The Hasmonean revolt was not a fundamentalist- religious movement sworn to the destruction of liberal Western ideologies.

ed note–once again, a glaring example as to ‘how they do it’ and a prima facie application of Judaism’s ‘by way of deception, we shall make war’. 

Before we get into the ‘meat and latkes’ of what our unesteemed Hebraic author has to say however, please read and then re-read carefully that section appearing in the pic above taken from the book of Deuteronomy, part of the Jewish Torah.

Our unesteemed Rabbi knows–better than anyone else, in fact, due to his religious training–exactly what encompasses Hanukkah and that indeed, the thesis upon which his ‘Hellenized’ Jewish counterpart writing for the NYT has based his OpEd is factually accurate vis a vis the celebration of Judaic religious violence.

However, rather than simply allowing the ugly truth to do its work and act as the remedial, healing medicine that by its very nature it is, instead Slimy Schmuley honey-coats the entire indictment of what Lukas writes with the same sweet, syrupy lies that have been/are the glue holding together the machinery of Judea, Inc for the last 6,000 years.

For the historical record, Antiochus Epiphanes only ‘suppressed’ Judaism because of the civil war that had already been going on for sometime and who (rightly) diagnosed the backwards and barbaric beliefs and practices on the part of the Zealots as the source. The Greeks were CONSTITUTIONALLY very tolerant of all religions and religious practices within their empire, as were the Romans, and who believed that for the sake of order and harmony, it was best to allow people to follow their religion in the manner in which they were the most comfortable. It was only due to the irrational, violent Juhad that was being waged by those religious kook elements in Judea who were antithetical to Hellenization that Antiochus resorted to the same religiously-repressive tactics that eventually the Romans would adopt as well.

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach for jpost

In the latest puerile and asinine op-ed from The New York Times about Jews and Judaism, novelist Michael David Lukas seeks to dampen the joyous energy of the festival of Hanukkah by adding a bummer liberal twist. In Hanukkah, he claims, we are celebrating the defeat of the pallbearers of Western culture at the hands of intolerant fundamentalist guerrillas. The Maccabees, he essentially argues, were a bunch of rightwing nuts. It’s just an “eight-night-long celebration of religious fundamentalism and violence” he declares, one based not on doughnuts or menorahs, but on “subjugating assimilated Jews.”

Lukas isn’t the first to make this silly claim.

A columnist for The Forward, just a few years ago, took it upon herself to sentence the Maccabees to the “wrong side of history.” The Washington Post listed “Hanukkah celebrates a fight for religious freedom” as one of its five Hanukkah myths. Those who make this argument seem to draw an implicit parallel between the Maccabees and the “other” fundamentalist death cults we see across the world today claiming divine commission to combat Western culture. They’re also parroting a theory that is according to both the Jewish and secular historical traditions, overwhelmingly baseless.

The Hasmonean revolt was not a fundamentalist- religious movement sworn to the destruction of liberal Western ideologies. It was, instead, a popular campaign to safeguard the freedom of a people to freely practice their faith and traditions regardless of the whims of an emperor. Unlike fundamentalist terrorist groups, which are born from intolerance of other faiths, the Maccabees fought to end the Greek intolerance of theirs.

Moreover, the Maccabees did not wage war against a mostly benevolent superpower encouraging religious, political and cultural reforms. Their mission, rather, was to stymie the very deadly plans of a megalomaniacal, absolutist dictator who drew no limits on the level of oppression and exploitation he would thrust upon the powerless citizens of a tiny client-state.

BEFORE WE begin to explore the depth and depravity of Antiochus’ crimes, we must first establish the crucial fact that they represented a stunning departure from Hellenistic imperial norms. Crucial, because it proves that the Jews did not revolt against Hellenistic culture – which, by the time of the revolt in 167 BCE, had been around for at least six decades – but against a king who sought to enforce that culture both to the exclusion of all others and at the pain of death. In other words, the Maccabees revolted against a tyrant who sought to destroy Judaism.

After all, from the moment Hellenistic kings conquered ancient Israel, they brought their ideologies with them. That never seemed to bother the rabbinic Jewish leadership. On the contrary, the Jewish high priest Simon the Great – probably a New York Times-certified “extremist,” considering the rabbis of the Talmud laud him – offered the warmest imaginable welcome to Alexander the Great during the first Greek foray into Israel.

During that campaign, the kingdoms of Gaza, Tyre and Sidon waged futile battles to keep Alexander and his culture far out of their homelands. When he came to Jerusalem, however, Jewish tradition teaches that the Jewish High Priest Simon left the city to greet the Macedonian king. There, he begged that Alexander spare the Temple, which he described as a “house in which we pray for you and for your kingdom not to be destroyed.” This stunning symbol of Jewish-Hellenistic cooperation has been preserved not in the books of Hellenized Jews, but in the Pharisaic, rabbinically authored Babylonian Talmud (Yoma, 69a.) While this story stands in stark contrast to the narrative told by The New York Times and Lukas, it seems all but natural, once you accept that, for the Jews of ancient Israel, the existence of competing ideologies in their native homeland just wasn’t an issue. After Alexander’s death, and the division of his empire into Seleucid Syria, Ptolemaic Egypt, and Antigonid Greece, religious tolerance became a central tenet of Hellenistic rule in general, and of the Seleucids in particular.

According to the great Jewish historian Josephus, when King Ptolemy IV gained control over Jerusalem after the battle of Raphia in 217 BCE, he paid homage to his new Jewish subjects by offering sacrifices to their God in the Temple. Even when after flaunted Jewish cultural norms by forcing his way into the Holy of Holies, he elicited a moderate response from what appears to have been a moderate Jewish community.

When Antiochus III defeated the Ptolemies, beginning a three-decade era of Seleucid control over ancient Judea, he too allowed all his Jewish subjects to live in accordance with their native laws, promising even to protect and subsidize the Temple. 2 Maccabees even seems to suggest that, far from being an anomaly, it was actually standard practice for Hellenistic Kings to foster and even fund Jewish ritual, “to the extent that King Seleucus of Asia defrayed from his revenues all the expenses connected with the services of the sacrifices.”

This policy of tolerance was known to exist in other areas of Seleucid rule as well: one clay cylinder found at the Babylonian Ezida temple complex at Borsippa presents King Antiochus I as a patron of a local Babylonian non-Hellenistic religious cult, even describing him as “caretaker” of chief Babylonian deities.

Ultimately, then, the Jews rebelled less against Hellenistic norms than against Antiochus IV’s departure from them. That 60 years of coexistence would give way to violence only after the aberration of Antiochus IV’s persecutions, proves the crucial point: the Jews fought not against a system of Hellenistic belief, but a system of Hellenistic oppression.

IF THE New York Times must find a villain, though, they needn’t look far. Antiochus IV Epiphanes is the founding father of the global scourge known as religious persecution.

He may have been seeking to solidify support before launching his dream-conquest of Egypt. He may have been lashing out after the fledgling, yet formidable Roman republic had forced him to abandon his plans. Either way, few historians would deny the brutal regime of religious discrimination enacted by the king. His laws sought to stamp out Judaism from amongst the Jews, replacing their ancestral beliefs with politically convenient demagoguery.

(The king suffixed his name with the title Epiphanes, or “god Manifest.”) Still, it was not Antiochus’ ideas that spurred the Jews to revolt. It was his brutality.

Jewish troubles with Antiochus seem to have begun when he encountered locals in Jerusalem who supported his rivals in Ptolemaic Egypt.

“Being thereto disposed beforehand,” we are told, Antiochus “came upon the Jews with a great army, took their city by force, and slew a great multitude of those that favored Ptolemy.”

After that, “overcome with his violent passions,” the king “compelled the Jews to dissolve the laws of their country, to keep their infants uncircumcised, and to sacrifice swines flesh upon the altar.” When the Jews, in turn, opposed his new rules, “the most approved among them were put to death.” The Greek general Bacchides, a man of “natural barbarity,” is said to have “indulged all sorts of the extremist wickedness, and tormented the worthiest of the inhabitants, man by man, and threatened their city every day with open destruction.”

The story of Hanukkah, as chronicled in this source, comes to a close when the Jews choose a king by “their own free consent” – a remarkably liberal ending for what Lukas would have you believe is the story of al-Qaida garbed in prayer shawls.

This scathing account of Antiochus IV, parenthetically, comes not from fundamentalist Jewish religious text, but Flavius Josephus, arguably the most famous Hellenistic Jew of all time (The Jewish Wars I, 1:1-3).

Just last week, millions of Americans celebrated Thanksgiving, a holiday based on celebrating brave men and women who were forced to venture to a new world to practice the faith of their choosing. This festival of religious freedom has its roots in the story of Hanukkah, which the Jews offered the world nearly 1,800 years before. This holiday of liberty is just one small part of Judaism’s rich legacy of wisdom, ritual and values. Perhaps, instead of assaulting it, Jews like Michael Lukas need to take pride in Judaism’s inspiring heritage of freedom and tolerance, if only for eight days a year.

5 thoughts on “Fish Swim, Birds Fly–'Hanukkuh a celebration of Judaism's legacy of liberty, wisdom, freedom, and tolerance'”
  1. However, rather than simply allowing the ugly truth to do its work and act as the remedial, healing medicine that by its very nature it is, instead Slimy Schmuley honey-coats the entire indictment of what Lukas writes with the same sweet, syrupy lies that have been/are the glue holding together the machinery of Judea, Inc for the last 6,000 years.

    For those people in the dark about why lying and lies are so evil and harmful, just look at the above quote and then contemplate their history and sufferink.

  2. When Jews speak or write of “liberty, wisdom, freedom, and tolerance” it is meant only for themselves. It it NOT meant for anyone else. Everyone else is to be subject to the Jew.
    I didn’t read all of the drek coming out of Boteach’s pen or keyboard. I only skimmed it. I did enjoy the “al-Quaeda garbed in prayer shawl” reference however, since it’s true.
    This team A – team B propaganda only serves to enforce my thinking that the JMSM is getting very nervous that they and their co-religionists have pushed the non-Jews a bit too far and the NY Times has only published the op-ed as a steam vent in order to lessen the potential severity of the blow-back these creatures may experience in the not too distant future (may it please God).
    I think the Jews at the JMSM and elsewhere may be seeing the train headlights coming down the track ….
    Anno Domini 70…..ah, the good old days.

  3. it makes perfect sense, actually.
    if you hitch yourself to devil, there can be no half-measures, it’s all in.
    that means the total inversion of all values.
    abhor truth, justice, freedom, decency, beauty, purity, innocence.
    worship lie, iniquity, bondage, shamelessness, ugliness, filth, depravity.
    it is not for nothing that jesus said: “woe to you, scribes, pharisees, hypocrites!”, all 3 terms essentially the same, though “hypocrite” has been broadened to let others down with the same affliction into the club.
    so, when you call jew a liar, he only pretends to be offended because lying is the root of his “religion” that denies reality, truth and God, while inwardly he is pleased with the compliment yet angry that you were able to figure him out, must double his efforts at dissimulation.
    shamelessness is a psychogenetic mutation typifying the jew cluster since Time Immemorial and they are inordinately proud of it, the chutzpah, the most prominent display of jew-manhood, the psychotic ability to fool polygraph tests because telling a lie does not stress a jew in the least, a joyous pursuit.
    so yeah, hannukah typifies jew values™, use my little cheat sheet to translate “‘Hanukkuh a celebration of Judaism’s legacy of liberty, wisdom, freedom, and tolerance’” into the terms meaningful to the gentiles.

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