There is a conceptual congruence between Hanukka and Eretz
Yisrael. The struggle of the Hasmoneans, the loyalists of Torah, against
the Greeks involved a clash of world outlooks. The Greeks deified nature, while
Jewish tradition asserts that nature exists only through the will of God, Who
daily renews the universe, as we say in the daily morning prayers: "Who in
His goodness daily renews the work of creation."
Rabbi Shlomo Wolbe writes that the distinction between the
Land of Israel and all other lands is that:
Within Eretz Yisrael it is necessary to introduce
sanctity into nature. The challenge of life within the Land is to imbue natural
life with the supernatural, to see that "nature" is an ongoing miracle,
and not the result of "my strength and the might of my arms." [Deuteronomy
8:17]
Similarly, Rabbi Kook commented: "In Eretz Yisrael
one sees the miracle within nature."
Thus, Ḥanukka and the Land of Israel express
the same concept.
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