Al Hanisim:
the miracle of the battle
The Maharal states that this Gemara seems to contradict what we say in Al
Ha’Nisim, a Tfilah written by Taanim hundreds of years before. In the Al
Ha’Nisim, we proclaim thanks to HASHEM for the miracle of the war. We thank
HASHEM for delivering the Yivanim armies into our hands: “You fought their
battles, judged their judgments, took their revenge. You put the mighty into
the hands of the weak, the many into the hands of the few…” According to the
Al Hanisim, the miracle of Chanukah was that HASHEM delivered us from the
armies of the Yivamim. Yet the Gemara in Shabbos says that we celebrate
Chanukah because of the miracle of the oil lasting eight days. The Maharal
asks, “Which one is correct?”
The miracle of the oil
revealed the miracle of the war.
The Maharal answers that both are true, and both are consistent. The actual
event for which we give thanksgiving and sing Hallel is the salvation of the
Jewish people. We won a war against all odds. However, it wasn’t clear that
the victory was a miracle. To people living in those times, military success
seemed to be natural. It was attributed to Jewish resilience and bravery. It
didn’t appear that HASHEM had delivered us from the hands of the Yivanim.
rather, it appeared as “their might, and the strength of their arms.” It was
only through the miracle of the oil that they came to understand the miracle
of the battle. Once people saw the oil last eight days – an overt miracle
from HASHEM — they then came to see that their success on the battlefield
was from HASHEM as well. The miracle of the oil revealed to them the miracle
of the war.
Israel didn’t have a standing
army
This Maharal becomes difficult to understand when we take into account a
basic historical overview.
The events of Chanukah take place around the middle of the era of the Second
Bais Hamikdash. From the time that Bavel destroyed the first Bais Hamikdash
until that point, the Jewish People lived under the reign of gentile
monarchies. Our right to exist and our form of government was decided by the
ruling parties. We were a vassal state under foreign rule, and when the
Yavanim entered Yerushalayim, the Jewish people did not even have a standing
army.
This wasn’t a war of a stronger army against a weaker opponent. It was a war
in which the most powerful empire in the world was pitted against a band of
unorganized, unarmed, private citizens.
While the war itself lasted 3 years, during the entire first year of
fighting, there were no formal battles. Two armies were not squaring off
against each other; there was no Jewish army. The fighting consisted of
guerrilla skirmishes. Some Jews would sneak up on a lone detail of Yivamim
soldiers, kill them and take their arms. Bit by bit, more Jews would join
Yehudah Hamacabi, but at every point during the wars, the Jews were far
outnumbered, outgunned and preposterously less battle-ready than their
enemies.
The leaders of the rebellion
were Kohanim
Even more startling is that almost all of the original fighters had no
battle experience. The leaders of the rebellion were Kohanim. A Kohain is a
Torah teacher, one who serves in the Bais Hamikdash, one who guides the Klal
Yisroel in Ruchnius. He isn’t a soldier. So this was a war led and fought
not by soldiers, but by Roshei Yeshiva. It was akin to Reb Shmuel Kaminetsky
leading the Lakewood Yeshiva in battle against the US Marine Corps.
How could anyone not see the
miracle of the war?
No intelligent assessment of the situation would have predicted a Jewish
victory. How then is it possible that the Jews at the time saw these events
as anything other than the miracles that they clearly were?
This seems to be natural to
the human
The answer to this question seems to be that when one is many years away and
far removed, he gains a historical vantage point. He is able to see an event
in context and can easily recognize it as a miracle. But to those living in
the day-to-day heat of the battle, it is much more difficult to see the
event from that perspective.
To those involved, it seemed to be a natural course of events. Granted the
odds were slim, but the Jews won. Skirmish after skirmish, battle after
battle, the Macabis came out victorious. There is no question that they did
well, which is why it seemed that it was their skill, their cunning, our
wisdom in battle that won those wars. And as such, to people living in those
times, the miracle was hidden. And then a single event focused their sight.
When the Kohanim returned to the Bais Hamikdash and took out that little bit
of oil that couldn’t possibly last for eight days, and saw it remain aglow
night after night, everyone knew this was miraculous. When they experienced
the miracle of the oil, it reshaped the previous three years in their minds,
and they then saw the battles themselves as the miracles that they were.
We see the same phenomena in
our times
In our own times we witness an eerie parallel to these events and to the
same mistaken interpretation.
For almost 2,000 years we have existed as a lone sheep amongst 70 wolves.
Universally hated and oppressed, the Jewish People have survived. And now,
after almost 1900 years of wandering, we find ourselves back in our own
land.
Since 1948, the Jewish Nation has witnessed profound miracles in the
repopulation and development of the land of Israel. But it is the survival
of our people that is the greatest miracle.
In 1948, the population in the Middle East numbered roughly 650,000 Jews,
surrounded by some 50 million Arabs. On May 15th, 1948, one day after the
State of Israel was declared, five nations attacked, each with well-trained
armies and air forces, each alone capable of annihilating the small band of
Holocaust survivors. At the time there was no Jewish Army, Navy or Air
force. Yet, against all odds, we won that war, and against all odds we
continued to win war after war – until now, ironically, the Jews are
considered the super power in the region.
To most people, Jew and Gentile alike, it seems that this is just the way of
the world. To the average witness to these events, it isn’t a demonstration
of the hand of HASHEM -- It is just the ebb and flow of history.
The lesson of Chanukah is to see behind the veil of nature – to tune our
sight into the true cause of events, and to see that it is HASHEM who runs
the world, and HASHEM Who fights our wars-- then as now.
For more on this topic please
listen to Shmuz #15 – G-d Fights Our Wars
