Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Our worst year ends in a Hanukkah miracle

We’ve struggled all year to find silver linings, but the COVID-19 vaccine is not a silver lining. It’s pure, shining gold. How will we handle such blindingly good news?

Chanukah Menorah
Chanukah menorah. Credit: Pixabay.
David Suissa is editor-in-chief and publisher of Tribe Media Corp and Jewish Journal. He can be reached at davids@jewishjournal.com.

The COVID-19 vaccine is on its way. Instead of waiting years and years, as we normally do with vaccines, we waited eight months. Can you believe it? It’s a modern twist on the ancient Hanukkah miracle when oil for one night lasted for eight. Here, scientists burned the midnight oil for eight long months to bring us a vaccine that will rescue a suffering world.

I can’t say I saw this coming so fast. I’ve been writing all year about 2020 as a year of astonishing challenges and dark news. I figured we’d end the year with one final blast of darkness. The latest spike in coronavirus cases, what we call “the dark winter,” surely qualified.

But in a stunning turnaround, a ray of healing light snuck in at the very end of 2020 to shuffle the script. How can we not love that ending—or should I say new beginning?

I think of those thousands of scientists slogging in their labs for months with the weight of the world on their shoulders. They had to balance maddening urgency with perfect accuracy. From what I gather, they brought in the big guns—a technology called mRNA— that would shorten the time of development. Evidently, it worked. Countries are lining up to get their supply.

We’ve had many heroes in 2020, from frontline workers to humanitarian activists to philanthropists who stepped up to mitigate losses. I want to add the silent “heroes of the laboratories” who strained their eyes on charts and high-powered microscopes to figure out how to outsmart a nasty virus.

It’s been a dizzying year. Our minds have been reeling from the devastation. We’ve struggled all year to find silver linings, but this vaccine is not a silver lining. It’s pure, shining gold. How will we handle such blindingly good news?

First, let’s not spoil this last mile by getting complacent. We’ve been cautious for so long; we ought not to let our guards down. We’re quarantine-exhausted, Zoom-exhausted, isolation-exhausted. But soon enough, the vaccine will reach all of us.

For those who have lost loved ones, it’ll be too late. A vaccine cannot bring those lives back. For those who have lost their livelihoods, a vaccine will not be enough. Businesses that have been decimated by the lockdown and were forced to close won’t be saved by a vaccine. Financial insecurity will remain.

Indeed, some damage may be permanent. Old habits may die hard, but what about new habits? How “sticky” will the new habits of 2020 prove to be? How many people will continue to pray, shop and watch movies exclusively online, while spending more time in nature? How strong will be the pull to reconnect with people?

For those who can afford it, they will return to consumption with a vengeance. More travel, more in-person shopping, more dining in restaurants, more investments. Business owners, and our economy, will be grateful for their vengeance.

I hope there won’t be too many people who refuse to be vaccinated, but for those in that camp, the risk will be theirs. I also hope we all will be patient. Frontline health workers and high-risk people must come first. There’ll be enough for everyone, just like the routine flu shot.

It may take many more long months, but I’m looking forward to seeing the post-vaccine world with wide-open eyes, like a kid unwrapping a new toy. In the meantime, let’s take a moment to appreciate that in this crazy, impossible year, everyone on the planet got the same Hanukkah gift.

David Suissa is editor-in-chief and publisher of Tribe Media Corp, and the “Jewish Journal.” He can be reached at davids@jewishjournal.com.

This article was first published by the Jewish Journal.

The IHRA definition could have a “chilling effect on political speech,” said the British Medical Association, drawing condemnation from Jewish medical groups and Holocaust educators.
Washington is said to be looking to move ahead with a $750 million sale of jet engines to Turkey, bypassing congressional review • The U.S. president said Turkey stayed out of the Iran war at his request.
Basil Sweid, 32, a driver in the military’s 75th Battalion, was “a brave reservist fighter, filled with a sense of mission, who symbolized the unbreakable bond between the Druze community and the State of Israel,” said Israel’s prime minister.
The Jerusalem-based India x Israel Nexus seeks to strengthen business, cultural and policy cooperation between the two countries.
It’s “absurd and tragic that there are U.N. experts who are supposed to care about the rights of women, especially to combat sexual violence, and she’s one of the world’s major deniers of sexual violence against Israeli women,” Hillel Neuer told JNS.
“I will be one of the Jewish members of Congress most willing to stand up for Palestinian human rights,” he told the crowd at his victory party in Brooklyn.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.