http://thebusysignal.com/2010/12/01/rethinking-hanukkah-the-dark-history-of-the-festival-of-lights/

Rethinking Hanukkah: The Dark History of the Festival of Lights
2010 December 1

by J.A. Myerson

OK, so: there’s a civil war. On one side is a group of reformers, who 
break from divine-right totalitarianism to design a society based on 
reason, philosophy, comity with national neighbors and religious 
moderation. On the other is a violent group of devout fanatics who 
engage in terrorist warfare in their quest to institute religious law 
that includes ritual sacrifice and compulsory infant genital mutilation. 
Which side are you on?

And if the second group defeats the first, returns the land to 
theocratic despotism, institutes a program of imperial conquest and 
declares the abolition of secular thought, isolating itself from the 
rest of the civilized world for a century, do you celebrate their victory?

Easy answers, surely, if this scenario were situated in the Muslim world 
of the 21st century. But, starting tonight, a great many Jews the world 
over, including—or perhaps especially—secular American Jews, will light 
candles and sing prayers in observance of Hanukkah, which commemorates 
the historical incident aforementioned. The sectarian factions were 
traditionalist Jews and their Hellenized brethren. The location was 
Jerusalem. The year was 165 BCE.

A decade earlier, Antiochus IV Epiphanes had assumed rule of the 
Seleucid Empire, which stretched farther east than Alexander the Great’s 
Macedonian Empire, from modern day Saudi Arabia all the way to what are 
now Turkmenistan and Pakistan. Antiochus appointed Jason—probably in 
reward for a bribe—to the governorship of Judea, then a client state of 
the Seleucids, and, in 167 BCE, Jason did away with Jewish law and 
rebuilt Jerusalem in a Greek model. This included banning genital 
mutilation and Jewish sacrifice, permitting Jews to marry gentiles and 
instituting an internationalist program exemplified by participation in 
the Olympic Games.

To be sure, Seleucid Judea, being an imperial protectorate, was hardly 
the democratic polis par excellence; widespread corruption and 
capricious political leadership combined with a measure of jealous 
authoritarianism hardly constitute the virtuous city. Nevertheless, a 
secular, multicultural state is subject to civic reform in a way that 
dictatorial theocracy is not, and the latter is precisely what the 
Maccabees sought to establish. (The Maccabees are routinely called a 
“rebel army,” but really this is a romantic and obfuscatory term; 
“terrorist militants” is a well chosen substitute, and the one we use 
for their contemporary analogues).

Judah Maccabee, whose father Matthias had had to flee Judea after 
killing a Hellenistic Jew for worshiping before an idol, served as the 
chief of that fundamentalist army, his brothers Jonathan and Simon 
occupying the upper lieutenancy. Their holy war featured the demolition 
of pagan altars in the villages, the ritual cleansing of the temple and 
compelling the circumcision of children. Their terror campaign worked 
and, in 165 BCE, after just two years of secular law, the Maccabees 
overtook Judea, establishing the political reign of the Hasmonean dynasty.

Not content with the victory, Judah continued the war—when was the last 
time holy war ended with the conquest of but one land?—and expanded the 
boundaries of Israel, setting a nationalist-expansionist precedence 
whose reverberations we (leave alone the Palestinians) continue to feel. 
Between Judah’s regime and the subsequent administrations of his 
brothers, the fanatical Maccabee Israeli army conquered the port of 
Joppa and the fortress of Gezer and razed the Acra in Jerusalem. 
Hasmonean rule lasted until 64 BCE, when the Romans moved in and Herod 
the Great became King of Israel—for more on that, see the gospels of the 
New Testament.

*   *   *

Judaism, as much as any other world religion, can boast an extraordinary 
history of secular thought. Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, 
Isaiah Berlin, Christopher Hitchens, Tony Kushner—who can think of 
better Jews than these or imagine, without anguish, a world devoid of 
their contributions? My own family’s ancestry is Jewish and we are 
ourselves devoted to secularism and the pursuit of a Judaism in the 
image of those named above.

Nevertheless, growing up, we lit the candles and sang the Hebrew prayer 
my mother could remember from her childhood (but—how Jewish—cannot 
translate to English). My father, for his part, is fond of proving that 
he can sing “Hanukkah, Oh Hanukkah” in Yiddish—his father escaped an 
Orthodox home at age 13, never to return—not that the rest of us are in 
any position to verify his rendition’s accuracy. Latkes (with sour cream 
and apple sauce, naturally), gelt (lousy chocolate, sure, but it’s 
shaped like money!) and dreidels came out once a year, in order, I’m 
sure I always knew, to make Jews feel better about not having Christmas, 
which is a big deal to the goyim (so big that the Myersons celebrate it 
too, and more enthusiastically than the Jewish consolation prize, to boot).

What a piercing irony, that secular Jews have taken to comforting 
ourselves in the yuletide season by celebrating the destruction of the 
Hellenistic Jewry, whose legacy we inherit, at the hands of 
fundamentalist fanatics who wouldn’t even consider us Jewish. With each 
lunatic attempt to expel Palestinians from their homes to make room for 
Orthodox settlers from Brooklyn, with each story of a Hasidic woman 
confined to a medieval lifestyle of bondage and repression born of 
superstition and uncritical faith, with each exposure of depravity and 
fraudulence in the communities who make the most exuberant claims to 
piety, it becomes clearer: the time has come for us to proclaim loudly 
that we have a better tradition. Let us celebrate the Hellenistic Jews 
and their struggle, rather than the violent extremists and their victory.

The prayer Jews are expected to say on the first night of Hanukkah (the 
only one my mother knew to teach us) translates thus: “Blessed are you, 
our God, King of the universe, who has sanctified us with his 
commandments and has commanded us to kindle the Hanukkah lights.” Need 
anyone mention that the greatest Jewish tradition is not one of 
following any commandments whatever, but rather of investigating, 
examining, discovering? The secular Jewish tradition holds that it is 
through those processes that one learns truth, not through the 
revelation of commandment. Cast off that prayer.

The klezmer ditty, though, can stay. “One for each night, they shed us 
with light to remind us of days long ago.” Let us take this opportunity 
to remind ourselves of what really happened in days long ago, and commit 
ourselves to reversing it.

*   *   *

The author is obliged to mention Josephus’ The Wars of the Jews along 
with the biblical apocrypha contained in the first and second book of 
the Maccabees, which provide the history presented here. For additional 
reading, please see relevant works by Christopher Hitchens and James 
Ponet, both in Slate.
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