Jewish Daily Forward
 
 
 
Deck The Halls With Boughs of Challah
Jews Created Soundtrack for Both Hanukkah and Christmas

 
By _Eileen  Reynolds_ (http://forward.com/authors/eileen-reynolds/) 
Published December 03, 2012, issue of _December 07,  2012_ 
(http://forward.com/issues/2012-12-07/) .



A Jewish music preservation group sets out to make the definitive Hanukkah  
compilation and ends up with an album dripping with Christmas cheer. 
That’s not just a humdrum holiday punch line — it’s also an accurate  
description of the genesis of the Idelsohn Society’s December release, “‘Twas  
the Night Before Hanukkah: The Musical Battle Between Christmas and the 
Festival  of Lights,” a catalog of efforts by a century’s worth of Jewish 
musicians to  head off the yuletide blues. And really, what did the Idelsohn 
researchers  expect? 
“The archive of Hanukkah songs was not as deep and varied as we had  
imagined,” they admit in an introduction to the two-disc set, revealing a truth 
 
that will surprise no one familiar with the story “of a Jewish people 
embracing  a somewhat minor Jewish holiday” in a spirited, if not wholly 
successful,  attempt to compete with the merry month-long “red-and-green 
festival of 
gifts,  food, and decorated trees” that is an American Christmas.
 
Hand-wringing over the relationship between Hanukkah and Christmas is 
nothing  new, of course, and the Idelsohn Society traces that tension all the 
way 
back to  1870, when Christmas was declared a national holiday. It was then 
that a New  York City-based group called The American Hebrews started 
campaigning for a  “Grand Revival of the Jewish National Holiday of Chanucka in 
a 
manner and style  never before equaled.” In keeping with the martial spirit 
of the post-Civil War  era, one early revival effort took the form of a 
Young Men’s Hebrew  Association-sponsored military pageant (the better to 
celebrate the Maccabees as  an ancestral race of manly Jewish warriors). 
And so began the great American Jewish war against Christmas.
 
Almost as soon as Christmas was stamped on calendars as a national holiday, 
 it became just that — a widespread secular celebration that centered on  
presents, sleigh bells and sweets, and had little to do with Christian 
rituals  marking the birth of Christ. American Jews, even as they hastened to 
develop  festive eating and gift-giving traditions for their own eight-night 
festival,  couldn’t resist a turn on Santa’s knee. 
But rather than viewing the beloved contributions of songwriters like 
Irving  Berlin to the Christmas canon as shameful relics from a painful time 
when 
the  goal was to assimilate at all costs, “‘Twas the Night Before Hanukkah”
 takes a  jollier approach. A 1955 recording of Jewish songwriter Mel Tormé’
s wistful,  understated performance of his iconic “The Christmas Song” is 
a highlight of  this collection. And why not?
“Why shouldn’t Jews write the Christmas songs that everybody sings? Who  
knows America better than the Jews?” the Idelsohn Society asks. “America is 
a  craft, and Jews have long mastered it, so let it snow.”
 
This “anything goes” spirit pervades the catchall two-disc set, a 
compendium  of rare and wacky gems ranging from cheerful Disney-like 
injunctions to “
march  like Maccabees in a Hanukkah parade” to Bob Dylan’s curiously 
somber rendition  of “Little Drummer Boy.” Most of this stuff you won’t have 
heard before and the  detailed liner notes include new essays by music critic 
Greil Marcus and  historian and Forward columnist Jenna Weissman Joselit. 
Reproductions of album  covers dating from the midcentury height of the peppy 
pro-Hanukkah propaganda  effort and sporting what Weissman Joselit aptly 
describes as “youngsters with  eager beaver expressions” are an added bonus. 
Given all that, this might be the first-ever holiday album that’s both a  
scholarly triumph and a guilty pleasure. Take the opening track: A spirited  
1950s recording of a 1939 minor-key Zionist anthem by Tin Pan Alley composer 
 Gerald Marks, it begins with a narrator speaking boldly over majestic 
organ  chords: “The miracle of light, as described in the song, can be compared 
only to  eternal Israel, and the rebuilding of the Jewish nation in our time 
has given  Hanukkah an added importance.” George M. Cohan could have 
written the rousing  march tune, with its bouncy piano accompaniment and 
sighing 
men’s chorus, that  follows. Next, consider the 1960s-era “Chanukah Quiz,” 
written and performed by  Jewish children’s song pioneer Gladys Gewirtz. When 
she sings, “Four dreidel  letters you must know to win: nun and ___ hey and 
____” I defy you not to belt  out “Gimel!” and “Shin!” like you’re back 
at Camp Ramah, where Gewirtz served as  music director. Then, when all this 
maniacally chipper indoctrination becomes a  bit too much, there’s always 
Woody Guthrie’s “Hanukkah Dance,” which for all its  talk of hop-hop-hopping 
around has the lazy, laid-back feel of a campfire  song.
 
That’s not to say that certain parts of “‘Twas the Night Before Hanukkah” 
 won’t make you cringe. Don McLean’s 1972 “Dreidel,” which uses the 
relentlessly  spinning top as a metaphor for the drudgery of modern life, 
includes what must  be some of the most embarrassing lines ever written: “And I 
feel like I’m a  dippin’ and a-divin’ / My sky shoes are spiked with lead 
heels!” Once-daring  comic Jewish-Christmas spoofs, like Stanley Adams’ and Sid 
Wayne’s 1962 Yinglish  poem, “‘Twas the Night Before Chanukah,” now have 
the ring of faded clichés. 
Still, the Idelsohn Society’s openhearted embrace of the kitschy and dated 
is  what makes “‘Twas the Night Before Hanukkah” so appealing. Who wants to 
listen  to another anthology of timeless classics? It’s much more fun to 
travel back to  the 1980s with the Ramones, to hear Danny Kaye take a 
plausibly reverent stab at  “O Come All Ye Faithful” or to imagine the elegant 
cocktail party where Benny  Goodman’s big band might have set the mood for 
romance with the love-struck  strains of “Santa Claus Came in the Spring.” Even 
the syrupy strains of a  shamelessly sentimental song like 1950s pop idol 
Eddie Fisher’s “Christmas Eve  in My Hometown” can make you yearn for the 
darnedest things: a particular  December from childhood, grandmother’s cookies, 
an imagined past in which all  tender moments were enhanced by the 
contributions of an unseen choir.
 
But the past haunts us, too. Greil Marcus hears “deadly fatalism,” “terror”
  and the “specter of the pogrom” in legendary cantor Yossele Rosenblatt’s 
 “Yevonim,” and after listening to the scratchy, ethereal recording from  
1916, it’s hard to disagree with him. In it, a far-off choir is suddenly 
joined  by Rosenblatt’s improbably clear tenor as he and the other singers seem 
to reach  through time to tell us something, “something they are not sure 
will make it to  the future.” Marcus identifies them as the “specter of the 
specter,” the “dead  standing in for the dead who will follow them” in a 
pogrom. Exactly why the  Holocaust seems to loom over a song about oil burning 
for eight days is  difficult to describe, but Rosenblatt’s beseeching cries 
are enough to take your  breath away. 
And if you listen closely, you’ll find eerie moments on the Christmas disc, 
 too. When Eddie Cantor sang “The only thing I want for Christmas / is just 
to  keep the things that I’ve got” in 1939, could he have known just how 
precious  those things really were? Knowing what was to come — and what had 
already begun  in Europe — adds poignant urgency to what was once a 
run-of-the-mill  anti-commercial holiday message: The things that matter don’t 
come “
tied with  ribbons, or wrapped in cellophane.” Even now, as we fret over 
Hanukkah bushes  and debate whether to let the kids open presents on all eight 
nights, this is  one forgotten Jewish-Christmas 

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