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Tevet 5779

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Tevet 5779

We hope you had an enjoyable and light-filled Chanukah, during the darkest time of the year, when the hours of daylight are shortest (at least in the northern hemisphere). It is in this context that the rabbis established the festival of Chanukah, in which we add light to the darkness and publicize an ancient miracle that symbolically, and literally, brought light into the world.

The famous rabbis Hillel and Shammai debated about how we should light the Chanukah candles. Shammai believed that we should start with the full eight candles at the beginning and gradually reduce them from day to day. Hillel, on the other hand, argued that we should start with just one light and increase them until we reach eight. Our tradition preserves both opinions, but ultimately we follow Hillel because, as the rabbis tell us, Ma’alin ba’Kodesh “we only go up in holiness, not down”. In other words, once the lights are lit, and the holiness they bring is present, we can’t reduce that holiness. We learn from this that we should always be striving for more holiness, and that our trajectory in life is up, not down.

No matter how cold or dark it is outside, in the societies we live in, or in our own lives, we start small, light a single candle and watch as it spreads its light and grows in influence so that its whole surroundings become enveloped in its glow.

We wish you a light-filled winter and the courage to keep striving to add holiness to your communities. For some more ideas about light that you can draw on throughout the year, or plan ahead for next year(!), see the resources below. Feel free to share them with your colleagues, friends and family.
 
The Yesod Team

Resources 

Songs about Light

 

Other Resources

View Resource of the Month Archive for resources posted in previous months.