Saturday, December 12, 2009

Hanukkah

"Hanukkah is the most adult of holidays. It commemorates an event in which the good guys did horrible things, the bad guys did good things and in which everybody is flummoxed by insoluble conflicts that remain with us today. It’s a holiday that accurately reflects how politics is, how history is, how life is."

What does "adult" mean in this context, David Brooks? Does it mean that we must always honor the faith of our fathers, cast it in the best (not the truest) imaginable light, and villify all who dispute our particular version of orthodoxy?

"Generations of Sunday school teachers have turned Hanukkah into the story of unified Jewish bravery against an anti-Semitic Hellenic empire. Settlers in the West Bank tell it as a story of how the Jewish hard-core defeated the corrupt, assimilated Jewish masses. Rabbis later added the lamp miracle to give God at least a bit part in the proceedings."

Or does "adult" mean acknowledging the inadequacy of every self-serving version of this-- as of every-- human story?

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