Candle-Lighting for the First Night of Chanukah at the Kosel

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The menorah on the first night of Chanukah at the Kosel, Sunday. Western Wall Heritage Foundation

YERUSHALAYIM – Candle-lighting for the first night of Chanukah took place on Sunday evening at the Kosel, where mayor of Yerushalayim Moshe Lion performed the lighting in the presence of the rabbi of the Western Wall and holy sites, Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, along with MK May Golan, Director of the Western Wall Heritage Foundation Mordechai (Suli) Eliav, and members of the general public, some of whom sang and danced afterward.

Rabbi Rabinowitz told the gathering: “Whoever makes their way to the modest plaza at the foot of the ancient stones and joins the tens of thousands who come to the Western Wall every day, sees that the Western Wall continues to be a place of connection and unity. They see a place where prayers of every kind are recited alongside each other. They see traditional prayers and those that spontaneously erupt from the heart.

“Everyone is attracted to the Western Wall and to the light that shines from it onto the nation and out to the entire world. This year again, we will light the menorah at the Western Wall Plaza every night of Chanukah. Rabbis and leaders, the public, people from Israel and from the Diaspora will stand together and be blessed by the light of the candles, the light of the Western Wall, the light of unity and humility, the light of belonging and solidarity which will continue to illuminate humanity for all of eternity.”

Mayor Leon said that “It is a huge privilege for me to light the first Chanukah candle here at the Western Wall, the remnant of our Temple, where the miracle happened, in Jerusalem, the capital of a free and independent Israel, and to bless – with great joy and wholeheartedly – ‘Who has granted us life, and sustained us, and brought us to this time.’ Chanukah is a festival of light, a festival of miracles, a festival of bravery. But the bravery of Chanukah is not that of soldiers or of physical courage. The bravery of the Chashmonaim is of learners in a beit midrash who decided to fight for the privilege of living and returning the glory of Israel’s monarchy.”

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Source: Hamodia

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