Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

White House unveils Chanukah menorah as part of Christmas decorations

Menorahs have previously been lit in the White House, but this is the first time that one has been included as part of an official display.

The new White House menorah as part of the official Christmas decorations, December 2022. Credit: WhiteHouse.Gov.
The new White House menorah as part of the official Christmas decorations, December 2022. Credit: WhiteHouse.Gov.

As part of its annual Christmas decorations tradition, the White House has unveiled a new addition: a menorah in celebration of Chanukah.

The menorah is included in Cross Hall, a broad hallway on the first floor of the House, underneath a wreath. It is positioned between the portraits of presidents Jimmy Carter and Lyndon Johnson.

According to the White House, the menorah was constructed by the Executive Residence Carpentry Shop from wood leftover from the 1950s-era renovation during Harry S. Truman’s presidency.

Menorahs have previously been lit in the White House, but this is the first time one has been included as part of an official display. The positioning near the Carter portrait is apt, as he was the first president to celebrate the holiday with a lighting of a menorah in 1979. In 2001, George W. Bush was the first president to host a Chanukah party, lighting a menorah in the White House residence.

Last year, President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden also hosted a menorah-lighting, attended by Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff and Israeli Ambassador to the United States Michael Herzog.

“You know, when we light this menorah in the White House, when Jewish families place menorahs in their windows, we are proclaiming liberty,” Biden said at the time. “We’re exercising the freedom that the Maccabees sought to simply practice their faith. And we’re showing that there is still light, that even the most fragile flame can be sustained in a tradition and nourish the soul of a people.”

The overhaul reduces faith categories and removes visible officer rank for chaplains.
Daniel S. Mariaschin, CEO of B’nai B’rith International, told JNS that “the people behind this entry are nothing more than depraved apologists for terrorism.”
The effort is aimed at “ensuring that the nation’s capacity to build and deploy this vital defensive weapon will outpace any adversary’s threat,” the U.S. Defense Department stated.
Israel’s wartime restrictions on the country’s airspace are tentatively in place through April 16.
“To impose such a requirement selectively on Jewish and pro-Israel students raises serious concerns about unequal treatment and viewpoint discrimination,” Students Supporting Israel stated.
Israeli forces arrested the Hezbollah-linked field commander near Mount Dov after an intelligence-led operation, the military said.