Following the stabbing of five people in a rabbiâs home in Monsey, N.Y., which shattered Chanukah celebrations and intensified fears of attacks in Jewish communities nationwide, a record number of celebrants turned out for a display of positive Jewish resolve and pride at publlic menorah-lightings nationwide on the eighth and final night of the holiday.
More participants than ever before attended a Chanukah festival in Glendale, Colo., on Sunday evening. Rabbi Mendy Sirota, educational and program director of Denverâs Western Center for Russian Jewry, said it was celebrated by âmany Jewish participants eager to stand together and face down growing anti-Semitism throughout the United States and the world, with a defiant dose of Jewish pride.â
Glendaleâs mayor, Mike Dunafon, will be in attendance together with the Glendale Police Chief William Haskins in light of Saturday nightâs tragic event. âMany in this community fled religious persecution in the former Soviet Union and are showing up in numbers we havenât seen to show solidarity,â noted Sirota.
Across the Atlantic in suburban London, Rabbi Yosef Sharfstein, co-director of Bushey Chabad, held a menorah-lighting on Busheyâs High Street on Sunday evening. He said that âwith the attack in New York and recent anti-Semitic graffiti seen in London suburbs, we decided to use the opportunity to celebrate Jewish pride in an open and festive atmosphere. And what better place than the Bushey High Street? Even one act of light can make the world a brighter place.â
There was a large turnout at the historic Fifth Avenue menorah at 59th Street near Central Park, right outside the Plaza Hotel. âThey want us to be afraidâto fear proudly proclaiming our Jewish identity. The opposite is happening here. Weâre doubling down on our Jewish pride,â stated Rabbi Shmuel M. Butman, director of Lubavitch Youth Organization, which puts on the event every year.
Floridaâs Singer Island will be lit up on the eighth night of the holiday with a community menorah-lighting at Marina Village. âThe message of the menorah is ever more relevant today: We must add light. The power of light is innately brighter and stronger than any darkness in the world,â said Rabbi Berel Namdar, co-director of Chabad Singer Island.
Chanukah menorahs werenât the only symbols of Jewish pride and protection on display. In St. Lucia, West Indies, Rabbi Avromy Super, co-director of the islandâs Chabad center, received a call on Sunday morning from Nitzan Sneh, an Israeli yachting enthusiast based out of Boston who, shocked by the attack, wanted to affix a mezuzah to his boat in a display of Jewish pride. âFor sailors, itâs especially important,â said Sneh, âbecause we can be anywhere in the world on our boat. This mezuzah will show the world that we have nothing to fear.â
This year, Chabad-Lubavitch has set up more than 15,000 large public menorahs in more than 100 countries around the world, including in front of landmarks such as the White House in Washington, D.C.; the Eiffel Tower in Paris; and the Kremlin in Moscow. The menorah-lightings are part of the worldwide Chanukah campaign, an initiative launched in 1973 by the RebbeâRabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory. The campaign focuses on creating awareness and promoting observance of the holiday.
Using Twitter to reach congregants and friends in Salt Lake City, Utah, Rabbi Avremi Zippel echoed a sentiment shared by Jewish people around the world. âTonight, I will proudly and publicly light a menorah in Downtown SLC. I will not cower in the face of anti-Semitism.â





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