Chanukah Around The World
1) In Alsace, a region of France,
double-decker Hanukkah menorahs were common with space for 16 lights. The two
levels, each with spots for 8 lights, allowed fathers and sons to join together
as they each lit their own lights in one single menorah.
2) There is a custom of placing
your menorah in a place where people will be able to view the lights burning
and appreciate the miracle of the holiday. In some Jerusalem neighborhoods,
there are spaces cut into the sides of buildings so people can display them
outside. Historically in countries like Morroco and Algeria, and even some
communities in India, it was customary to hang a menorah on a hook on a wall
near the doorway on the side of the door across from the mezuzah.
3) In Yemenite and North African
Jewish communities, the seventh night of Hanukkah is set aside as a particular
women’s holiday commemorating Hannah whose sacrificed seven sons rather than
give in to the Greek pressure to abandon Jewish practice and in honor or
Judith, whose seduction and assassination of Holofernes, the Assyrian emperor
Nebuchadnezzar’s top general, led to Jewish military victory.
4) Gift giving at Hannukah time
is primarily a North American custom, but it is easy to make it global by
gifting Jewish items made around the world like hand made necklaces from
Uganda, challah covers from Ghana or kippot from China.
5) In Santa Marta, Colombia,
Chavurah Shirat Hayyam a new Jewish community, has started their own
traditional Hanukkah recipe, instead of eating fried potato latkes, they eat
Patacones, or fried plantains.
6) The Ethiopian and parts of
Indian Jewish communities split off from the larger Jewish community in ancient
time before Hanukkah was established as a Jewish holiday. They only began celebrating
Hanukkah in modern times, when their communities were reunited with other
Jewish communities.
7) In 1839, thousands of Jews
fled Persia, where the Muslim authorities began forcibly converting them, and
settled in Afghanistan. While some of them lived openly as Jews, others hid
their Jewish identity. When Hanukkah time came around they would not light a
special menorah, for fear it would attract the notice of Muslim neighbors.
Instead they would fill little plates with oil and set them near each other. If
neighbors stopped by, they could simply make the menorah disappear by spreading
the plates around the house.
8) The rich culinary traditions
of the Moroccan Jewish community know not of potato latkes or jelly doughnuts.
Rather they favor the citrusy flavors of the Sfenj doughnut, which was made
with the juice, and zest of an orange. Notably, from the early days of nation
building in Israel, the orange came to be associated with the holiday of
Hanukkah as the famed Jaffa oranges came into season in time for the holiday
celebrations.
https://www.myjewishlearning.com/jewish-and/beyond-latkes-hanukkah-around-the-world/
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