Hanukkah commemorates the victory of the Maccabean war, of about 165 BCE. The eight-day rededication of the Temple is mentioned in the book of Maccabees (I, 4:36; and II, 1:18); and Josephus mentions the eight-day festival in Antiquities ch.12. Hanukkah was instituted by the Sages, as recorded in the Talmud (Shabbat 21b).
Answer:On Hanukkah, the chief celebration is not for the military victory. It's for the miracle of the oil (Talmud, Shabbat 21b), which occurred during the Hasmonean victory over the Syrian-Greeks in the Second Temple era; and we also thank God for His having helped us to oust the Syrian-Greeks (Seleucids) and their lackeys, the Hellenizing Jews. The Seleucids, at the instigation of the Hellenizers, had forbidden various Torah-practices, such as Sabbath-observance, and pressed the Jews to offer up idolatrous sacrifices. The Hasmoneans (a religious Jewish family) fought to retake the Holy Temple, which had been seized by the Seleucids, and to enable the people to once again observe the Torah. When they reached the Temple grounds, they found only one day's supply of unsullied olive oil, but the oil lamps miraculously burned for eight days (ibid.), allowing enough time for new oil to be prepared and brought.The significance of the miracle is that it demonstrated that God's presence still dwelt in the Holy Temple.
The Torah Sages instituted the festival of Hanukkah at that time (Talmud, Shabbat 21b), to publicize the miracle (Rashi commentary, ibid).
The Al-Hanisim prayer which we recite during Hanukkah centers around the Hasmoneans' victory, while the candle-lighting commemorates the miracle of the oil.
Though the military victory is prominently mentioned in the prayers, it wouldn't have been celebrated if not for the miracle of the oil, just as we have no special occasion to mark Abraham's victory (Genesis ch.14), or those of Moses (Numbers ch.21), Joshua, Deborah (Judges ch.4), Gideon (Judges ch.6-7), Jephthah (Judges ch.11), or King David. And though the Hasmonean battles continued for two decades after the retaking of the Temple, the Sages instituted Hanukkah immediately after the miracle of the oil.
It should also be noted that the main goal for which the Maccabees fought was not political independence. They fought to enable the people to observe the Torah's commandments; as we say in the Al Hanisim prayer: "the Greeks sought to cause us to forget Your Torah and leave Your statutes."
Hanukkah is a holiday, not a person.
There is no such custom related to the holiday of Hanukkah.
They would be memories of the holiday of Hanukkah.
No U.S. president has ever declared Hanukkah a national holiday.
Yes. Hanukkah is not a fasting holiday.
There is no specific drink associated with the holiday of Hanukkah.
There is no tradition of the holiday of Hanukkah being interrupted.
Hanukkah is a Jewish celebration with no connection to Buddhism.
Hanukkah is the holiday. It's celebrated by Jewish people.
NO it is a Jewish holiday
Is it happy Hanukkah
The holiday is called Channukah (Hanukkah).