Chanukah Is Approaching
Dear Friend,
Chanukah starts in less than two weeks! As always, our team is making sure our site and staff are primed to help you make this the best Chanukah ever. Here are some handy links to make sure you don’t miss out:
- Menorah lighting instructions and printable blessings
- Recipes for our favorite (and easy) donuts and latkes
- Fun quizzes to make sure you’re up to date
- Candles, gifts and more at our online store
- Stories to savor as the candles burn
- Essays to give spiritual perspective to your holiday
- A guide to hosting your own Chanukah Hakhel celebration
- And a letter from the Rebbe that will set the tone for it all
With wishes for a light-filled, joyous, and spiritually uplifting Chanukah!
Your friends @ Chabad.org
7 Reasons Why Hanukkah 2022 Is Unique
1. It’s a Hakhel Year
In ancient times, every 7 years the entire nation would gather in the Holy Temple to hear the king read from the Torah. Today, the seventh year, known as a Hakhel year, is a special time for gathering Jewish people together to study Torah, gain inspiration, or even just enjoy each other’s company. Chanukah is a perfect time to host YOUR Hakhel gathering!
Download: How to Host a Hanukkah Hakhel
2. It Has Two Sundays
Chanukah can begin on any day of the week except Monday night, but it’s only when it begins on Sunday night—as it does this year—that we light the menorah twice on Sunday. This means that you have two super convenient nights—the first and the eighth—on which to host your Chanukah party.
3. Hanukkah Is During the December Holidays
We’re coming out of a Jewish leap year, which had an additional, 13th month, meaning Chanukah is pretty late in the season this year, starting on Dec. 18th and ending on the 26th. This means that many more people will be off work and free to attend your Chanukah celebration this year.
4. We’re Out of the Pandemic
After two years of drive-thru celebrations, drive-up concerts, and drive-by menorah lightings, we are good and ready to get together in person, socialize, see each other’s faces up close, and enjoy getting sprinkled with powdered sugar as our friends take those first bites out of oversized jelly doughnuts.
Read: 8 Ways We Adapted Chanukah Celebrations During the Pandemic
5. We’ve Collected the Best Recipes for You
After years of frying and fiddling, concocting and confecting, testing and tasting, we’ve put together our collection of all-time favorite Chanukah recipes, including the crispiest latkes, the sugariest doughnuts, and even our classic Chanukah party surprise cake.
Browse: Dozens of Hanukkah Recipes
6. Shabbat Is Rosh Chodesh
Chanukah is the only Jewish holiday that extends from one month to the next. This year, the first day of Rosh Chodesh Tevet is on Shabbat. This means that we get to say the longest Grace After Meals, including special inserts for Chanukah, Shabbat and Rosh Chodesh. Another unique element of this day is that three Torah scrolls are taken from the ark and read from during morning services: one scroll for the weekly Parshah, a second scroll for the Rosh Chodesh reading, and a third scroll for the Chanukah reading. (The only other occasions on which three scrolls are taken out are Simchat Torah, and when Rosh Chodesh Adar or Rosh Chodesh Nissan fall on Shabbat).
7. It’s Now!
The Kabbalists teach us that every moment G‑d creates the world anew. This year brings with it fresh opportunities and new significance that have never existed before and will never exist again. Grab the moment, and make this a Chanukah to remember!
Honoring Rabbi YY Kazen, Father of Judaism in Cyberspace
Dear Friend,
If you are reading this, your life has likely been affected in some way by Chabad.org. Maybe you enjoy our articles and stories, take our quizzes, or stop by to find handy Jewish information. Perhaps, you just “happened” to bump into this article. But the fact is that Chabad.org is part of your life.
After nearly three decades online (Chabad.org was among the first few hundred websites in the world!), it’s hard to imagine a world without Chabad.org.
I remember the first time I came across it. I was on my eighth-grade graduation trip to New York, and we were touring the warren of offices above the large sanctuary of the Lubavitch World Headquarters in Brooklyn.
In one room, we saw a man surrounded by computers, wires, screens, modems, and more.
Turning around on a swivel stool, he greeted us with a grin as bright as his carrot-colored beard and chatted with us about his work, connecting with Jews and non-Jews all over the world via a wonderful new thing called the “Internet.”
Most of us had not yet owned an email address, chatted online, viewed a website, or even placed a cell-phone call—but we were acutely aware that things were happening. The dot-com bubble was beginning to inflate, and words like “AOL,” “keyword,” and “cyberspace” were everywhere.
We did not fully understand what he was doing (who did?), but we were so very proud to know that he was doing the Rebbe’s work, spreading the joy and light of Judaism to the farthest corners of the earth. With vision, sweat and a smile, he was charting a new trail where others saw nothing, creating a lane of spirituality on the information superhighway.
That man was Rabbi YY Kazen, “the father of the Jewish internet,” who tragically passed away in 1998 at the age of 44. Alongside his family, he left thousands of “orphans” around the world, people who had been touched by his revolutionary work—work that we strive to perpetuate and elevate every day here at Chabad.org.
On his yahrzeit, Kislev 12, join me in taking a moment to reflect in gratitude. Do a mitzvah in his memory, and perhaps learn something (online, of course!), to honor the soul of Harav Yosef Yitzchak ben Harav Shlomo Schneur Zalman Kazen.
On behalf of the Chabad.org family,
Menachem
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