UIUC students celebrate Hanukkah while thinking about Middle East war

Rabbi Dovid Tiechtel joins University of Illinois provost John Coleman in lighting an electric menorah in front of the student union building.

URBANA – The Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, also called the Festival of Lights, started on the evening of December 7. At the University of Illinois, participants are observing the holiday while also reflecting on the current situation in the Middle East.

UIUC provost John Coleman joined members of Illini Chabad to light a menorah in front of the Illini Union Thursday night.

Sophomore Daniel Newman said celebrating with fellow Jewish students makes this tough time easier.

People were invited to eat sufganiyot (jelly doughnuts) as part of the Hanukkah celebration on December 7, 2023. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)

“Sad day for everyone who knows what’s going on in Gaza, and Israel. But being able to be here and show there’s a community and people supporting each other is making every struggle better,” said Newman.

This year’s Hanukkah celebrations come two months after the terrorist group Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis and abducted 250 more. More than 15,000 Palestinians have been killed since the war in Gaza started. The ongoing situation has also caused a rise in antisemitism and Islamophobia in the United States. 

Rabbi Dovid Tiechtel urged the crowd to think of the Jewish children who are still being held hostage and unable to join their families for this year’s Hanukkah celebrations. 

He also recounted the ancient Israelites who rededicated a Temple in Jerusalem.

UIUC students listening to speakers at the December 2023 Hanukkah celebration. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)

“The story of Hanukkah is about how the few in their homeland were being oppressed. And as the whole world watched from the sidelines, the Maccabees [Jewish rebel warriors] stood up and the Maccabees said ‘no one could destroy our people,'” said Rabbi Tiechtel.

Sophomore Sari Sugar, an organizer at Illini Chabad, said that the festival of lights not only celebrates the miracle of a small amount of oil keeping a Temple’s menorah lit for eight days, it also commemorates the spiritual strength of the Jewish people.
 

“More than just a religion. It’s a group of values and morals that we live up on on a day-to-day basis, which are the same things human morals of giving back, of community, of raising your kids to respect older people.”

A lit menorah stands in front of the Illini Center on the first night of Hanukkah, December 7, 2023. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)

Reginald Hardwick

Reginald Hardwick is the News & Public Affairs Director at Illinois Public Media. He oversees daily newscasts and online stories. He also manages The 21st Show, a live, weekday talk show that airs on six NPR stations throughout Illinois. He is the executive producer of IPM's annual environmental TV special "State of Change." And he is the co-creator of Illinois Soul, IPM's Black-focused audio service that launched in February 2024. Before arriving at IPM in 2019, he served as News Director at WKAR in East Lansing and spent 17 years as a TV news producer and manager at KXAS, the NBC-owned station in Dallas/Fort Worth. Reginald is the recipient of three Edward R. Murrow regional awards, seven regional Emmy awards, and multiple honors from the National Association of Black Journalists. Born in Vietnam, Reginald grew up in Colorado and is a graduate of the University of Northern Colorado. Email: rh14@illinois.edu Twitter: @RNewsIPM