NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

How Hanukkah came to be an annual White House celebration

  • Written by Jonathan D. Sarna, University Professor and Joseph H. & Belle R. Braun Professor of American Jewish History, Brandeis University
imagePresident Donald Trump speaks during a Hanukkah reception at the White House in 2019.AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

President Trump’s plan of holding an in-person Hanukkah reception at the White House on Dec. 9, despite concerns over the coronavirus, is getting much attention on social media.

Some asked whether anyone would be reckless enough...

Read more: How Hanukkah came to be an annual White House celebration

More Articles ...

  1. This DIY contact tracing app helps people exposed to COVID-19 remember who they met
  2. Wisconsin's not so white anymore – and in some rapidly diversifying cities like Kenosha there's fear and unrest
  3. As the pandemic rages, the US could use a little bit more 'samfundssind'
  4. How COVID-19 vaccines will get from the factory to your local pharmacy
  5. How to fight Holocaust denial in social media – with the evidence of what really happened
  6. Trump plan to revive the gallows, electric chair, gas chamber and firing squad recalls a troubled history
  7. What are emergency use authorizations, and do they guarantee that a vaccine or drug is safe?
  8. How TikTok is upending workplace social media policies – and giving us rebel nurses and dancing cops
  9. In a year of Black Lives Matter protests, Dutch wrestle (again) with the tradition of Black Pete
  10. Tiny treetop flowers foster incredible beetle biodiversity
  11. How a flu virus shut down the US economy in 1872 – by infecting horses
  12. What makes the world's biggest surfable waves?
  13. The chattering classes got the 'Hillbilly Elegy' book wrong – and they're getting the movie wrong, too
  14. Vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 will have side effects – that's a good thing
  15. How a troop drawdown in Afghanistan signals American weakness and could send Afghan allies into the Taliban's arms
  16. A better way for billionaires who want to make massive donations to benefit society
  17. Cicely was young, Black and enslaved – her death during an epidemic in 1714 has lessons that resonate in today's pandemic
  18. Tribes mount organized responses to COVID-19, in contrast to state and federal governments
  19. AI makes huge progress predicting how proteins fold – one of biology's greatest challenges – promising rapid drug development
  20. The morality of canceling student debt
  21. Global disabilities map visualizes the strength and power of millions of athletes around the world
  22. Socialism is a trigger word on social media – but real discussion is going on amid the screaming
  23. Your brain's built-in biases insulate your beliefs from contradictory facts
  24. Peru's democracy faces greatest trial since Fujimori dictatorship after two presidents are ousted in one week
  25. Rapid COVID-19 tests can be useful – but there are far too few to put a dent in the pandemic
  26. Reckoning with slavery: What a revolt's archives tell us about who owns the past
  27. James Baker's masterful legal strategies won George W. Bush a contested election – unlike Rudy Giuliani's string of losses
  28. NCAA amateurism appears immune to COVID-19 – despite tide in public support for paying athletes having turned
  29. Fences have big effects on land and wildlife around the world that are rarely measured
  30. Nonprofits are struggling to do more with less money, but donors and volunteers can help: 5 questions answered
  31. Why waiters give Black customers poor service
  32. The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season was a record-breaker, and it's raising more concerns about climate change
  33. How Taiwan uses Buddhist literature for environmental education
  34. Parler is bringing together mainstream conservatives, anti-Semites and white supremacists as the social media platform attracts millions of Trump supporters
  35. 57 años después del asesinato de Kennedy, las pistas en México se agotan
  36. 'Constructive arguing' can help keep the peace at your Thanksgiving table
  37. This type of sexual harassment on campus often goes overlooked
  38. Homeless patients with COVID-19 often go back to life on the streets after hospital care, but there's a better way
  39. Will there be a monument to the COVID-19 pandemic?
  40. Janet Yellen and Kamala Harris keep shattering glass ceilings – but global elite boys club remains
  41. Poland's anti-abortion push highlights pandemic risks to democracy
  42. California vetoed ethnic studies requirements for public high school students, but the movement grows
  43. It's not just ABCs – preschool parents worry their kids are missing out on critical social skills during the pandemic
  44. Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is cheaper than Pfizer's and Moderna's and doesn't require supercold temperature
  45. Testing sewage can give school districts, campuses and businesses a heads-up on the spread of COVID-19
  46. How Biden and Kerry could rebuild America's global climate leadership
  47. 'My vote will be Black' – A wave of Afro-Brazilian women ran for office in 2020 but found glass ceiling hard to break
  48. School suspensions don't just unfairly penalize Black students – they lead to lower grades and 'Black flight'
  49. Republicans didn't lose big in 2020 – they held onto statehouses and the power to influence future elections
  50. These at-home exercises can help older people boost their immune system and overall health in the age of COVID-19