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Hanukkah is too holy to be known primarily for sarcastic pop music, says the founder of an Orthodox Jewish Web site, who wants to reclaim the holiday from Hollywood.
Although the eight-day Jewish Festival of Lights does not begin until sundown December 7, Binyamin Jolkovsky, 35, of www.jewishworldreview.com is spearheading an effort to depose a pop song composed in 1996 by "Saturday Night Live" comedy idol Adam Sandler.
Simply named "The Hanukkah Song," and revised since its debut, the song is played widely on local rock stations such as WARW 94.7 FM. In 2002, it was featured on "Eight Crazy Nights," a made-for-TV Hanukkah movie.
Its irreverent lyrics suggest the holiday should be shared with a gin and tonic and lists movie stars, athletes, politicians and other celebrities as being Jewish.
"When you feel like the only kid in town without a Christmas tree," the song says, "here's a list of people who are Jewish, just like you and me."
Mr. Jolkovsky calls the song -- and others like it -- an "embarrassment."
"Hanukkah is about a lot more than menorahs or potato latkes," he says. "It's childish when you take a minority that doesn't take itself seriously and then you see what they're offering."
Others say the schmaltz has its place.
"Christmas music is so everywhere during this season that Sandler had to be over the top as a song of rebellion," says Yosef Abramowitz, chief executive officer of Newton, Mass.-based Jewish Family and Life. "Sandler's song is the default song. People should be happy it's made it into the mainstream. You're not going to have regular Hanukkah music make it onto the rock music stations."
So Mr. Abramowitz is agitating for a Jewish category in the Grammy awards, similar to six already existing pop Christian and gospel categories.









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