Tuesday, December 9, 2008

In Darkness, Celebrate Light

I love winter – cold days call for hot chocolate, roaring fires, cozy sweaters and snowball fights.  But the short days get to me. Sunlight, even when it’s 20 degrees, warms me, but leaving the office in the dark hurts. The rabbis must have shared some of this sentiment – I doubt it’s chance that our Festival of Lights, Hanukkah, falls during the darkest days of the year.

This year, the first night of Hanukkah actually falls on the darkest day of the year – the Winter Solstice.  Which is coincidence of course, because the Jewish calendar functions off the lunar cycle, right? True, except for a once-every-twenty-eight year holiday called Birkat HaHammah – Blessing of the Sun.  On this day, the Jewish community celebrates the tradition-based return of the sun to its original place in the heavens at the precise time and day of its creation.  Tradition states that this happens when the Vernal Equinox falls out on a Wednesday morning (for more detail, click here) – rabbinically speaking, the next time this happens is April 8, 2009. 

This year of 5769, it seems too marvelous that the solar occurrences of Winter Solstice and Vernal Equinox are celebrated on the Jewish calendar. In response, COEJL has created a 1st night of Hanukkah ceremony that acknowledges the wonders and sustenance of the sun.

This year of 2008, it also seems impossible to celebrate the “birth of the sun” without acknowledging its full potential. At a time when we all understand the disastrous consequences of uninhibited fossil fuel consumption (e.g. global warming), along with the incredible fact that the Sun provides Earth with as much energy every hour as human civilization uses every yearBirkat HaHammah must be a time of energy awareness and action. To this effect, a coalition of Jewish groups has come together to make sure this happens.  To read more, go to www.blessthesun.org.

Happy Hanukkah!

p.s. for more Hanukkah tips check out the new Green Gift guide and our CFL Hanukkah campaign.   

Posted by COEJL in 18:21:16
Comments

2 Responses to “In Darkness, Celebrate Light”

  1. Anonymous says:

    JUST PUBLISHED! My new children’s book about Birkat HaChamah: The Sun’s Special Blessing, by Sandy Wasserman (Pitspopany Press)for grades 2-5.
    AVAILABLE at your local Judaica shop or on Amazon.
    Visit my website: http://web.mac.com/sfwasserman
    How will you/did you celebrate Birkat HaChamah in your community? Email me at: sandyfw@gmail.com
    IMAGINE! Pre-schoolers will be in their early 30′s when this blessing is recited next in 2037 – tell them about it too!

  2. Len Zangwill says:

    Check out this blog for a post on Birkat Ha-Chammah and an event organized by Or Hadash, a Reconstructionist congregation just outside of Philadelphia, PA.
    sustainablewrtitings.wordpress.com