Hanukkah, American Style
The Jewish festival near Christmas gained prominence in the U.S.
Reprinted with permission of
the American Jewish Historical Society from "Chapters
in American History."
Hanukkah, the Festival of Lights, celebrates the victory, in
164 B. C. E. of armed Jewish rebels led by Judah the Maccabee over the army of
the Syrian despot Antiochus IV. Against all odds, the courageous, resourceful,
and badly outnumbered Jewish freedom fighters, David-like, slew the Syrian
Goliath. Since that day, Jews around the world have marked Hanukkah as a "minor"
holiday, not an observance commanded by Scripture but one that is nonetheless
traditional.
Hanukkah has allowed Jews who were oppressed or under
pressure to assimilate to identify a golden age in which militant, assertive
Jews maintained their religious freedom and independence. Lighting candles,
playing cards, and gambling with dreidls recall the prowess of the
Maccabeans and the miracle of the oil that burned for eight days, a sign that
Jews are indeed God's chosen people.
Proximity to Christmas
For the millions of Jewish immigrants who came to America at
the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, Hanukkah in the New
World took on new, ambiguous, and conflicted meanings. Hanukkah's proximity on
the calendar to Christmas posed particular challenges. By the 1890s, Christmas
was firmly established as America's premiere season for gift giving. For many
Americans of all faiths, consumerism and general feelings of "good cheer"
supplemented, if not replaced, the religious basis for Christmas. The holiday
was rapidly becoming a national, rather than purely Christian, tradition.
For Jewish immigrants feeling pressure to shed their
European ways, exchanging gifts with neighbors at Christmastime signaled their
adaptation to their new home. In 1904, the Forward quoted Jewish Christmas
shoppers who, when challenged, asked (in Yiddish), "Who says we haven't
Americanized?" The paper observed, "The purchase of Christmas gifts
is one of the first things that proves one is no longer a greenhorn."
As historian Jenna W. Joselit notes, some Jewish leaders
criticized the tendency of immigrant Jews to accept Christmas as an American
consumer ritual. Writing in The Menorah in 1890, Rabbi Kaufman Kohler asked, "How
can the Jew, without losing self-respect, partake in the joy and festive mirth
of Christmas? Can he without self-surrender, without entailing insult and
disgrace upon his faith and race, plant the Christmas tree in his household?"
Yet, Rabbi Kohler admitted, Hanukkah as then celebrated by
American Jewry could not hold a candle (so to speak) to Christmas. Kohler said
of the comparison, "How humble and insignificant does one appear by the
side of the other" and suggested that Hanukkah needed more pizzazz if it
was to compete with Christmas.
Jewish homemaking advisor Esther Jane Ruskay lamented in
1902 that Christmas's focus on family celebrations, gift giving, decorations,
and Santa Claus "gives a zest to life that all the Hanukkah hymns, backed
by all the Sunday-school teaching and half-hearted ministerial [rabbinic]
chiding, must forever fail to give."
Hanukkah Finds Its Footing
Joselit notes that it was not until the late 1920s, when
Jewish immigration to America was effectively ended, that Hanukkah "began
to come into its own as a Jewish domestic occasion and an exercise in
consumption." Merchandisers to Jews began advertising their wares as ideal
Hanukkah gifts. Der Tog carried an ad in Yiddish for Hudson automobiles, which
were proclaimed "A Hanukkah Present for the Entire Family--The Greatest
Bargain (metsiah) in the World."
Colgate promoted toiletries as Hanukkah gifts and food
purveyors such as Loft's and Barton's candies marketed chocolates wrapped in
gold foil to simulate Hanukkah gelt [money]. Aunt Jemima flour
proclaimed itself "the best flour for latkes," and the Hadassah
Newsletter advised that "mah-jongg sets make appreciated Hanukkah gifts."
With the creation of the State of Israel in 1948, Hanukkah
took on a new--or rather, renewed--meaning. In the aftermath of the Holocaust,
the valor and success of Israeli military forces helped rebuild the image of
the Jew as fighter. Zionists proudly identified the Haganah and Irgun
[pre-statehood Zionist militias] as Maccabean descendants. Adapting the image of
the martial Jew to its Hanukkah product line, Loft's Chocolate Company issued a
board game called "Valor Against Oppression" that featured General
Moshe Dayan. Not to be outdone, Barton's produced what Joselit calls "an
Israelized version of Monopoly whose board featured a map of Israel, miniature
Israeli flags, [and] menorahs."
Despite the shift in the meaning of Hanukkah in light of
Israeli military success, the holiday remains ambivalent for many American
Jews. For younger Jewish children, December can still be a difficult month as
they come to terms with the omnipresent lures of Santa Claus. Yet, Hanukkah
seems to grow in popularity as the observance of traditional Jewish ritual
becomes more widespread and intense.
In 1951, a California Jewish woman offered advice that,
while acknowledging the parallels between Hanukkah and Christmas, bridges the
worlds of Jewish particularlism and American civic celebration: "Let this
be our guiding principle: Keeping within the framework of our own tradition,
using a color scheme of blue and silver and yellow and gold, let us adorn our
homes inside and out as beautifully as we can for Hanukkah, enlarging upon the
old-time Feast of Lights."