Eiffel Tower Menorah-Lighting Brightens Paris, as Worldwide Chanukah Celebrations Begin

Thousands participate in Chabad-Lubavitch's annual public menorah lighting ceremony at the base of the Eiffel Tower in Paris on Sunday, December 6, 2015, the first night of Hanukkah. The event, organized by Chabad-Lubavitch, featured a live video hookup with a simultaneous menorah lighting at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. Photo courtesy Chabad.org / Thierry Guez.
Thousands participate in Chabad-Lubavitch’s annual public menorah lighting ceremony at the base of the Eiffel Tower in Paris on Sunday, December 6, 2015, the first night of Hanukkah. The event, organized by Chabad-Lubavitch, featured a live video hookup with a simultaneous menorah lighting at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. Photo courtesy Chabad.org / Thierry Guez.

By Chabad.org Staff 

Just weeks after terrorists murdered 130 people on the streets of Paris, an estimated 6,000 people gathered tonight at the Eiffel Tower to watch the lighting of a 30-foot-tall menorah on the first night of Chanukah. The annual public menorah-lighting at the base of the iconic Eiffel Tower – a decades-old French tradition – is organized annually by Chabad-Lubavitch.

Before the event started, individuals milled about in the 50-degree weather – fairly mild for a European evening in December. Parents held young children, while others clapped along to the live music, waiting patiently as the crowd grew larger and the speakers became more animated. “Quelle joie extraordinaire!” – “What extraordinary joy!” rang out in the night air.

Children read the 12 pesukim (Torah passages) with vigor and joy. Chabad.org / Thierry Guez.
Children read the 12 pesukim (Torah passages) with vigor and joy. Photo courtesy Chabad.org / Thierry Guez.

In addition to moving introductory speeches by officials, children recited the 12 pesukim with verve.

The first candle on the giant menorah was lit by Chief Rabbi of France Haim Korsia, followed by a rousing rendition of “Maoz Tzur.”

In addition to the sizable crowd of local residents and guests, the event was attended by leaders of the French Jewish community, members of the Paris city council and representatives of the French government.

A Particularly Relevant Message

The Eiffel Tower event is one of more than 30 different public menorah-lighting celebrations taking place across the city and in nearly 100 in nearby towns. It is part of a worldwide Chanukah campaign set into motion in 1973 by the Lubavitcher Rebbe – Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory. Since that time, the public display of the holiday has become a staple of Jewish cultural and religious life.

Chabad-Lubavitch will set up more than 15,000 large public menorahs in more than 80 counties around the world in the next eight days, including in front of landmarks such as the White House in Washington, D.C., the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin and the Kremlin in Russia.

“This year, Chanukah delivers a particularly relevant message,” said Rabbi Chaim Schneur Nisenbaum of the Complexe Scolaire Beth Haya Moushka school system in Paris. “In Paris, we very recently faced terrible attacks … intended to put an end to freedom of mind and opinions. In the historical times of Chanukah, the invaders of the land of Israel, the Greeks, had the same intention. But the Jews did not submit.

“They knew that light is stronger than obscurity, and that nobody can douse it.”

Courtesy Chabad.org/News

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