Inglés, pregunta formulada por estelanolascodemerca, hace 4 meses

investiga una historia de una festividad en ingles porfavor
Doy corona alguna buena jente pliss se lo agradeceria mil​

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Candles behind bars

Rabbi Shabsi Katz of the city of Praetoria, the administrative capital of South Africa, and Chief Rabbi of the Department of Prisons in that African country, was in contact for many years with the Lubavitcher Rebbe.

In December 1978 he went to visit the Rebbe. In his private audience, a few days before Hanukkah, the Rebbe asked Rabbi Katz what he was doing for the Jewish prisoners in South Africa. The Rabbi explained that conditions there were much harsher than in New York, but they had managed to get the prisoners toJews were not required to work on Rosh HaShana, Yom Kippur and Pesach and even receive kosher food under rabbinical supervision.

The Rebbe then asked: "And what happens on Hanukkah? Can prisoners light the candles? We must value the importance of lighting the candles for a person who is alone in a cell. It is impossible to calculate the warmth and hope they produce. in such a gloomy environment. "

The Rabbi promised that when he returned to South Africa, he would start working on the project so that the following year the inmates could light the Hanukkah candles. The Rebbe was not satisfied and asked, "But what will happen this year?"

Rabbi Katz told him that since Hanukkah was only a few days away and he was in New York, he doubted that anything could be done about it.

The Rebbe asked him to pick up his office phone as soon as this hearing was over.outside and make the calls that were necessary to solve the issue.

Rabbi Katz reminded him that in South Africa it was 4 in the morning; He did not dare to wake up the general in charge of the prisons. The Rebbe did not accept the answer. On the contrary, he argued that when the general sees that the matter is so important, to the point that the Rabbi is contacted from the outside in the middle of the night, he would be impressed and see the importance of authorizing the Jewish prisoners to light the candles that same year.

Leaving the Rebbe's office, one of the secretaries led the Rabbi into a small room. He showed her the phones and told her to get comfortable.

Rabbi Katz first called his secretary in Pretoria, in order to get the number of the religious director of the prisons, General Sephton, a pastor of the Dutch Reform church.

In his communication with the General, the Rabbi explained that he had just finished a meeting with one of the leaders of world Judaism, who expressed his concern for the Jewish prisoners in South Africa. He quoted the Rebbe's words explaining the importance of lighting the Hanukkah candles and how it would bring warmth, light, and hope.

General Sephton excited, understood that the matter was urgent (it was a December 24 at dawn), he promised that as soon as he arrived at his office the next morning he would send a telegram to all prisons in South Africa authorizing all Jewish prisoners to light the Hanukkah candles.

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