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What Chanucah says about saving energy

We wonder what message Friday’s festival has for world leaders grappling with climate change.

December 9, 2009 15:31
Bulb in grass

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

3 min read

With the eight days of Chanucah and the Copenhagen climate conference both concluding within a day, the Jewish media may soon be full of uplifting parallels between those Maccabean preservers of oil, and our own conservation needs. It is a nice analogy: switch the Maccabees’ fuel resource, olive oil, with our own oil, gas and coal, and the miracle of the Chanucah lights becomes the ideal narrative of the Copenhagen delegates — minimal amounts of carbon-emitting fuels, maximal progress and globalised development. Judah Maccabee and UK Climate Secretary Ed Miliband share a common goal-how to use the smallest amount of oil without turning off the lights.

Yet, the parallel ends here. Global leaders have come to Copenhagen with the general understanding that if we continue to emit carbon at the present rate, our planet will be deeply harmed. They are conserving now with an eye on tomorrow.

But he story of Chanucah is a tale of anti-conservation. The Maccabees realise that they will need eight days of oil and their resources are limited to one precious jar, yet they go ahead and burn the lot, requiring a divine miracle to bail them out.

Having just bought my organic olive oil for the eight-day celebration, I have the uneasy feeling that all is not green in our winter holiday. If we really followed the Maccabees’ lead, we would use up our limited resources first and ask our conservation questions second. Does Chanucah imply that we should drive with abandon and then rely on God to provide a grand miracle in which all the petrol lasts eight times longer than expected? Although I doubt that there are religious folk out there driving with bumper stickers that read “a great miracle will happen here”, faith in a miraculous ecological fix has permeated quite deeply into religious society.

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