חנוכה
הדף מאת: shlomo voskoboynik
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one is not bound to attend to it. Therefore, there is no reason to make certain from the outset to light it with materials that burn well, as even if it is extinguished, he is not required to relight it. However, he also holds that it is permitted to use its light. As a result, he must ensure that the wick burns well on Shabbat; if not, he is liable to come to adjust the flame in order to use its light. The third opinion is that which Rabbi Zeira said that Rav Mattana said, and others say that Rabbi Zeira said that Rav said: The wicks and oils with which the Sages said one may not light on Shabbat, one may, nevertheless, light with them on Hanukkah, both during the week and on Shabbat. Rabbi Yirmeya said: What is Rav’s reason? He holds that if it is extinguished, one is not bound to attend to it and relight it, and it is prohibited to use its light. Therefore, even on Shabbat, there is no concern lest he come to adjust the wick, as it is prohibited to utilize its light. The Gemara relates that the Sages said this halakha before Abaye in the name of Rabbi Yirmeya and he did not accept it, as he did not hold Rabbi Yirmeya in high regard. However, subsequently, when Ravin came from Eretz Yisrael to Babylonia, the Sages said this halakha before Abaye in the name of Rabbi Yoḥanan, and he accepted it. Then Abaye said regretfully: Had I merited, I would have learned this halakha from the outset. The Gemara wonders: Didn’t he ultimately learn it and accept it? What difference does it make from whom and at what point he learned it? The Gemara answers: The practical difference is with regard to knowledge acquired in one’s youth, which is better remembered. With regard to the opinion that one need not rekindle the Hanukkah light if it is extinguished, the Gemara asks: And is it true that if the Hanukkah light is extinguished one is not bound to attend to it? The Gemara raises a contradiction from that which was taught in a baraita: The mitzva of kindling the Hanukkah lights is from sunset until traffic in the marketplace ceases. Does that not mean that if the light is extinguished, he must rekindle it so that it will remain lit for the duration of that period? The Gemara answers: No, the baraita can be understood otherwise: That if one did not yet light at sunset, he may still light the Hanukkah lights until traffic ceases. Alternatively, one could say that this is referring to the matter of its measure. One must prepare a wick and oil sufficient to burn for the period lasting from sunset until traffic ceases. If he did so, even if the light is extinguished beforehand, he need not relight it. The expression until traffic in the marketplace ceases is mentioned here, and the Gemara asks: Until when exactly is this time? Rabba bar bar Ḥana said that Rabbi Yoḥanan said: Until the traffic of the people of Tadmor [tarmodaei] ceases. They sold kindling wood and remained in the marketplace later than everyone else. People who discovered at sunset that they had exhausted their wood supply could purchase wood from them. The Sages taught in a baraita: The basic mitzva of Hanukkah is each day to have a light kindled by a person, the head of the household, for himself and his household. And the mehadrin, i.e., those who are meticulous in the performance of mitzvot, kindle a light for each and every one in the household. And the mehadrin min hamehadrin, who are even more meticulous, adjust the number of lights daily. Beit Shammai and Beit Hillel disagree as to the nature of that adjustment. Beit Shammai say: On the first day one kindles eight lights and, from there on, gradually decreases the number of lights until, on the last day of Hanukkah, he kindles one light. And Beit Hillel say: On the first day one kindles one light, and from there on, gradually increases the number of lights until, on the last day, he kindles eight lights. Ulla said: There were two amoraim in the West, Eretz Yisrael, who disagreed with regard to this dispute, Rabbi Yosei bar Avin and Rabbi Yosei bar Zevida. One said that the reason for Beit Shammai’s opinion is that the number of lights corresponds to the incoming days, i.e., the future. On the first day, eight days remain in Hanukkah, one kindles eight lights, and on the second day seven days remain, one kindles seven, etc. The reason for Beit Hillel’s opinion is that the number of lights corresponds to the outgoing days. Each day, the number of lights corresponds to the number of the days of Hanukkah that were already observed. And one said that the reason for Beit Shammai’s opinion is that the number of lights corresponds to the bulls of the festival of Sukkot: Thirteen were sacrificed on the first day and each succeeding day one fewer was sacrificed (Numbers 29:12–31). The reason for Beit Hillel’s opinion is that the number of lights is based on the principle: One elevates to a higher level in matters of sanctity and one does not downgrade. Therefore, if the objective is to have the number of lights correspond to the number of days, there is no alternative to increasing their number with the passing of each day. Rabba bar bar Ḥana said that Rabbi Yoḥanan said: There were two Elders in Sidon, and one of them acted in accordance with the opinion of Beit Shammai, and one of them acted in accordance with the opinion of Beit Hillel. Each provided a reason for his actions: One gave a reason for his actions: The number of lights corresponds to the bulls of the Festival. And one gave a reason for his actions: The number of lights is based on the principle: One elevates to a higher level in matters of sanctity and one does not downgrade. The Sages taught in a baraita: It is a mitzva to place the Hanukkah lamp at the entrance to one’s house on the outside, so that all can see it. If he lived upstairs, he places it at the window adjacent to the public domain. And in a time of danger, when the gentiles issued decrees to prohibit kindling lights, he places it on the table and that is sufficient to fulfill his obligation. Rava said: One must kindle another light in addition to the Hanukkah lights in order to use its light, as it is prohibited to use the light of the Hanukkah lights. And if there is a bonfire, he need not light an additional light, as he can use the light of the bonfire. However, if he is an important person, who is unaccustomed to using the light of a bonfire, even though there is a bonfire, he must kindle another light. The Gemara asks: What is Hanukkah, and why are lights kindled on Hanukkah? The Gemara answers: The Sages taught in Megillat Taanit: On the twenty-fifth of Kislev, the days of Hanukkah are eight. One may not eulogize on them and one may not fast on them. What is the reason? When the Greeks entered the Sanctuary they defiled all the oils that were in the Sanctuary by touching them. And when the Hasmonean monarchy overcame them and emerged victorious over them, they searched and found only one cruse of oil that was placed with the seal of the High Priest, undisturbed by the Greeks. And there was sufficient oil there to light the candelabrum for only one day. A miracle occurred and they lit the candelabrum from it eight days. The next year the Sages instituted those days and made them holidays with recitation of hallel and special thanksgiving in prayer and blessings. We learned there in a mishna with regard to damages: In the case of a spark that emerges from under a hammer, and went out of the artisan’s workshop, and caused damage, the one who struck the hammer is liable. Similarly, in the case of a camel that is laden with flax and it passed through the public domain, and its flax entered into a store, and caught fire from the storekeeper’s lamp, and set fire to the building, the camel owner is liable. Since his flax entered into another’s domain, which he had no permission to enter, all the damages were caused due to his negligence. However, if the storekeeper placed his lamp outside the store and it set fire to the flax, the storekeeper is liable, as he placed the lamp outside his domain where he had no right to place it. Rabbi Yehuda says: If the flax was set on fire by the storekeeper’s Hanukkah lamp that he placed outside the entrance to his store, he is not liable, as in that case, it is permitted for the storekeeper to place his lamp outside. Ravina said in the name of Rabba: That is to say that it is a mitzva to place the Hanukkah lamp within ten handbreadths of the ground. As if it should enter your mind to say that he may place it above ten handbreadths, why is the storekeeper exempt? Let the camel owner say to the storekeeper: You should have placed the lamp above the height of a camel and its rider, and then no damage would have been caused. By failing to do so, the storekeeper caused the damage, and the camel owner should not be liable. The Gemara rejects this: And perhaps one is also permitted to place the Hanukkah lamp above ten handbreadths, and the reason Rabbi Yehuda exempted the storekeeper was due to concern for the observance of the mitzva of kindling Hanukkah lights. He held that if you burden one excessively, he will come to refrain from performing the mitzva of kindling Hanukkah lights. Since the storekeeper placed the Hanukkah lamp outside at the behest of the Sages, the storekeeper should not be required to take extra precautions. With regard to the essence of the matter Rav Kahana said that Rav Natan bar Manyumi taught in the name of Rabbi Tanḥum:
דיון
מה מציינים בחנוכה על פי המקור?
מדוע נס פח השמן מודגש כסיבה עיקרית לחג חנוכה?
הפחד מהחושך
לְפִי שֶׁרָאָה אָדָם הָרִאשׁוֹן יוֹם שֶׁמִּתְמַעֵט וְהוֹלֵךְ,
אָמַר: "אוֹי לִי, שֶׁמָּא בִּשְׁבִיל שֶׁסָּרַחְתִּי עוֹלָם חָשׁוּךְ בַּעֲדִי וְחוֹזֵר לְתֹהוּ וַבֹהוּ וְזוֹ הִיא מִיתָה שֶׁנִּקְנְסָה עָלַי מִן הַשָּׁמַיִם."
עָמַד וְיָשַׁב ח' יָמִים בְּתַעֲנִית וּבִתְפִלָּה.
כֵּיוָן שֶׁרָאָה תְּקוּפַת טֵבֵת וְרָאָה יוֹם שֶׁמַּאֲרִיךְ וְהוֹלֵךְ, אָמַר: "מִנְהָגוֹ שֶׁל עוֹלָם הוּא." הָלַךְ וְעָשָׂה שְׁמוֹנָה יָמִים טוֹבִים.
לַשָּׁנָה הָאַחֶרֶת עֲשָׂאָן לְאֵלּוּ וּלְאֵלּוּ יָמִים טוֹבִים. הוּא קְבָעָם לְשֵׁם שָׁמַיִם וְהֵם קְבָעוּם לְשֵׁם עֲבוֹדַת כּוֹכָבִים.

מילים
  • סרח - סטה מדרך הישר; הושחת; התקלקל
  • מיתה - מוות
  • תענית - צום
With regard to the dates of these festivals, the Sages taught: When Adam the first man saw that the day was progressively diminishing, as the days become shorter from the autumnal equinox until the winter solstice, he did not yet know that this is a normal phenomenon, and therefore he said: Woe is me; perhaps because I sinned the world is becoming dark around me and will ultimately return to the primordial state of chaos and disorder. And this is the death that was sentenced upon me from Heaven, as it is written: “And to dust shall you return” (Genesis 3:19). He arose and spent eight days in fasting and in prayer. Once he saw that the season of Tevet, i.e., the winter solstice, had arrived, and saw that the day was progressively lengthening after the solstice, he said: Clearly, the days become shorter and then longer, and this is the order of the world. He went and observed a festival for eight days. Upon the next year, he observed both these eight days on which he had fasted on the previous year, and these eight days of his celebration, as days of festivities. He, Adam, established these festivals for the sake of Heaven, but they, the gentiles of later generations, established them for the sake of idol worship.
דיון
ממה חשש האדם הראשון?
מדוע חוגגים חנוכה על פי הטקסט?
מהו הנושא העיקרי של חנוכה על פי הטקסט?
הרב שלמה אבינר, עפ"י מאמר "דרכו של יהודה המכבי", כתב עת "אמונת עיתך" מס' 26 כסלו-טבת תשנ"ט
גבורה היא נס
הגמרא דנה על הריגת הדוב והארי על ידי דוד המלך, ומודיעה שהיה כאן נס, "ניסא זוטא".

בעלי התוספות שואלים מה היתה מהות הנס זה, וכיצד הוא קרה, האם דוד ניחן לפתע בכוח על-אנושי?

הם משיבים שהנס הוא הופעת רוח גבורה וחכמה להלחם. גבורה גדולה - זהו נס, זו תופעה אלוקית.

יש נס אסטרונומי כמו "שמש בגבעון דום", ונס פיסיקלי כמו "והמים להם חומה" ביציאת מצרים, וקיים גם נס אנושי פסיכולוגי. אדם פחדן או אדם רגיל הופך לפתע לגיבור. ישנם כוחות אלוקיים הגנוזים באדם שמתעוררים בו לפתע, כמו הגבורה, ואז הוא מסוגל ללחום אפילו בארי ודוב.

אומרת הגמרא שכאשר מתעוררת רוח גבורה וחוכמה להלחם, זהו נס. נס כזה הופיע אצל החשמונאים - עובדי אדמה פשוטים, כהנים, נתמלאו לפתע גבורה, לאחר מאות שנים ללא עצמאות, עם מנטליות גלותית של פחד וצורך להשתמש בחנופה ושתדלנות.

הופעת נס פך השמן היא אישור לכך שמעשי החשמונאים נכונים היו, שה' היה בקרבם וחולל הנסים.

למאמר המלא


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הסברים
  • ניסא זוטא = נס קטן (ארמית)
דיון
על אילו סוגים של נס מסביר המקור?
האם אדם מסוגל לחולל ניסים?
נתן יונתן, שירי עפר ורוח, מרחביה, 1965
לְאור הַנֵּר
וְכָךְ הָאִישׁ יָצַר אֶת דְּמוּת הַנֵּר:
מִן הַחֵמָר לָקַח לוֹ חֵלֶב רַךְ וְחִוֵּר
וְאֶל תּוֹכוֹ אֶת פְּתִיל חַיָּיו חִבֵּר
וְאָז הָיָה הַנֵּר שָׁלֵם.

בְּאֵשׁ קְטַנָּה הִדְלִיק אוֹתוֹ וּכְמוֹ אָדָם:
תָּמִיד עַד תֹּם בָּעַר בַּחוֹשֶׁךְ לְאִטּוֹ,
לוֹהֵט וּמְהַבְהֵב כְּמוֹ נִשְׁמַת הָרוּחַ הַנּוֹשֵׁב.

אוֹהֵב אֶת מַעְגַּל הַפַּרְפָּרִים,
זוֹלֵג הַחֵלֶב כִּדְמָעוֹת עַל הַסְּפָרִים,
עַל שֻׁלְחָנוֹ שֶׁל הַמְּשׁוֹרֵר.
חַיָּל בְּאָהֳלוֹ אֶת הַמִּכְתָּב גּוֹמֵר.
וּבְלֵיל סַעַר מְאֻחָר,
כְּשֶׁרְעָמִים נוֹפְלִים בַּחֲשֵׁכָה וְלא רוֹאִים שָׁמַיִם,
לא כּוֹכַב זוֹהֵר,
אָז מַדְלִיקִים אֶת שְׁאֵרִית הַנֵּר
וְיֵשׁ תִּקְוָה שֶׁהָעוֹלָם יָשׁוּב וְיִתְבַּהֵר.
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דיון
מהו תפקידו של אור על פי השיר?
מימרה על נר ואור, מיוחסת לרב אברהם יצחק קוק
צריך שכל איש ידע ויבין שבתוך תוכו דולק נר ואין נרו שלו כנר חברו. ואין איש שאין לו נר. וצריך שכל איש ידע ויבין שעליו לעמול ולגלות את אור הנר ברבים, ולהדליקו לאבוקה גדולה ולהאיר את העולם כולו.

מילים
  • אבוקה - אור המורכב ממספר שלהבות
דיון
מהו האור עליו מדבר המקום?
הביאו דוגמאות, כיצד ניתן לגלות את האור ברבים?