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  2. Opinion: This Hanukkah, we Jews could use your help - AOL

    www.aol.com/opinion-hanukkah-jews-could-help...

    The first night of Hanukkah this year marks exactly two months since Hamas waged a brutal surprise attack on Israel, murdering 1,200 people, raping women and kidnapping 200.

  3. Hanukkah is no minor Jewish holiday. It becomes a crucial ...

    www.aol.com/hanukkah-no-minor-jewish-holiday...

    Shellie Branson, left, brought 18-month-old Gigi Green up on stage to see the menorah after it was lit during a Hanukkah celebration at the Trager Family Jewish Community Center on Monday, Dec. 19 ...

  4. Christmas and Hanukkah: Distinct Holidays With a Common Challenge

    www.aol.com/news/christmas-hanukkah-distinct...

    Hanukkah’s purifying of the temple from idolatrous worship would, for most Jews, preclude any embrace of Christian claims about a trinity, a divine God-Man, and the abrogation in such a person ...

  5. Women in Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Judaism

    Halacha also provided women with some material and emotional protections related to marriage, and divorce that most non-Jewish women did not enjoy during the first millennium of the Common Era. [14] Penal and civil law treated men and women equally. [15] Evidence suggests that, at least among the elite, women were educated in the Bible and in ...

  6. Girls' Day (Judaism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girls'_Day_(Judaism)

    Rosh Chodesh L'Banot [1] [2] (Hebrew: ראש חודש לבנות), also known as Chag HaBanot [2] (חג הבנות, 'Festival of the Daughters', [3] sometimes translated as Girls' Day), and in Arabic as Eid al-Banat, [clarification needed] [2] is a holiday celebrated by some Jewish communities in the Middle East on Rosh Chodesh of the Jewish month of Tevet, during the Jewish holiday of Chanukah.

  7. Women of the Wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_of_the_Wall

    Woman praying at Women of the Wall service wearing a tallit and tefillin. Women of the Wall (Hebrew: נשות הכותל, Neshot HaKotel) is a multi-denominational Jewish feminist [1] organization based in Israel whose goal is to secure the rights of women to pray at the Western Wall, also called the Kotel, in a fashion that includes singing, reading aloud from the Torah and wearing religious ...

  8. 10 surprising facts you may not know about Hanukkah - AOL

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    Hanukkah celebrates the victory of a small group of Jewish rebels over an enormous Greek army to defend their heritage, and a miraculously long-lasting flame that continues to serve as a symbol of ...

  9. Jewish religious clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_religious_clothing

    Married observant Jewish women wear a scarf (tichel or mitpahat), snood, hat, beret, or sometimes a wig in order to conform with the requirement of Jewish religious law that married women cover their hair. [30] [31] A Greek Sephardic couple in wedding costume ca. late 19th century. The woman wears a veil in accordance with wedding custom.