Thursday, 13 February 2020

Al Hanissim - Chanukah vs Purim - the background facts

The prayer Al Hanissim, which is added to the central Shemona Esrai and Birchart Hamazon (Grace after Meals), commemorates Purim and Chanukah as acts of Divine intervention.


The basics of both holidays are known to even young children and both holidays are celebrated with joy and merriment and thanksgiving. But I suspect little attention is paid to how radically different the two versions are in style, tone and content.

This blog focuses on their background facts; the next blog will examine the actual prayers.


Background Facts[i]


1.    Timeline

Both holidays commemorate events that occurred centuries after the time of Moses and the Chumash.
(As such, the stringencies of the Torah re: Shabbat and Yom Tov Holidays do     not apply.)
Purim occurred during the Persian Empire period when King Achashverosh ruled 127 provinces from India to Nubia (Cush) (Megilat Esther Ch 1:1).
The Maccabee revolt and restoration of the Temple took place centuries later: long after Persia was conquered by Alexander the Great (died 323 BCE) and his empire split between his 3 generals.  
In 168 BCE the Seleucid Greek ruler, Antiochus IV, banned Jewish religious worship and other practices.  Matityahu and his sons rebelled in 167 BCE and the Temple and monotheistic Jewish worship was restored in165 BCE. (The struggle, however, did not end until 142 BCE as explained below.)

2.  Holiday’s Purpose and Heroes

Purim

Purim celebrates the ongoing physical survival of the Jewish people.  As the Passover Hagadah states:

“In every generation there arises someone who tries to destroy us.”
Hitler’s genocide and the Holocaust was not the first. Haman’s plot was similar and would have instantly, on a single day, Adar 13, endangered the lives of every Jewish man and woman, young and old, throughout the Persian World Empire.

Salvation was through human agents: led by Mordechai and Queen Esther, and the Jews of the empire who prepared and defend themselves successfully in battle.


Chanukah’s goals

As for Chanukah, it celebrates two other achievements: also through human agents:  the Maccabees, and also through their success on the battlefield.

For over 150 years, the Jews of Judea were exposed to -- and co-existed -- with the dominant Greek culture first spread by Alexander the Great and which continued after his death in 323 BCE in the empires of his successor generals ##.

During all this time, Jews everywhere were free to practice traditional monotheistic Judaism, and the traditional services and practices in the Temple in Jerusalem continued uninterrupted.

The only change was that the position of High Priest was now the de facto ‘ruler’ of Jerusalem and Judea, and an appointment by the Seleucid king[ii].

This powerful and lucrative position, unfortunately, became the focus of heated completion between Onias and Simon and thereafter Jason and Menelaus as detailed in 2 Maccabees ch 3 and 4 and Josephus’ Jewish Antiquities 12:5:1.
In particular, Jason not only offered a great amount of silver for the post, but also promised to build a gymnasium and arena within Jerusalem: where Jewish men and gentiles would exercise and compete ‘the Greek way’: in the nude[iii]. 

Jason won, and these Hellenistic ways became established in Jerusalem even among those whose duty was the Temple, i.e., the Priests and Levites.[iv]

When Jason was replaced by Menelaus, he led an army to besiege Jerusalem but was unsuccessful[v].


Antiochus IV’s universal ban (168 BCE)

The ‘conflict’ between traditional Jewish values and Hellenistic ways that bubbled over under Jason, is often seen as the impetus for Antiochus IV’s decrees outlawing Judaism, its practices and monotheistic worship[vi].

But neither the author of 1Maccabees nor 2 Maccabees saw it this way.
Nor did Josephus, Jewish Antiquities Book 12:5:5.

1 Macabees ch 1: 41      http://www.usccb.org/bible/1maccabees/1

Then the king wrote to his whole kingdom that all should be one people,
and abandon their particular customs. All the Gentiles conformed to the command of the king.  And many Israelites delighted in his religion; they sacrificed to idols and profaned the sabbath.  [My red and underlining.]


2 Maccabees ch. 6:8-10      http://www.usccb.org/bible/2maccabees/6

Following upon a vote of the citizens of Ptolemais [modern Acre], a decree was issued ordering the
neighboring Greek cities to adopt the same measures, obliging the Jews to partake of the sacrifices and putting to death those who would not consent to adopt the customs of the Greeks. It was obvious, therefore, that disaster had come upon them.     [My red .]


The above Maccabees passages make clear the ban on Jewish traditional practices applied well beyond Jerusalem and the tiny area of Judea.

Jews living in Acre and any of the other Decapolis: the ‘10 Greek cities’ created in the Middle East by Alexander the Great and his successors[vii], all became subject to the ban; as would any Jewish community throughout the Empire.

And not just Jews and Judaism.  Put simply, Antiochus’ decree applied to all peoples under his rule.

For centuries, religious pluralism was the norm. Each land and peoples followed their own religion, deities and cultural traditions, but under Antiochus IV’s decrees, they too must now worship and follow the ‘Greek way’.

Then, for some reason, Antiochus IV Epiphanes (the Living God), decided that everyone from Babylon through the Fertile Crescent to the border of Ptolemaic Egypt had to convert to the Greek religion and practices: especially worshipping  Zeus and Dionysus, the god of wine, revelry, fertility and theatre[viii].

Josephus, Jewish Antiquities Book 12:5:5, records how the Samaritans readily accepted Antiochus’ decrees and converted. Ever since they were settled in the former, northern Kingdom of Israel in 722 BCE, they had practiced a variation of monotheistic Judaism: adopted the Jewish God of the land, adopted the Chumash (with their own changes) as ‘holy scripture, kept the Sabbath, and built their own temple to the monotheistic God on Mount Gerizim.

Now, in light of Antiochus’ decrees, they readily acquiesced and abandon
 their religious practices. They even approached the Seleucid king for permission to rename their temple The Temple of Zeus the Greek God
  [The Temple of Jupiter Hellenius in Jospehus’  Romanization.].


If any other peoples and their religious leaders resisted this forced conversion and ‘assimilation’ or how the Jewish communities in Babylon and Mesopotamia responded, I do not know.


But 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees and Josephus record the responses in Judea: refusal -- leading to martyrdom, and, ultimately, open rebellion under the Maccabees.

Here is Josephus’ quick summary re: defiance:

They every day underwent great miseries, and bitter tormentsFor they were whipped with rods; and their bodies were torn to pieces, and [they]were crucified, while they were still alive, and breathed. They also strangled those women and their sons whom they had circumcised, as the King had appointed: hanging their sons about their necks as they were upon the crosses. And if there were any sacred book, or the law found, it was destroyed: and those with whom they were found miserably perished also.  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          (My underlining.)
https://penelope.uchicago.edu/josephus/ant-12.html   Jewish Antiquities:                      Book 12:5:4


Goal #1  Preserving Judaism and the Temple
For Jews, the ban, on penalty of death, applied to circumcision, kashrut, Torah study, observance of the Sabbath and Holy Days, and monotheistic worship at the Temple in Jerusalem[ix].
When the Maccabees quickly revolted in 167 BCE, it was not, as noted above, a response to Hellenization per se, but to sudden, enforced pagan religious practices and the outlaw of monotheistic, traditional Judaism.
Matityahu’s battle cry was – copying Moses to the faithful Levites after the Golden Calf (Exodus 32: 26) -- “Who is for God, follow me!”[x]. For the initial goal was the preservation of Judaism:  its monotheism, customs and Temple worship.

In 165 BCE the Maccabees gained control of Judea and Jerusalem and cleansed the Temple and restored traditional Jewish temple worship and other customs. 

Even though Antiochus IV died the following year,164 BCE, forced assimilation was still Seleucid policy and goal.

In 163 BCE, a massive army led by the young new ruler, Antiochus V, and general Lysias attacked again, defeated the Maccabees in the battle of Beth Zachariah and then laid siege to Jerusalem and the Maccabees sheltered inside.  Fortunately, Antiochus V and his army at the last minute had to return to Antioch to defend his throne and a ‘peace agreement’ was signed with Judah Maccabee.

The agreement restored Jewish freedom of worship and practices everywhere, Jewish control of the Temple and its services, and Judah Maccabee was to remain the ‘ruler’ of Jerusalem and Judea under Seleucid overlordship as High Priest. [xi]

But Antiochus V and Lysias soon were killed by Demetrius I who again sent an army to invade Judea in 162 BCE, forced the Maccabees to flee Jerusalem, and placed Hellenist Alcimus as High Priest and ruler.[xii]

Maccabee successes in guerrilla warfare triggered another massive Seleucid army invasion and battle in 161 BCE. The Seleucid general, Nicanor was killed and his troops fled. Judah Maccabee and his men once again had control of Judea and Jerusalem [xiii]. And Judah maccabee again resumed the role of High priest/ruler while Alcimus was forced to flee.

 But in 160 BCE, another Seleucid army invaded to restore Alcimus as High Priest and ruler. They were victorious at the battle of Elasa.  Judah Macabee was killed in the fighting.  His remaining brothers and forces fled and returned to guerilla warfare.[xiv]

Then, in 153 BCE, thanks to the ongoing musical chairs and ‘game of thrones’ of the Seleucid kingship,  Jonathan Maccabee was able to manoeuver and transform from being a rebel and outlaw to the appointed High Priest and ruler of Jerusalem and Judea. He officiated as High Priest at the Succot festival of that year.[xv]

In 142 BCE, however, Jonathan was treacherously captured and murdered by Diodotus Tryphon, a claimant to the Seleucid throne who had invaded Judea.  Only a sudden heavy snowstorm saved Jerusalem and the remaining Maccabee forces from his siege.[xvi]

On Jonathan’s murder, Simon Maccabee, the last of the Maccabee brothers, became leader.  By agreement with Demetrius II, the successful claimant to the Seleucid throne, Simon was allowed to  continue in the dual roles of High Priest and ruler of Judea under Seleucid overlordship.

In 141 BCE, at an assembly of the entire people of Judea, Simon was officially accepted in these roles.

1 Maccabees 14: 41-43; 46-47

...  the Jewish people and their priests had decided the following: Simon shall be their leader and high priest forever until a trustworthy prophet arises.   He shall act as governor over them, and shall have charge of the sanctuary, to make regulations concerning its functions and concerning the country, its weapons and strongholds.   He shall be obeyed by all. All contracts in the country shall be written in his name, and he shall be clothed in purple and gold.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       (My underlining.)

1 Maccabees 13: 42
… and the people began to write in their records and contracts, “In the first year of Simon, great high priest, governor, and leader of the Jews.”
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       (My underlining.)


Historians consider Simon the founder of the Hasmonean dynasty[xvii].

As Seleucid overlordship and power waned, there were no further attempts to
 reconquer  Judea or appoint a new Hellenist High Priest/ruler.

    


When we celebrate – and teach our children about - Chanukah and the Temple’s cleansing and restoration in 165 BCE and the Maccabees who achieved this, we 
should also remember and teach that the struggle to ensure Jewish monotheism
and traditional Temple worship was far from over in 165 BCE.

As shown above, the struggle was decades long: with many ups and downs – 
battles won and lost; Jerusalem recovered and then lost again; and the High 
Priesthood fluctuating between Hellenist Seleucid appointed High Priests and the Maccabees.            

The ‘peace agreement’ of 163 BCE restoring freedom of religion was great, but its continuation was not assured; especially after the immediate murder and replacement 
of Antiochus V.

Even having appointed Hellenist Jewish High Priests was a threat to traditional Judaism and its continuation.

 In brief, then, the Maccabee victory and control of Judea and Jerusalem which allowed for the redecoration of the Temple in 165 BCE was not the end of the religious struggle to end Antiochus IV’s outright ban on all Jewish rituals and religious practices everywhere.

Yes, thanks to the ‘peace agreement’ negotiated by Judah Maccabee in 163 BCE   Jews throughout the Seleucid Empire were once again free to follow traditional Jewish religious customs and rituals. 

And no succeeding Seleucid ruler ever again initiated forced conversion, i.e., to abrogate the ‘peace agreement’.

But the Seleucid kings did continue to try – again and again -- to impose a Hellenist High Priest/ruler on Judea: an effort that involved repeated invasions and Maccabee battles.

Put simply, the Temple and Judaic practices and traditions were never safe or assured until 142 BCE --  some 25 years!



Goal #2 Self-rule

As should be clear from the above, it must have soon become evident  to the Maccabees that the perpetuation of Judaism and Temple worship could not be left to
the whim of a Seleucid or other Greek ruler nor an appointed Hellenist High Priest/ruler.

Only some form of Jewish self-rule would do so.

So a second goal soon emerged. 

In 586 BCE, the Kingdom of Judea, the last remnant of King David and King Solomon’s Jewish state and self-rule ended with the Babylonian Exile. 

Under Persian rule, even under a Queen Esther and a Viceroy Mordechai, no such autonomy was re-stored.  Judea remained part of a larger Persian province administrated by an appointed governor.

And this ‘structure’ continued under Alexander the Great and his generals and their heirs.

It took 25 years of Maccabee struggle, to 142 BCE, for this second goal to (permanently) materialize.

The Hasmonean dynasty, starting with Simon, continued to rule Judea and 
Jerusalem (and annexed territories) for 103 years[xviii].

Thereafter Herod and his heirs continued the semi-independence of Judea and Jerusalem to 6 CE as client kings under Roman control[xix].

Only in 1948 -- after almost 2000 years – did Jewish self-rule and independence 
return: with the creation of the State of Israel.


3.     Holidays by ‘royal’ decree

Both Purim and Chanukah were initiated/created by ‘royal’ decree rather than rabbinic origin – though with the assent of the people[xx].
The holiday of Purim was established by Queen Esther and Viceroy Mordechai as stated in Megilat Esther Ch 9:17-32, and Chanukah by the victorious Maccabees on 
the purification and rededication of the Temple on 25th of Kislev, 165 B.C.E. (as recorded in the contemporary documents: 1 Maccabees  ch 4:36- 59 and 
2 Maccabees 10: 8 and as found in Josephus’ Jewish Antiquities 12:7:6-7).

That Purim was not ‘imposed’ upon the Jewish people but involved their ‘consent’
 is also stressed in the sources:

Purim:   
כז  קִיְּמוּ וקבל (וְקִבְּלוּ) הַיְּהוּדִים עֲלֵיהֶם וְעַל-זַרְעָם וְעַל כָּל-הַנִּלְוִים עֲלֵיהֶם, וְלֹא יַעֲבוֹר--לִהְיוֹת עֹשִׂים אֵת שְׁנֵי הַיָּמִים הָאֵלֶּה, כִּכְתָבָם וְכִזְמַנָּם:  בְּכָל-שָׁנָה, וְשָׁנָה.
27 the Jews ordained, and took upon them, and upon their seed, and upon all such as joined themselves unto them, so as it should not fail, that they would keep these two days according to the writing thereof, and according to the appointed time thereof, every year;
                                       
The same democratic principle applied to Chanukah as well.  

       1 Maccabees ch 4:59, referring to the 165 BCE celebrations, states:

Then Judas and his brothers and the entire assembly of Israel decreed that every year for eight days, from the twenty-fifth day of the month Kislev,n the days of the dedication* of the altar should be observed with joy and gladness on the anniversary.     
                        (My BOLD, underlining and yellow highlighting.)                                                                                                                                                                        
In the semi-official letter at the start of 2 Maccabees ch 1:10, asking the Jews of Egypt to also celebrate the holiday on its first anniversary, 164 BCE, it specifies: 


Letter 2: 164 B.C. The people of Jerusalem and Judea, the senate [Sanhedrin], and Judas [Maccabee] send greetings and good wishes to Aristobulus, teacher of King Ptolemy and member of the family of the anointed priests, and to the Jews in Egypt.                            
                                         (My BOLD and yellow highlighting.)

And the assent of the people is again mentioned in 2 Maccabees Ch 10:8


Talmud Bavli  ‘amnesia”

It is important to stress the royal origin of Purim, its customs and rituals. All aspects 
were initiated and decreed by Persian Queen Esther and Persian Viceroy Mordechai: something the rabbis of the Talmud Bavli (c. 500 CE) – even with Megilat Esther in 
hand – ignored. 

Talmud Bavli Megillah 2a states plainly: 
 The Gemara explains: This is what we said, i.e., this is what we meant when we
 asked the question: Now, all of these days when the Megilla may be read were enacted
 by the members of the Great Assembly when they established the holiday of Purim itself.
As, if it enters your mind to say that the members of the Great Assembly enacted only the 
fourteenth and fifteenth as days for reading the Megilla, is it possible that the later Sages
 came and uprooted an ordinance that was enacted by the members of the Great Assembly?                                        
 https://www.sefaria.org/Megillah.2a.6?lang=bi&with=all&lang2=en

In contrast, Megilat Esther makes clear Persian Queen Esther and Persian Viceroy Mordechai’s key roles in establishing the holiday and its customs in Ch 9:17-32, 
and in particular verses 31-32.
א  לְקַיֵּם אֶת-יְמֵי הַפֻּרִים הָאֵלֶּה בִּזְמַנֵּיהֶם, כַּאֲשֶׁר קִיַּם עֲלֵיהֶם מָרְדֳּכַי הַיְּהוּדִי וְאֶסְתֵּר הַמַּלְכָּה, וְכַאֲשֶׁר קִיְּמוּ עַל-נַפְשָׁם, וְעַל-זַרְעָם:  דִּבְרֵי הַצּוֹמוֹת, וְזַעֲקָתָם.
31 to confirm these days of Purim in their appointed times, according as Mordecai the Jew and Esther the queen had enjoined them, and as they had ordained for themselves and for their seed, the matters of the fastings and their cry.
לב  וּמַאֲמַר אֶסְתֵּר--קִיַּם, דִּבְרֵי הַפֻּרִים הָאֵלֶּה; וְנִכְתָּב, בַּסֵּפֶר.  {ס}
32 And the commandment of Esther confirmed these matters of Purim; and it was written in the book. {S}
















The Megilah’s texts quoted above refute such a singular, all powerful Sanhedrin role.

Put simply, any suggestion that Purim was instituted by the Sanhedrin/Great Assembly
alone -- in far off Jerusalem -- by their rabbinic decree,  is untenable.


Similarly, the ‘royal’ origin for Chanukah is important to note as the rabbis of the Talmud Bavli (c. 500 CE) seem to have been unaware of -- or tried to ignore -- the role of the Maccabees and their authority in creating Chanukah.

Talmud Bavli, Shabbat 21b states that the holiday was instituted by the Sages -- i.e., 
the Sanhedrin -- alone:

The Gemara asks: What is Hanukkah, and why are lights kindled on Hanukkah? The Gemara answers: The Sages taught in Megillat Taanit: On the twenty-fifth of Kislev, the days of Hanukkah are eight. One may not eulogize on them and one may not fast on them. What is the reason? When the Greeks entered the Sanctuary they defiled all the oils that were in the Sanctuary by touching them. And when the Hasmonean monarchy overcame them and emerged victorious over them, they searched and found only one cruse of oil that was placed with the seal of the High Priest, undisturbed by the Greeks. And there was sufficient oil there to light the candelabrum for only one day. A miracle occurred and they lit the candelabrum from it eight days. The next year the Sages instituted those days and made them holidays with recitation of hallel and special thanksgiving in prayer and blessings.

Again, the evidence of the contemporary, semi-official 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees already cited above – written by pious, Orthodox Jews -- refute such a claim.



4.   Name of the holiday

Purim has always been the sole name for this holiday. It was derived from the 
lottery (Persian pur) of Haman as stated in Megilat Esther, ch 9: 24 and 26.

In contrast, Chanukah was originally called the “Festival of Booths in Kislev” for at 
least the first 40 years. (See below.)  Josephus, raised in Judea and of priestly 
descent, only knew the holiday as “Festival of Lights” (Jewish Antiquities Book 12: 
ch. 7:7).  (He makes no mention of any Chanukah menorah or any lighting of 
oil/candles at home as the reason for this name; but rather speculates it was 
symbolic of the temple’s restoration)
(Josephus was a commander in the Great revolt and captured and taken to Rome 
in 67 CE –3 years before the Temple’s destruction in 70 CE.)

The name Chanukah – which mean ‘dedication’ and refers to the Temple --  first
 appears n the late first century CE list of special days called Megilat Tannit
Thereafter it is the name used in the Mishnah (c. 200 CE), Talmud Bavli (c.500 CE), 
the Scholion commentary added to Megilat Tannit centuries later[xxi], and the dubious, 
error filled medieval effort to create an account comparable to Purim’s Megilat Esther: variously called Megilat Antiochus/Hasmoneans/Maccabees/ Chanukah.[xxii]
As argued in the previous blog, “Chanukah – the full story “, the swwitch to the name Chanukah  (i.e., ‘dedication’) was probably instituted after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE as a Zachar L’Mikdash.
And in the hope a Third Temple would soon arise.


5.    Customs and practices
The main customs and practices for Purim are prescribed by Queen Esther and 
Viceroy Mordechai in chapter 9 of Megillat Esther.  Namely, a celebratory family or communal meal (Seudat Purim) on Adar 14 and in ancient walled cities on Adar 15 (Shushan Purim); exchanging gifts of food and drink with friends in advance of the above meal; giving gifts of food and drink to the poor for their Purim meal (v. 22). 

Even the Fast of Esther beforehand is of royal origin (ch 9:31). Finally, the very scroll 
we read I synagogues on this holiday, Megilat Esther, was produced by Queen 
Esther and Viceroy Mordechai (ch.9:9 and 32).

(Hamentachen pastries -- as their Germanic/Yiddish name indicates -- are of late medieval origin.  Dreidels with their four sides and markings are gambling devices; possibly of Greek or Roman origin or a much later Irish/English invention which 
became popular in Germany.[xxiii]

However, the customs of Chanukah that we practice today, and for centuries before 
us: lighting candles/oil at home, using a special Chanukah menorah, eating oil cooked potato latkes and jelly donuts and the story of the ‘miracle of oil’ –-- all evolved 
post-70 CE, i.e., after the destruction of the 2nd Temple.  (As argued in the previous blog, “Chanukah - the full story”.)

       They are rabbinic and/or folk culture in origin.

The first rededication celebrations by the Maccabees and people were all about restoring normal Temple services.  The 8 day length of the holiday, the procession 
with palm branches through the streets and sacrifices[xxiv] were all copied from the
fall harvest festival, Succot/Shemini Atzeret - which had been banned for at least two years by Antiochus (2 Maccabees Ch 1:6-7).  The new holiday, in fact was called “the festival of Booths [Succot] in Kislev” in 164 BCE and still so 40 years later in 124 BCE  (2 Maccabees ch 1:18  and 9).
(See previous blog “Chanukah – the full story” for more details.)

6.    Date of Holiday
Purim celebrations are held on Adar 14 and in ancient walled cities on Adar 15, with
 the Fast of Esther preceding. All because the Adar 13 was the day chosen by 
Haman’s lottery for the mass extermination of all Jews. Thanks to the interventions 
by Mordechai and Queen Esther, the plot was defeated. The Jews around the 
Empire successfully defended themselves on Adar 13 and in the capital Shushan, 
the fighting lasted for  two days.


Chanukah
Why start 25th Kislev? 

 According to the contemporary and semi-official books of the Maccabees, the 
Temple’s rededication took place on the exact same day (or anniversary of) when Antiochus first defiled the Temple with a pagan pig sacrifice two years beforehand:  
the 25th of Kislav . 
(1 Maccabees  4:54;   2 Maccabees 10: 3, 5)  

1 Maccabees  1: 54 and 59 note that Antiochus had pagan alters set up as well throughout  Judea and forced all Jews to make pagan sacrifices monthly on the 25th 
of the month – which 2 Maccabees 6: 7 adds -- was his birth day.]

(NOTE: The later, 1st century CE historian Josephus, in his Jewish Antiquities ch 12: 7:6 says it was dedicated on the same day Antiochus had left it abandoned 3 years earlier[xxv].)


7.    Holiday length

Purim is celebrated for one day as noted above with a preceding fast day. All is
 detailed in Megilat Esther, ch. 9.

As to why Chanukah is 8 days long, the contemporary and semi-official sources --preserved in the Greek Septuagint – make clear it is to emulate the banned
 celebrations for eight (8) days of Succot/Shemini Atzeret.

2 Maccabees ch.10:6-7 states:

Carrying rods entwined with leaves,* beautiful branches and palms, they sang hymns of grateful praise to him who had successfully brought about the purification of his own place.”

As Antiochus had banned all Jewish holiday services and celebrations, including 
the 8 day Succot/Shemini Atzeret harvest festival, the Maccabees chose to revive 
that missed celebration and mimic it: in length, the lulav procession (listed above 
and following Leviticus 23:40) and Temple sacrifices.

It is also probably why the annual Chanukah festival was called “the feast of Booths
in the month of Kislev” for at least 40 years.  I.e., In the letter to the Jew of Egypt
in 164 BCE (2 Maccabees 1: 18) and 40 years later in a second letter to Egypt dated 124 BCE (2 Maccabees 1:9)

(NOTE: The later, 1st century CE historian Josephus, in his Jewish Antiquities 12:7: 7 simply states the holiday was made in perpetuity 8 days long.[xxvi])
     
The claim in the Talmud Bavli, Shabbat 21b, that Chanukah is eight (8) days long to commemorate a “miracle of oil’, is, as argued in the previous blog, is simply a ‘pious fiction’.

It is post-70 CE in origin and was totally unknown to the contemporary and pious
 authors of 1 and 2 Maccabees, and even Josephus: born Yosef ben Matityahu, in Jerusalem, to a priestly family, and captured at age 30 and taken to Rome in 67 CE[xxvii].


8.   Divine role?

It has long been noted that in Megilat Esther, the detailed account of the Purim story, God seems to be absent.  None of the Hebrew names for the Divine ever appear nor
is there any prophet to forewarn nor ‘vision from Above’ nor any ‘obvious’ and highlighted ‘miracle’ in the Purim’s account.

The closest one comes to this is in Mordechai’s message to Esther:Ch 4:13-14

 “Do not imagine that you, of all the Jews, will escape with your life by being 
in the king’s palace.
On the contrary, if you keep silent in this crisis, relief and deliverance will come 
o the Jews from another quarter, while you and your father’s house will perish. 
And who knows, perhaps you have attained to royal position for just such a crisis.”

This is, at best, a very vague reference to God and invokes the principal that God often causes events and actions from the ‘background’ -- so His involvement seems invisible.

However, it is noteworthy that the entire megilah uses Vav Hahefuch: which converts 
future tense verbs into past tense in meaning and past tense verbs into future meaning.
 As I have argued in past blogs, this device is used throughout the Chumash to affirm the Divine nature of the text, its eternal validity, and as the dictation to Moses of a God whose proper name is the Eternal. (The Tetragrammaton of four (4) letters is a conflation of the Hebrew verb TO BE’s tenses of  FUTURE-PRESENT-PAST  -- in this specific order.) 

It is used thereafter throughout the Tanach and Holy Scripture as emblematic of the Divine origin of events and deeds. (Its special use by King David in Psalm 34 is an earlier blog.)
Consequently, its use throughout Megilat Esther --from the very first word -- is an acknowledgement of the Invisible hand of God at work.

As for Chanukah, the same attitude applies: that the events of history are God’s will and
 the outcome of His ‘invisible hand’.

There were no ‘Divine visions’ and no ‘miracles’ recorded in 1 Maccabees and 
2 Maccabees re: the Maccabee revolt and victory.  Nor in Josephus’s account.

But references to God and God’s role in history are found repeatedly in 1 Maccabees
and 2 Maccabees and even Josephus (Jewish Antiquities, 12:7:6-7).

All are testament to the enduring faith of the Maccabees, their followers and the nation
 as a whole.

I emphasize “enduring” for unlike Purim and its one to two days of fighting; a quick 
victory by any standards, the fight against Antiochus IV’s ban on Judaism and Jewish temple services was far from quick.  The rededication in 165 BCE was far from the end 
of the struggle which, in fact  lasted for some 25 years as explained below.

Yes, Temple services and Jewish holidays and practices were restored in 165 BCE, 
a mere 2 years after Mariyah began the revolt, but this was not guaranteed. 

Forced conversion of all the Empire’s local peoples and their religions to the Greek 
Gods and Hellenic culture was enforced until 163 BCE – even after Antiochus IV’s death
 in 164 BCE. And Antiochus iv’s successors continued to send armies -- at times 
year after year --  against the Maccabees to regain direct control of Judea, Jerusalem 
and the Temple and impose a Hellenist High Priest/ruler. 

Only in 142 BCE: some 25 years on, did this stop.

In that year the Seleucid king, Demetrius II, finally give up on reconquering Judea 
and agreed that Simon Maccabee (the last surviving brother) and his descendants 
be High Priest and rulers of Judea and Jerusalem under his overlordship.

The accounts of 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees are long and detailed and filled with martyrdoms: the 7 sons and their mother, the old scribe Eliezer, and many more. Even Josephus recounts the brutality, Jewish defiance and mass martyrdoms[xxviii].

But no clear Divine miracle – not even of a pot of oil (see below).

Of the Maccabees themselves, Matityahu died quietly, but Eliezer died in battle, crushed 
by an elephant. Judah Maccabee died in the great Jewish defeat in the battle of Elasa 
(160 BCE). Jonathan, his successor, was murdered when tricked to a meeting with 
Seleucid claimant to the throne, Diodotus Tryphon (143 BCE).  And, finally, Simon, 
the last brother and leader after Jonathan, considered the founder of the Hasmonean Dynasty, was himself treacherously murdered (in 135 BCE) along with two of his sons 
at a banquet by his own son-in-law, Ptolemy, son of Abubus.

2 Maccabees only records events down to Judah Maccabee’s last victory in 161BCE 
over Syrian general Nicanor; a surprise victory that was made thereafter an annual 
national holiday on – YES – Adar 13.  (See Megilat Tannit.)
The full story down to Simon’s death is recorded in 1 Maccabees.

Again, the ‘miracle of oil’ story was unknown to the contemporary, pious authors of the
 two Maccabee accounts and Josephus.  As noted above and detailed in the previous 
blog: ”Chanukah – the full story”, it was created post-70 CE: after the destruction of the Second Temple’s and the removal to Rome of all of its gold vessels and the great Temple menorah. 

Put simply, no extraordinary ‘visible miracle’ occurred during the 25 year struggle of the Maccabees.

Consequently, when we Jews celebrate the holidays of Purim and Chanukah and  their different customs and distinct ‘mitzvahs’: each so different from the other in many ways,
 we do so acknowledging the ’Invisible hand of God’ at work.

9.     Universal acceptance
Purim was essentially from the start a universal Jewish holiday.
As noted in the first verse of Megilat Esther,
א  וַיְהִי, בִּימֵי אֲחַשְׁוֵרוֹשׁ:  הוּא אֲחַשְׁוֵרוֹשׁ, הַמֹּלֵךְ מֵהֹדּוּ וְעַד-כּוּשׁ--שֶׁבַע וְעֶשְׂרִים וּמֵאָה, מְדִינָה.
1 Now it came to pass in the days of 
Ahasuerus--this is Ahasuerus who reigned, 
from India even unto Ethiopia, [actually Nubia] over a hundred and seven and twenty provinces--
                                                             https://www.mechon-mamre.org/p/pt/pt3301.htm


As the great Persian Empire extended from the Indus Valley through Mesopotamia 
and the Fertile Crescent through Egypt to Nubia, it included nearly all Jewish communities except the few that may have settled in Greece and Italy.

Consequently, Purim’s acceptance as a Jewish celebration among all Jews was 
not hard to achieve.

Chanukah, on the other hand, celebrates the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem, instituted by the Maccabees, and restoration of (semi-) independence. Both applied only to the small area of Judea and Jerusalem under Maccabee control.
As mentioned previously, it was not celebrated in Egypt in 164 BCE nor in 124 BCE.
And as for Babylon and Mesopotamia – where most Jews were living after the Babylonian Exile – the Talmud Bavli is our only source.
Chanukah is discussed in the volume Shabbat. Regarding candle/oil lamp lighting 
and placement on pages 21a-b, 22a-b, 23a-b, and regarding additional, special 
prayers on 21b and 24a.

The key passages are the following:   https://www.sefaria.org/Shabbat.21b.10?lang=bi                                                 
21 b   The Gemara asks: What is Hanukkah, and why are lights kindled on Hanukkah?  The 
Gemara  answers: The Sages taught in Megillat Taanit: On the twenty-fifth of Kislev, the days 
of Hanukkah are eight. One may not eulogize on them and one may not fast on them. What 
is the reason? When  the Greeks entered the Sanctuary they defiled all the oils that were in
the Sanctuary by touching  them. And when the Hasmonean monarchy overcame them and 
emerged victorious over them, they searched  and found only one cruse of oil that was placed
with the seal of the High Priest, undisturbed by the  Greeks. And there was sufficient oil there ]
to light the candelabrum for only  one day. A miracle occurred  and they lit the candelabrum 
from it eight days. The next year the  Sages instituted those days and made them holidays 
with recitation of hallel and special thanksgiving in prayer and blessings.

24a A dilemma was raised before the Sages: What is the ruling with regard to the obligation 
to  mention Hanukkah in Grace after Meals? The dilemma is: Since it is merely an obligation 
by rabbinic law, do we not mention it? Or, perhaps due to publicity of the miracle, we mention it. 
Rava said that Rav Seḥora said that Rav Huna said: One does not mention it. And if, nevertheless, 
he comes  to mention it, he  mentions it in the blessing of thanksgiving. The Gemara relates that 
Rav Huna bar  Yehuda happened  by Rava’s house on Hanukkah. When, after eating, he came 
to recite Grace after  Meals, he thought  to mention Hanukkah in the blessing: Who builds 
Jerusalem. Rav Sheshet said to the yeshiva students: One mentions Hanukkah in Grace after 
Meals just as he does in the  Amida prayer. Just as in the Amida prayer one mentions Hanukkah 
in the blessing of thanksgiving, so too, in Grace after Meals on  mentions Hanukkah in the 
blessing of    thanksgiving.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          (My yellow highlighting.)

Put simply, according to the Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 21b and 24a:

1. Chanukah was instituted in 164 BCE by the Sages of the Great Assembly/
 Sanhedrin alone. 

2. Chanukah and its eight (8) days are celebrated because of the ‘miracle of oil’. 

3. All the additional prayers: saying hallel and the special Chanukah ‘thanksgiving’ 
prayer (i,e., Al Hanissim)  were set by the above Sages   of the Sanhedrin in 164 BCE.

The only matter under dispute was if Al Hanissim should be added to Grace after 
Meals, and, if yes, at which section.

Rav Huna, the Head of the Sura academy (died 290/297 BCE)[xxix]  did not include
 it at all, Rav Huna bar Yehuda did include it with the section on Jerusalem and
 Rav Sheshet told his yeshiva students to include it in the blessing of thanksgiving.

 As such, these Talmud Bavli passages assert that all Jews: even those beyond tiny Judea, celebrated Chanukah by rabbinic/Sanhedrin decree from 164 BCE onward.

As noted above, this was not the case with the Jews of Egypt.

And the claim the Jews in Babylon and Mesopotamia did so from 164 BCE onward
 is dubious.
Babylon and nearby Sura and Pumbedita were under Seleucid rule for almost another 40 years.

For Seleucid rulers to allow Jews anywhere in the Empire to celebrate Chanukah and the Maccabees’ rebellion would have been unthinkable.

They banned Judaism (and other local religions) until late 163 BCE, and thereafter again and again invaded Judea, laid siege to Jerusalem in efforts to impose a Hellenist High Priest/ruler: who would be the Head of the Sanhedrin[xxx]. 

Alcimus, the Hellenist High priest/ruler imposed by the Seleucids, would have been Head of the Sanhedrin for most of the time between 162 BCE and his death in 159 BCE, i.e., whenever Judah Maccabee and his followers were forced out from Jerusalem[xxxi].

Only c. 127 BCE did Seleucid rule over ancient Babylonia end, as Parthia took
 over control[xxxii].   

Also, the Talmud’s ‘reason’ for the holiday and its eight (8) day duration is incorrect. 

The ‘oil miracle’ story is of post -70 CE creation and totally unknown to the contemporary Orthodox authors of 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees, and even unknown to Josephus, who was of priestly family, and lived in Judea until age 30.
So too the Chanukah customs discussed in the Talmud re: any candle/oil lighting or special Chanukiah menorah; they were also unknown to the early, contemporary sources and even Josephus.  Again, most likely post-70 CE innovations.
 (See for detailed arguments the blog “Chanukah – the full story”.)

Consequently, whether Jews in areas outside Judea, who were still under Seleucid rule to at least c. 127 BCE, celebrated Chanukah and the Maccabees’ rebellion is questionable.  And the emphasis on the ‘miracle of oil’ and home oil lights and Chanukiah are certainly post-70 CE.


CONCLUSION

Researching Purim and Chanukah as preliminary background information for a better understanding of my original focus: the two versions of the prayer, Al Hanissim, have uncovered many surprises. 

Thanks to the inclusion of Megilat Esther in the Hebrew Canon, the story of Purim, 
its Mordechai and Queen Esther heroes, and detailed events have long been known
to every Jew: both adult and child.

However, that has not been the case with Chanukah. 

The Talmud Bavli’s texts represent later, evolved ideas and customs: re: the 
‘miracle of oil’ and home lights and Chanukiah, the instant ‘universality’ of 
Chanukah, and a monolithic belief that both Purim and Chanukah were instituted by the Sanhedrin in Jerusalem – alone.

All of this is in conflict with the two contemporary Maccabees sources: recorded by pious Jews, and even Josephus, of priestly family, who lived in Judea until 67 CE.

Put simply, the veils of times long past, lack of access to contemporary sources and  ‘pious blinkered thinking’ have led to the Talmud’s inaccuracies.

Also, as noted in the previous blog “Chanukah – the full story”, the Scholion for Megilat Tannit for Kislev 25 and the discredited and error filled Megilat Antiochus/Maccabees/ Hasmoneans/ Chanukah– have only muddied the waters
 further.

It is unfortunate 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees, the true story of the Maccabees 
and Chanukah, did not end up in the Hebrew Canon, and have for millennia been unknown to Jewish rabbis, scholars and the Jewish general public.

Similarly Josephus’ Jewish Antiquities.

Fortunately, the Jews of Egypt have had access to the Maccabees text ever since the
3rd century BCE Greek Septuagint translation which included them as Holy Scripture. 


Christians have also had access to the two Maccabees for well over a millennium and a half: ever since Jerome’s translation of the Hebrew Tanach, the Latin Vuglate (c.405 CE) also included the additional texts found in the Septuagint.

1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees have consequently been available to this day (in Latin, Greek and various vernacular translations) to all Catholics and Eastern Greek Orthodox Christians in their bibles, and were long included in many Protestant translations, especially the landmark King James Bible (1611) and its offspring.[xxxiv]

We Jews alone have been denied the ‘full story’ of Chanukah, and have too long relied on the Talmud Bavli and related religious sources for Chanukah -- and even Purim-- and their ‘pious, blinkered thinking’.


_______________________________________________________________________________
# #   As a side note, Hellenism,  the culture of ancient Greece -- first spread by Alexander the Great and his conquest --  became the intellectual and scientific foundation of every society and culture it touched.

The indebtedness of Western culture -- even today -- to those ancient Greeks is enormous.

Direct democracy from Athens [Representative democracy came from the early Roman Republic], the Olympic games and sports in general, theatre[1] and its offsprings: film and TV,  literature (Homer)  life-like sculpture in marble and bronze, realistic  painting, architecture and engineering, and the systematic study of Science (Aristotle), medicine (Hypocrates), mathematics and geometry (Pythagoras), geography and anthropology (Herodotus),  philosophy and political science (Socrates, Plato, Aristotle) and history (Thucydides).  

Their inventiveness and ideas overwhelmed the lands conquered by Alexander the Great, were quickly adopted by the Romans, the Arab world after 622 CE and only 'rediscovered' in Europe during the truly appropriate label: Renaissance.

Josephus' Jewish Antiquities and even 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees follow in Thucydides’ footsteps.




[i] All texts from  I Maccabees are from http://www.usccb.org/bible/1maccabees; all texts from 2 Maccabees are from http://www.usccb.org/bible/2maccabees; ansd all texts from Josephus’ Jewish Antiquities are from https://penelope.uchicago.edu/josephus/ant-12.html
[iii] Briefly mentioned in 1 Maccabees 1:11-14 and in much detail in 2 Maccabees  Ch. 4:7-20 and Josephus, Jewish Antiquities Book 12:5:1
[iv] 2 Maccabees ch 4:14
[v] 2 Maccabees ch. 5:5-7
[ix] 1 Maccabees ch 1: 41-64; 2 Maccabees Ch 6-7; Josephus’ Jewish Antiquities, book 12 ch. 5:4
[x] Josephus, Jewish Antiquities Book12: ch. 5:4 and ch 6: 2
xii Maccabees ch 7  
[xiii] 1 Maccabees ch 7
[xiv] 1 Maccabees ch 9
[xv] 1 Maccabees ch 10, especially verse 21.
[xx]  While some of the Hasmonean coinage inscriptions refer to the Hasmoneans as absolute kings, e.g., “Yehonatan the King” and “Yehonatan the King”, other coinage have a more ‘modest’ and ‘democratic’ tone: “ Yehochanan the High Priest, Head of the Council of the Jews” and  “Matityahu the High Priest, Council of the Jews”.  See Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasmonean_coinage  
[xxiv] See 1 Maccabees 4: 50-53 and http://www.usccb.org/bible/2maccabees/1 footnote there to verse 9.    
     There is an interesting mention of Chanukah’s Succot-like sacrifices of bulls in Talmud Bavli, Shabbat 21b   re: dispute of two elders in Sidon.  

[xxx] Mishnah Sanhedrin 4:2 notes the Great Assembly was to be made up mainly of priests and Levites. Under the Maccabees/Hasmoneans, their family ruler/leaders acted as the Heads of the Sanhedrin. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanhedrin
[xxxii] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthian_Empire
[xxxiv] See Edgar J. Goodspeed, The Complete Bible: an American Translation, Un. Of Chicago,  first ed. 1923, page iv to the Apocrypha section following page 883.  Also, Wikipedia’s  final section on Megilat Esther at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Esther

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