Hanukkah is, at its core, the religious and cultural commemoration of a decisive, ancient Jewish military victory.
In 168 BCE, the Syrian army took over Jerusalem, banning Judaism and its observance and renaming the holy temple for Zeus. In response, a small group of Hebrew resistance fighters led by Judah Maccabee routed the Syrian army in two major battles and drove them from the city. Tradition holds that, when the Maccabees entered the desecrated temple, they found a small jar of oil that would keep the synagogue’s eternal light burning for one day. Instead, the oil was enough for eight days. For that reason, Hanukkah is often known as the Festival of Lights and celebrated by lighting the menorah for eight consecutive nights.
Here’s what Hanukkah festivities look like on base, at war, on ships and everywhere in between:
USS Dwight D. Eisenhower, 2018
Hanscomb AFB, Massachusetts, 2017
FOB Lagman, Afghanistan, 2011
Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey, 2017
Camp Kosciuszko, Poland, 2022
Travis AFB, California, 2023
MCAS Miramar, 2013
Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Maryland, 2022
Joint Base Balad, Iraq, 2008
USS Nimitz, 2022
Camp Striker, Iraq, 2007
Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, 2020
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Joanna Guldin is the community engagement manager at Military.com. She has worked in the military community for more than a decade, and her writing has been featured in national and international publications. She lives in Pennsylvania with her Navy veteran husband.
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