A Hanukkah celebration at oldest building in Westminster to become annual celebration held inside the oldest building on Westminster’s parliamentary estate will now become an annual event, Lord John Mann has confirmed.
Jewish MPs, peers and staff working across the estate turned up in numbers for the second ever Hanukkah event to be staged inside the beautiful and atmospheric Westminster Hall, which was built in 1097.
Ministers and shadow ministers, including Dan Jarvis, the security minister, Chris Philp, shadow home secretary, and the Liberal Democrats Christine Jardine addressed the gathering, along with Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis and Progressive Judaism’s Rabbi Charley Baginsky.
Commons Speaker Linsday Hoyle also delivered a fine speech which recognised the significance of staging the Hanukkah celebration at oldest building in Westminster to become annual event event in the heart of Westminister as a way of honouring the vital contribution made to this country by the Jewish community.
Later that same evening, the Commons Speaker hosted a Chanukah reception inside Speakers House on the estate, with Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Communities Security and deputy prime minister Angela Rayner among those to speak, along with Board of Deputies president Phil Rosenberg, and Israel’s ambassador to the UK Tzipi Hotovely.
Lord Mann praised the role both the Commons Speaker and Lords Speaker had played in recognising the importance and significance of hosting the Chanukah event on an annual basis.
“Last year you attended the first ever Chanukah commemoration to take place at Westminster Hall, but through the hard work of the Speaker and the Lords Speaker I can confirm today, we will be having an event inside this hall,” said the government’s independent adviser on antisemitism, to loud applause from the audience.
Speaker Hoyle said:”Chanukah serves as a reminder that the Jewish people should stand strong in the face of adversity, just as your ancestors did. Chanukah is also a mark of the Jewish people’s continued dedication to the history that makes you who you are”.
Many of those who work inside parliament from the Jewish community told Jewish News said confirmation of an annual Chanukah event in the heart of parliament was a reassuring move at a time of great uncertainty and rising antisemtism in society outside.
Organised with the All Party Group Against Antisemitism for the first time last year in Westminister Hall, the success of the gatherings led to a decision to make the event an annual one.
In their speeches Rabbi Mirvis and Rabbi Baginsky both dwelt on the symbolism of the Chanukah story, with further reference to the horrendous plight of the hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza.
Mirvis spoke also of the desperate need for “social cohesion” in this country right now, and referenced the belief in Judaism that peoples can celebrate their differences, while at the same work together with the same goals with society.
Baginsky spoke of the “vital” need for all to dedicate themselves to the “pursuit of peace and justice:” at a time when dark had come to obscure light.