hanukkah in A Sentence

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    Paraffin Wax Hanukkah Candles.

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    The second night of Hanukkah.

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    Merry Christmas! Happy Hanukkah?

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    Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday celebrated for eight days.

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    Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday celebrated for eight days in December.

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    Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday that's celebrated for 8 days and nights.

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    And my own little traditions, like celebrating both Hanukkah and Christmas.

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    The dreidel is a top most often used during the Hanukkah season.

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    Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday that is celebrated for eight days and nights.

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    The package of Hanukkah Candlesis 44pcs/box 50boxes/ctn, one 20'fcl can be loaded 1650ctns.

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    And of all the holidays, Hanukkah is perhaps one of the most unique.

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    Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday that is celebrated for eight days and eight nights.

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    In this context, rabbis rethought Hanukkah's origins as the celebration of a military victory.

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    So here are my eight wishes(one for each day of Hanukkah) to make that happen in 2020.

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    The best things about Christmas(also Kwanzaa and Hanukkah) heading into New Year's week are the gifts and the promises.

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    Since Hanukkah is centered around finding hope in desperate situations, participating in Hanukkah observance is completely appropriate for someone who is grieving.

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    Ewish Smokeless Colorful Hanukkah Candles these candles popular in Ameria and Isreal, for jewish holiday, and pls order before Sep every year,

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    Every year customer order Multicolor Hanukkah Candles before OCT. as i know 3.8g Wholesale Hanukkah Candles and 7g Bulk Hanukkah Candles sell very well.

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    Beginning on the evening of Dec. 2, Jews will celebrate the eight-day festival of Hanukkah, perhaps the best-known and certainly the most visible Jewish holiday.

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    Beginning on the evening of Dec. 12, Jews have celebrated the eight-day festival of Hanukkah, perhaps the best-known and certainly the most visible Jewish holiday.

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    Over two millennia, Hanukkah has evolved to narrate the story of the Maccabees in ways that meet the distinctive needs of successive generations of Jews.

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    Beginning on the evening of Dec. 2, 2018, Jews are celebrating the eight-day festival of Hanukkah, perhaps the best-known and certainly the most visible Jewish holiday.

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    Hanukkah today responds to Jews' desire to see their history as consequential, as reflecting the value of religious freedom that Jews share with all other Americans.

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    Though it is 2,200 years old, Hanukkah is one of Judaism's newest holidays, an annual Jewish celebration that does not even appear in the Hebrew Bible.

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    In short, Hanukkah is as powerful a commemoration as it is today because it responds to a host of factors pertinent to contemporary Jewish history and life.

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    Hanukkah, meaning“dedication,” marked this military victory with a celebration that lasted eight days and was modeled on the festival of Tabernacles(Sukkot) that had been banned by Antiochus.

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    Hanukkah, with its bright decorations, songs, and family- and community-focused celebrations, also fulfills American Jews' need to reengage disaffected Jews and to keep Jewish children excited about Judaism.

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    Poignantly, telling a story of persecution and then redemption, Hanukkah today provides a historical paradigm that can help modern Jews think about the Holocaust and the emergence of Zionism.

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    It is also an interesting coincidence that the Jewish Festival of Lights, Hanukkah, falls in November or December each year, and is celebrated with the lighting of the candelabra(menorah), traditional foods, games and gifts.

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    The earliest version of this story appears in the Talmud, in a document completed in the sixth century A.D. From that period on, rather than directly commemorating the Maccabees' victory, Hanukkah celebrated God's miracle.

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