler and the others who have pushed Hanukkah into the mainstream are more comfortable and confident with their Jewish heritage, said Weiss. He credits stronger Jewish youth organizations and day schools with building that self-identity.
And while presents will always be a part of the American Hanukkah celebration — because, as Weiss puts it “kids like presents and kids will always like presents” — the best gift a hip Hanukkah offers is something that can’t be wrapped.
“It’s a wonderful thing for Jewish youth to see their faith and heritage and celebration being accepted in the mainstream. That’s a wonderful affirmation of their identity.”
By John Campanelli
Religion News Service
John Campanelli writes for The Plain Dealer in Cleveland.
Copyright 2008 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission.



posted December 24, 2008 at 10:46 am
I have long maintained that Christians who do not know about and understand Hanukkah will have a diminished sense of the expectations people had in the coming Christ. It is more than Isaiah’s prophesies some some bits and pieces from those little books in the back of the Old Testament. And you do not have a full appreciation of John chapter 1 unless you understand the story of the oil lamp. And even more, you will not understand what happened and how Herod got tied into the whole political situation. This does not mean we have to appropriate the holiday from the Jews. But we need to accept and understand it.
My only hope is that Hanukkah does not get so secularized that it loses its unique meaning. But it is another solstice event – thank the pagans! So light a candle in the dark, watch for angels in
unexpected places, and look to the stars!
Happy Hanukkah, Merry Christmas, wonderful Solstice (a couple days late)!
posted December 24, 2008 at 7:56 pm
Hanukkah, from the Hebrew word for “dedication” or “consecration”, marks the re-dedication of the Temple in Jerusalem after its desecration by the forces of Antiochus IV and commemorates the “miracle of the container of oil.”According to the Talmud, at the re-dedication following the victory of the Maccabees over the Seleucid Empire, there was only enough consecrated olive oil to fuel the eternal flame in the Temple for one day. Miraculously, the oil burned for eight days, which was the length of time it took to press, prepare and consecrate fresh olive oil.
An Islamic shrine, the Dome of the Rock, has stood on the site of the Temple since the late 7th Century AD, and the al-Aqsa Mosque, from roughly the same period, also stands on the Temple courtyard.
Maccabees had the the reason to celebrate Hannukka but how do the present day Jews celebrate Hannukka when the same temple is controlled by a Waqf (an Islamic trust).
Is not their job to sanctify the temple like Maccabees did and then celebrate Hannukka instead of competing with christians and christmas.
Note:
Although it’s a popular holiday for Jews, it is not their most sacred  in fact, the story isn’t even mentioned in the Torah.
Alex Lubet , the Hillel Board of Directors president and a music professor at the University, said Hanukkah doesn’t reflect the full depth of Judaism. Other more sacred holidays include Passover and Yom Kippur.
Laura Supkoff , a Jewish University graduate student, said it’s not a holiday that people would take off work to celebrate.
“It receives a lot more attention than it actually should, just because Christmas is at the same time,†she said.
posted December 24, 2008 at 9:35 pm
Just in case your readers are wondering, No Limit Texas Dreidel is a combination of dreidel and poker.
Best,
Jeremy
http://www.ModernTribe.com
posted December 27, 2008 at 12:17 am
Now if we could only get Yule looked at in such a manner. I get tired of the ridicule and down playing of it. Calendars don’t even list it half the time and never with the name Yule unless they were published by a new age publisher. I have even dropped a note to Dear Abby and Margo about wishing their pagan readers a Happy Yule- or Samhain as they do for other holidays but they never change or do so.
Anyway Happy Holidays for everyone celebrating.
posted December 27, 2008 at 3:08 pm
Ruairi, we just don’t pay enough attention to people who don’t do what we’re doing.
Happy Yule! Ruairi, and Pagansister
Happy Hanukkah, Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays
And
A Very Happy 2009 for everybody!
posted December 29, 2008 at 12:37 pm
kohn
You pose a good question – what are the Jews of the 21st century consecrating? I assume they are rededicating themselves and their community to the concept of freedom and liberation with God. I have compared Hanukkah to our modern 4th of July. Do we actually all sign a renewed Declaration? No, but we do celebrate the day it was first read for the public, and the resulting actions. Christmas is not really about a newborn baby either. It is about remembering to care for each other as parents care for their baby; and how God cares for us in the same way.
Of course Hanukkah was not in the Torah – a silly notion. But neither was King David or the Temple, or Isaiah, or the Psalms, etc… But they are all still valued. I see in the Apocrypha lessons about surviving the Holocausts of time.