Despite Threats, Parisian Jews Will Light the Menorah this Hanukkah

Despite Threats, Parisian Jews Will Light the Menorah this Hanukkah

Despite Threats, Parisian Jews Will Light the Menorah this Hanukkah

On Sunday at sundown, Hanukkah celebrations will begin around the world, and will last for the next eight days.

Paris is one of many cities in which its Jewish population traditionally holds various public Hanukkah ceremonies, with its outreach organization Chabad Lubavitch usually sponsoring over 60 celebrations around Paris, including a menorah lighting at the Eiffel Tower. Last year over 6000 people participated in that menorah lighting ceremony, which has been a tradition for 25 years.

menorah
Credit: chabad.org

However, in the wake of the November 13 attacks in Paris by Islamic terrorists, police have advised Parisian Jews against lighting the menorah, especially as continued threats upon Jews have been made upon them by radical Islamists.

The Parisian Jews said, “Mais, non!” As one Jewish mother tweeted:

Instead, Chabad emissaries and French officials met earlier this week and hammered out a compromise where 19 menorah lighting ceremonies would take place under heavy security. Chabad Lubavitch’s website read, “As a matter of principle, Chabad has always taken the position that shutting down its Jewish activities would be a capitulation to terror, a submission to darkness which the [Hanukkah] lights are intended to dispel.” Chabad also posted this tweet:

Vive la France! Joyeux Hannouka! How we need the lights of Hanukkah to help dispel the darkness in the world around us, especially in these days of terror.

Written by

Kim is a pint-sized patriot who packs some big contradictions. She is a Baby Boomer who never became a hippie, an active Republican who first registered as a Democrat (okay, it was to help a sorority sister's father in his run for sheriff), and a devout Lutheran who practices yoga. Growing up in small-town Indiana, now living in the Kansas City metro, Kim is a conservative Midwestern gal whose heart is also in the Seattle area, where her eldest daughter, son-in-law, and grandson live. Kim is a working speech pathologist who left school system employment behind to subcontract to an agency, and has never looked back. She describes her conservatism as falling in the mold of Russell Kirk's Ten Conservative Principles. Don't know what they are? Google them!

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