The Greeks and the Jews should have gotten along. The Greeks were universalists, open to new ideas and intellectualism from all cultures. The intellectual, spiritual, and legal aspects of Judaism were no doubt fascinating to the philosophical Greeks. The Greeks even seemed to respect the Torah. Ptolemy II had 72 sages translate the Hebrew Bible into Greek. In their journeys, if the Greeks encountered a new god, they would carve a new statue and add it to the pantheon. How much easier should it have been to accept a God that requires no statue?
In every other case where the Greeks ruled over another nation, the Greeks would expect a tribute to be paid and that was enough to allow the other weaker nation to live peacefully under their rule. The Seleucid rulers chose negotiation with local communities. In exchange for acquiescence in rule – in the form of political control and taxation – they guaranteed the continuity of local rights and practices. In fact, when the Seleucids initially conquered Jerusalem, they allowed the Jews to be governed under their own religious laws. But for some reason, this changed and the Seleucid king Antiochus IV persecuted the Jews, prohibited Judaism, and profaned the Temple.
Religious persecution targeting a particular group of the kind that was enacted against the Jews under the reign of Antiochus was unparalleled in Greek history. So what was different about the Jews? Why did Antiochus IV persecute them?
In People Love Dead Jews, Dara Horn makes a distinction between two kinds of antisemitism represented by two major Jewish holidays: Purim and Hanukkah. Purim antisemitism is characterized by a desire to murder the Jewish people. It was this form of antisemitism that was brought to its zenith by the Nazis in their attempt to bring about the Final Solution. They did not care about the Jewish faith. A Jew could be unaware of his Jewish heritage and the Nazis came for him anyway. This form of antisemitism is still around today, manifested in synagogue shootings, in the rise of White Supremacy and especially in the brutal attack by Hamas on October 7, 2023.
As terrifying as this form of antisemitism is, it is often so blatant that it is easy to identify and combat. Horn identifies Hanukkah antisemitism as being far more insidious. In this form of antisemitism, Horn writes that “The goal is still to eliminate Jewish civilization,” noting that this could be achieved “while leaving the warm, de-Jewed bodies of its former practitioners intact.”
The Greek’s treatment of the Jews at the time of Hanukkah was rooted in antisemitism. Not the kind of antisemitism that seeks to eliminate the Jews, but the kind that wants to rid the world of Judaism. This brand of antisemitism, which influenced the treatment of Jews in Communist Russia, still exists in contemporary times as well.
When the International Criminal Court investigated Israel in 2019, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu understood this as the modern manifestation of the same ancient hatred that led the Seleucids to attack the Jews and their Temple.
“As we celebrate Chanukah, the ICC is attempting decrees that are just as antisemitic as those of the ancient Seleucid Empire,” Netanyahu tweeted. “Shame on them! Just as we triumphed before we will triumph now.”
Horn noted that today, Hanukkah antisemitism is being perpetrated under the guise of social justice. This antisemitism attacks Jewish culture and religion, demanding that we disavow our history, our nationalism, our land, and, ultimately, our unique relationship with God. Liberalism demands that we assimilate and adopt its anti-Torah values.
The Greeks believed in the power of the intellect as being the ultimate. While acknowledging the intellectual aspect of the Jewish tradition, they realized that Jews believe in God as the supreme authority, even when His commandments seem illogical. Since the Greeks placed Man and intellect at the pinnacle of creation, they could not accept the Jewish people’s notion of God. This ideology was the basis of their idolatry, in which Man creates God and is, therefore, the ultimate authority.
This Greek trait has been adopted by extreme left-wing liberals who place the individual as the ultimate authority. While claiming to be universalist, so much of the liberal movement rejects Jews who openly identify as Jewish because they find Judaism and Jewish belief threatening.
The Black Lives Matter movement became vocally anti-Israel, though this policy had nothing to do with Israel’s treatment of blacks nor did they criticize any other country. A march for homosexuals in Washington DC in 2019 forbade the display of a rainbow flag with the star of David, claiming it was reminiscent of the Israeli flag and thus a symbol of apartheid, colonialism, and ethnic cleansing. And the pro-Palestinian demonstrations that have followed the October 7th massacre and the war in Gaza are filled with these same lies and rhetoric. All of these people are rewriting history, denying the historical and religious connection between the Jews and the Holy Land and creating a false narrative of the Palestinian people. The rapid spread of antisemitism, driven by a complex mix of misinformation, lies, and the appropriation of social justice narratives, is alarming.
So, while the Seleucids are no more, the form of antisemitism that they displayed remains prevalent today, and the battle against Hellenization and self-centered idolatry continues. And just like in the days of the Maccabees, the battle is focused on Jerusalem.