It isn't in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible). It was instituted about 175 years after the canon was sealed.
The story of Hanukkah can be found in the Apocrypha (also called the Deuterocanon) in the books of Maccabees I & II, but as mentioned above, these books are not in the Tanakh or Jewish Bible.
Yes, in the Deuterocanonical books of the Catholic Bible the story is found in the Book of Maccabees. It is also referred to by Jesus and His disciple in John chapter 10 (the Feast of the Dedication).
Answer:
(In response to the above): Note that the book of Maccabees is not part of the Hebrew Bible. Hanukkah was instituted about 175 years after the Hebrew canon was sealed. So the Jewish answer is that Hanukkah is not in The Bible.
No, it was enacted about 200 years after the canon of the Hebrew Bible had been sealed.
See also:More about Hanukkah
No, Hanukkah occurred after the Torah was written.
Hanukkah is not mentioned in the Bible. The story of Hanukkah occurred after the events of the Bible.
It isn't located there, since the miracle of Hanukkah occurred after the canon of the Hebrew Bible was sealed.
Nowhere. The Maccabean War took place in 165 BCE, which was AFTER the last book of the Hebrew Bible was written.The first written Jewish reference to Hanukkah occurred in the 5th Century, in the Talmud.
Hanukkah was instituted after the canon of the Hebrew Bible had been sealed.
Joyce Becker has written: 'Bible crafts' -- subject(s): Bible crafts 'Jewish holiday crafts' -- subject(s): Fasts and feasts, Jewish crafts, Judaism 'Hanukkah crafts' -- subject(s): Hanukkah, Jewish crafts
Hanukkah is not one of the Feasts of the Lord, given through Moses. The historical event that Hanukkah commemorates took place around 165 BC - long after the Old Testament had been completed. There is a verse in the New Testament that may or may not be referring to Hanukkah:John 10:22 - "And it was at Jerusalem the feast of the dedication, and it was winter."The Hebrew word - "hanukkah" (×—× ×›Ö¼×”) appears eight times in the Old Testament (coincidence?) and is translated in the KJV Bible as "dedication" and "dedicating"
The Jewish rulers who defeated the Syrian Greeks were the Hasmoneans from the tribe of Levi in violation of the biblical command to have a ruler from the tribe of Judah.Answer:The above answer is simultaneously factual and mistaken. While the Hasmoneans did violate the Biblical tradition by making themselves unauthorized kings, they did so a couple of generations after the celebration of Hanukkah had been created. The reason why Hanukkah isn't in the Jewish Bible is because prophecy had ended and the canon had been sealed close to two centuries before the events of Hanukkah.
Traditional Jews do not eat pork at any time. It is forbidden in the Hebrew Bible (Deuteronomy ch.14).
חנוכה שמחSee also: More about Hanukkah
It is called a Hanukiah or a Hanukkah menorah.
Hanukkah is the name of Hanukkah. In Hebrew it is spelled חֲנֻכָּה
Hanukkah is a holiday, not a person.