I don't know how much more I need to defend what I said, but the one rabbi is orthodox and the other one is conservative.
But I bet no matter what I would have answered, you would find a way to make them out to be oddballs. If I say orthodox and conservative, you will say, "Oh, those guys don't like the commercialism of hanukkah so they deny its history" and if I said reformed you would say, "Oh, those guys are so liberal they don't use the traditional writings as authority so they deny its history."
If even Jews don't agree on the practice and origins of hanukkah, to doesn't make much sense to keep arguing over it. My rabbis said hanukkah is a 19th century thing, your rabbi said it's from the middle ages, PGs rabbi said it's from ancient times. I've read half a dozen books on the subject that say hanukkah was a minor event in the Jewish calendar not even celebrated by most Jews until the 19th century when Christmas became a big deal (before the 19th century, even Christians didn't make a big deal out of Christmas. Most business didn't close and people exchanged small gifts at the dinner table, if they exchanged gifts at all), and that when hanukkah started to be celebrated by the larger Jewish community, it was contraversial because it wasn't a "sacred holiday ordained by God" and there was a lot of debate (I've read many of the letters rabbis and scholars wrote to each other on the subject) about whether or not a big deal should be made out of a holiday whose only existence came from Christian sources.
But you win Menno. Now I feel like a humbug, too.
I had no idea that I was opening up a subject that would invite non-anabaptists to come into our forum to break the rules about debating.
Education and scholarship is definitely not something prized and valued around here. People who are educated should just keep silent and let misinformation flourish in the name of political correctness, I guess.
Okay, here's the politically correct thing to say, so we can end this debate:
"Hanukkah is one of the most important holidays on the Jewish calendars and always has been, scholars agree that Jews everywhere gave gifts on 8 nights throughout the ages and Jesus lit 8 candles every december in celebration of Hanukkah, as we know it today."
So enough already!
