A Senator’s Gift to the Jews, Nonreturnable

Wednesday December 9, 2009 8:05 AM - 7 Comments

orrin-hatchThe following report by Mark Leibovich appears in the New York Times:

The canon of Hanukkah songs written by Mormon senators from Utah just got a little bigger.

Senator Orrin G. Hatch, a solemn-faced Republican with a soft spot for Jews, has penned a catchy holiday tune, “Eight Days of Hanukkah.”

The video was posted Tuesday night on Tablet, an online magazine of Jewish lifestyle and culture, just in time for Hanukkah.

Known around the Senate as a prolific writer of Christian hymns and patriotic melodies, Mr. Hatch, 75, said this was his first venture into Jewish music. It will not be his last.

“Anything I can do for the Jewish people, I will do,” Mr. Hatch said in an interview before heading to the Senate floor to debate an abortion amendment. “Mormons believe the Jewish people are the chosen people, just like the Old Testament says.”

In short, he loves the Jews. And based on an early sampling of listeners, the feeling could be mutual.

“Watching Orrin Hatch in the studio, I said to myself that nothing this great will ever happen to me again,” said Alana Newhouse, the editor-in-chief of Tablet.

Set against a bouncy synthesizer beat, the song begins:

“Hanukkah, oh Hanukkah,

The festival of light/

In Jerusalem,

The oil burned bright.”

Adding to the project’s only-in-America mishmash is that the song is performed by Rasheeda Azar, a Syrian-American vocalist from Indiana. But Mr. Hatch is the song’s unquestioned prime mover, or macher. He is featured in the video, sitting stoic in the studio, head bobbing slightly, donning earphones and contributing backup vocals.

The song’s contagious refrain goes:

“Eight days of Hanukkah,

Come let’s celebrate.

Eight days of Hanukkah,

Let’s celebrate tonight, Hey!”

At one point, Mr. Hatch unbuttons his white dress shirt to expose the golden mezuzah necklace he wears every day. Mezuzahs also adorn the doorways of his homes in Washington and Utah. Mr. Hatch keeps a Torah in his Senate office.

“Not a real Torah, but sort of a mock Torah,” he said. “I feel sorry I’m not Jewish sometimes.”

The genesis of “Eight Days of Hanukkah” came a decade ago. Mr. Hatch was considering a run for the presidency in the campaign eventually won by George W. Bush (Mr. Hatch wound up writing a song for Mr. Bush’s second inaugural, titled “Heal Our Land”). He was discussing his love of songwriting with the writer Jeffrey Goldberg, a well-known mensch-about-town in Washington with a longtime grievance against “the general lameness of Hanukkah music.” (As a columnist for The Jerusalem Post years earlier, Mr. Goldberg had organized a “write-a-new-song-for-Hanukkah contest” that attracted 200 entries, most of them - in his estimation - “dreck.”)

He asked Mr. Hatch if he would write a Hanukkah song. The senator said he would, but never did.

Mr. Goldberg, who now writes for The Atlantic, mentioned the decade-old promise in his blog last year. A day later, Mr. Hatch sent him an apologetic e-mail message that included the first five stanzas of “Eight Days of Hanukkah.”

“I am willing to serve as a Semitic song muse for any United States senator,” Mr. Goldberg said. “God forbid any of the Jewish senators write a Hanukkah song.”

Mr. Hatch enlisted his collaborator, Madeline Stone, a Jewish songwriter from the Upper West Side of Manhattan.”I’m a pretty liberal Democrat,” Ms. Stone said. “But it became more about the music and the friendship for me and Orrin.”

The song was recorded in October at a studio in Manhattan.

Mr. Hatch speaks of “Eight Days of Hanukkah” as a gift to the Jewish people. “This song means more to me than most of the songs I have ever written,” he said. “People need to know the story of Hanukkah. It was a miracle.”

{NY Times/Matzav.com Newscenter}

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7 Responses to “A Senator’s Gift to the Jews, Nonreturnable”

1. Comment from Chaim
Time December 9, 2009 at 8:23 AM

Senator Orrin Hatch is one of a VERY very few Oheiv Yisroel.

2. Comment from Teimini
Time December 9, 2009 at 8:24 AM

The Republican’s are our friends; whilst the Democrats tolerate anti-semites (i.e. Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, and many members of the CBC.)

3. Comment from crazy
Time December 9, 2009 at 10:03 AM

lets write him a mormon song

4. Comment from midwesterner
Time December 9, 2009 at 10:10 AM

in the words of that geat sage, MBD,
“You’d better run for your life
back to Utah overnight
before that montaintop opens wide
to swallow you inside!”

5. Comment from Yisroel Feldman
Time December 10, 2009 at 12:34 AM

Mr. “midwesterner”:

ARE YOU FOR REAL?????

Here, an elderly man, who is an important government official as a prominent United States Senator, who is obviously a wonderful Oheiv Yisroel, composes and publicizes a very nice song in honor of Chanuka, and you have the sick audacity to throw this totally stupid insult at him????

6. Comment from Yisroel Feldman
Time December 10, 2009 at 1:17 AM

(continuation of above comment)

That particular song from MBD — titled “Yerushalaiyim Is Not For Sale” — was made in the midst of a very serious issue where certain people were trying to do something that, Chas V’Shalom, could have been very harmful to Klall Yisroel. So, to, Chas V’Shalom, direct it to a person who is trying to do VERY GOOD things for Klall Yisroel, is just unspeakably completely insane and a terrible Chillul HaShem!

(By the way, of course, Mr. Mordechai Ben David is an Ehrliche Yid who sang and publicized numerous songs; many of them were traditional Torah songs, and many of them he himself made up. At the same time though, we can be 100% sure that Mr. Mordechai Ben David will empathetically tell us all that he is NOT any kind of “Gadol HaDor” or “great sage” or anything like that! And he would thus not like at all being referred to in that way!)

7. Comment from circumambulatr
Time December 16, 2009 at 8:24 PM

i love a good debate…

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