Jewish Holidays

Hanukkah

Festival of Lights

“Judaism and its culture of hope survived, and the Hanukkah lights are the symbol of that survival, of Judaism’s refusal to jettison its values for the glamour and prestige of a secular culture, then or now. A candle of hope may seem a small thing, but on it the very survival of a civilisation may depend.” — Rabbi Jonathan Sacks

When is Hanukkah 2025

25 Kislev - 2 Tevet 5786


Begins: Sundown on Sunday 14 December 2025
Ends: Nightfall on Monday 22 December 2025

Videos on Hanukkah

The Hidden Story of Chanukah

On 20th October 2012, the Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks delivered a keynote lecture at Bushey Synagogue about the story within...

Chanukah Thoughts

8 Short Chanukah Thoughts for 8 Chanukah Nights

Inspired by Faith, We Can Change the World

The story of the Maccabees was more than one of military victory. They show what we can achieve when we keep faith.

The Third Miracle

Rabbi Sacks shares a message of Jewish hope... a hope which led to the celebration of Chanukah today.

Inside/Outside

What can we learn from the Shabbat, Havdallah and Chanukah candles?

The First Clash of Civilisations

Ancient Greece and its culture of tragedy died, but our Chanukah lights symbolise the survival of Judaism’s culture of hope.

Chanukah in Our Time

Discover Rabbi Sacks' message to Mikhail Gorbachev when they lit Chanukah candles together in 1991.

The Light of War and the Light of Peace

If you only have one candle on Friday during Chanukah, what should you use it for? Should you light it as a Shabbat candle or a Chanukah one?

The Light of the Spirit Never Dies

What was the miracle of the first day of Chanukah?

To Light Another Light

Understanding the famous Talmudic disagreement about lighting the Chanukah lights when you don't have a shamash.

The Lights We Light: A Thought on Chanukah

Watch Rabbi Sacks' very first Facebook Live session, in which he shares some ideas on the festival of Chanukah, and...

Read about Hanukkah

From The Archives

Essays and writings from Rabbi Sacks' extensive body of work

ARTICLES

The keys to understanding American anti-Semitism — and fighting back

Hanukkah tells us not to curse the darkness, but instead to bring light to the world.

ARTICLES, ARTICLES

Why Chanukah is the Perfect Festival for Religious Freedom

Chanukah is the festival on which Jews celebrate their victory in the fight for religious freedom more than two thousand...

ARTICLES

A New Movement Against Religious Persecution

In 1991, I lit Hanukah candles with Mikhail Gorbachev, then President of the Soviet Union. After the ceremony he asked,...

CREDO

The Festival of Lights signifies an inextinguishable faith

What I find fascinating about Chanukah, the Jewish festival of lights we celebrate at this time of the year, is...

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

Religious Freedom Matters

Last night we lit candles on the first of the eight days of the Jewish festival of Chanukah. And I...

CREDO

The Battle to Teach Moral Values is Won at School

It was a fateful clash of civilisations when Ancient Greece and Israel collided. Jews won. Had they not done so,...

JEWISH CHRONICLE ARTICLES

The Flame of Jewish Learning that Keeps the Jewish People Alive

Too often, debates about Jewish identity and continuity take place in an intellectual void, as if we had no history....

ARTICLES

Chanukah: War and Peace

A military victory, however great, is short-lived. A moral victory endures.

Chanukah Menorah image created by the Rabbi Sacks Legacy

ARTICLES, ARTICLES

The Miracle of Chanukah

There are times, rare but unforgettable, when you know you are living through a page of history. That is what...

From Covenant & Conversation

The series of weekly commentary essays on the Torah by Rabbi Sacks

MIKKETZ • 5785

The Author of Our Lives

God is the co-author of the script of our life, and sometimes He reminds us of this by making us wait and taking us by surprise....

MIKKETZ • 5783

To Wait Without Despair

The Parsha in a Nutshell This summary is adapted from this week’s main Covenant & Conversation essay by Rabbi Sacks,...