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A menorah is lit at The Mount on Sunday evening in a celebration hosted by the Jewish Federation of the Berkshires.
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The Berkshire Jewish Musicians Collective performs on Sunday evening at The Mount.
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North Adams' menorah was lighted at City Hall in a brief ceremony on Sunday night.
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Rabbi Rachel Barenblat and her son, Drew Zuckerman, pose with Mayor Jennifer Macksey at City Hall.
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North Adams added a menorah to its holiday displays in 2018. This version has been used in the City Hall lobby for several years.

Berkshires Marks the Start of Hanukkah, Mourns Shooting Victims

By Stephen Dravis & Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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Rabbi Rachel Barenblat and her son, Drew Zuckerman, prepare to light the menorah in North Adams. The brief ceremony can be watched here.

LENOX, Mass. — At a community Hanukkah celebration at The Mount, Jewish Federation of the Berkshires President Arlene Schiff opened the festivities with a recognition of the victims of Sunday's mass shooting in Australia and praise for a hero who helped stop the killing.

Watch the lighting here.

"We stand in solidarity with the Jews of Australia and other Jewish communities around the world who are lighting candles tonight, continuing Jewish life and tradition, standing proud in the face of hate," Schiff said. "And we honor the upstander, Ahmed al Ahmed, the Muslim man who disarmed one of the gunmen and was shot twice.
 
"He could have hidden but did not, and Jews are alive because of his bravery."
 
The death toll has climbed to 15 and dozens were injured when two men opened fire at a celebration of the first night of Hanukkah, the Festival of Lights. Ahmed tackled one of the gunmen and wrestled his firearm away.
 
State Rep. Leigh Davis, D-Third District, also took a moment to honor the fallen at Bondi Beach and praised Jewish Federation of the Berkshires for working toward its mission of nurturing and sustaining the Jewish community locally.
 
Davis said efforts are underway on Beacon Hill to protect that community.
 
"It's times like these we have to realize that anti-Semitism is on the rise, and it's not going away without us focusing on it and doing such things as creating a special commission on combating anti-Semitic behavior like we have done at the State House," Davis said. "This is a moment that we need to come together and recognize that, as a community, we are stronger together. And when we focus on the light, we can get past the fear."
 
On Sunday morning, the Jewish Federation of the Berkshires posted on Facebook that the event was going forward as planned and that, while there was no known threat locally, security was in place for the menorah lighting.
 
"As Dara [Kaufman] noted in her email message earlier today, we will never allow hatred to deter us from practicing our faith and traditions," Schiff said. "We will use every tool at our disposal to ensure our community is safe and our lights burn even brighter."
 
In North Adams, Rabbi Rachel Barenblat Drew Zuckerman of Congregation Beth Israel of the Berkshires explained the history of the holy days, with the help of her son, Drew Zuckerman.
 
"Around 200 years before the birth of Jesus, a foreign Empire took control of Jerusalem. The Greco-Syrians, led by a king named Antiochus, defiled our sacred temple and banned the practice of Judaism," she said. 
 
Zuckerman continued, "After a brutal and bloody conflict, we gained control of Jerusalem. We cleaned and rededicated the temple, but we could only find one little vial of sanctified oil to light the eternal flame that represents God's presence. We lit the flame anyway, and the fire lasted all week until new holy oil could be made."
 
The city added the menorah to its holiday celebrations in 2018. Zuckerman, now 16, has been lighting it every year since.
 
Hanukkah celebrates by lighting a candle on the menorah each night for eight days to commemorate the event, though nowadays the "candles" are often electric or LED. 
 
Barenblat described it as a "small miracle," but said theologian Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel had taught that in "a dark room, even one little flame can bring a lot of light."
 
That light in the darkness is needed more than ever, Zuckerman said. 
 
"For many people today, the world feels like a very dark room, the rise in anti-Semitism, the rounding up of immigrants, the assault on trans rights, the normalization of hate speech," he said, plus the news that morning of the shootings in Australia. 
 
"Hanukkah reminds us that in the darkest times, we rededicate ourselves to bringing light."
 
Hanukkah means dedication, said Barenblat, and as the temple was once rededicated to sacred service, today was a time to rededicate ourselves to "upholding human rights and dignity, standing up for the immigrant and refugee, cultivating empathy and an ethics of mutual care."
 
The Williamstown menorah at the bottom of Spring Street will be lighted on Monday with the second candle. Barenblat said this was a scheduling decision as it has been hard trying to get to both communities, plus there had been a Hanukkah celebration at the temple earlier.  
 
She was heartened that "there are so many celebrations in North County now."

 


Tags: hanukkah,   holiday story,   

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Dalton Air Quality Report Links Dust to Digsite

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — For more than a year, neighbors of Berkshire Concrete's unauthorized dig site have complained that sand drifting into their neighborhood is affecting their air quality.
 
A five-month study is providing data that may support these claims.
 
Air Partners Collaborative of Needham monitored the air quality over five months — from October to April — using a network of monitoring sensors at strategic locations surrounding the site. 
 
Sensors were positioned west and southeast of the site at four locations: Raymond Drive, Off Prospect Street, Renee Drive, and the shooting range 80 meters northwest of the site to provide background measurements for the northwesterly winds. 
 
During the observation period, it was determined that Dalton is experiencing "extreme events of coarse particulate matter, with an aerodynamic diameter of 10 micrometers (PM10)
 
The National Ambient Air Quality Standards for PM10 is 150 micrograms per cubic meter within a 24-hour period, the report says. But Dalton is seeing concentrations reaching 1,000 to 10,000 micrograms per cubic meter during individual events. This is seven to 67 times the national standards.
 
The wind direction analysis indicates that 10 of the 12 exceedance events, or 83 percent, suggest the digsite may be contributing to the issue, but this cannot be proved with certainty.
 
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