Dec 1, 2010 (17 hours ago)
Hanukkah 2010: Discover 8 Nights of Meaning and Light
As we celebrate Hanukkah 5771, we also begin to wind up the first decade of the 21st century, and what a decade it has been. America went to war and remains so to this day. Israel and the Palestinians are still unable to make peace. The economy, both at home and in most of the developed world, is shaky, with most of us still wondering exactly how close we came to another Great Depression, and some still waiting for the other shoe to drop. For American Jews, the last decade has seen a wild proliferation of Jewish institutions and initiatives, but it's not clear if we will sustain them or if we, like most Americans, simply create them and dispose of them as we keep searching for the "next big thing." Over that past ten years, lines have hardened in organized Jewish life even as those very lines have loosened in the lives of most Jews, creating a spiral of frustration and fear about the Jewish future on part of the first group. It feels that with every passing day of the last decade, our personal lives, like a dreidel, spun faster and faster. That's the world of Hanukkah 5771, one which needs Hanukkah and the opportunity it provides ─ to remember, reconnect, and renew. Our world and our lives often feel like those spinning dreidels, and on Hanukkah we remember that we have it within us to play the game of life as much as the game plays us. We reconnect to the source of that ability, even through the foods we eat. 

1. Where in your life could you use a little more light, enlightenment or energy? 2. Where have you found what you needed in the past and what made it work for you? 3. Where, what or to who could you look now to find what you need? 4. How could you tap into the energy within yourself and others more effectively? 5. To whose life could you contribute a little more light, enlightenment or energy? 6. When have you felt connected to your own ability to direct your own life and contribute to the lives of others? 7. What gift lies within you that you would like to use more fully or share more with others? 8. What goal will you pursue between this Hanukkah and the next one, trusting that the pursuit itself will bring rewards not yet even imagined? Having lived through a decade at least as challenging as our own, the Maccabees and all those who stood with them answered these kinds of questions and made miracles happen. In answering these questions for ourselves, we will rediscover who we really are and how much capacity we truly possess, to renew ourselves, our people and the fast-turning world in which we live
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