The hanukkiah is often displayed in public around Hanukkah time in December. Elected officials often participate in publicly lighting the hanukkiah. The
Chabad-Lubavitch movement is well associated with public lighting ceremonies, which it has done since a directive from their last
Rebbe,
Menachem Mendel Schneerson, in 1987. In the book ''A Kosher Christmas: 'Tis the Season to Be Jewish'', author Rabbi Joshua Plaut, Ph.D., details the history of public displays of the hanukkiah across the United States, summarizes the court cases associated with this issue, and explains how Presidents of the United States came to embrace lighting the hanukkiah during Hanukkah. In the US, the
White House has been represented at the lighting of the
National Menorah since 1979. This celebration of Hanukkah began with the attendance of President
Jimmy Carter in the ceremony in Lafayette Park. Additionally, beginning with President
Bill Clinton in 1993, a hanukkiah is lit at the White House, and in 2001, President
George W. Bush began the annual tradition of a
White House Hanukkah Party in the White House residence, which includes a hanukkiah candle lighting ceremony. In the United Kingdom, the
House of Commons holds a yearly hanukkiah lighting at the official residence of the
Speaker of the House of Commons in the
Palace of Westminster. Although
John Bercow became the first Jewish Speaker of the House in 2009, the hanukkiah currently used every year had actually been commissioned in 2003 by his predecessor
Michael Martin, who was a Catholic; prior to this, a hannukiah had to be borrowed for the ceremony every year. Two large hanukkiahs are in
New York City, each standing at 32 feet. One is at Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn, and the other is at Fifth Avenue and 59th Street in
Manhattan near
Central Park. A structure, it is the work of Israeli artist
Yaacov Agam. Because of the hanukkiah's height,
Con Edison assists the lighting by using a
crane to lift each person to the top. In the United States, the public display of hanukkiahs and
Christmas trees on public grounds has been the source of legal battles. Specifically, in the 1989
County of Allegheny v. ACLU case, the majority of the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the public display of hanukkiahs and Christmas trees did not violate the
Establishment Clause because the two symbols were not endorsements of the Jewish or Christian faith, and were rather part of the same winter holiday season, which the court found had attained a secular status in US society. In December 2024 in
Kyiv,
Ukraine, chief of the
Main Directorate of Intelligence of Ukraine Kyrylo Budanov ceremonially lit the first candle on a hanukkiah made from fragments of Russian drones and rockets fired at Ukraine.
Public Collections Many museums have notable collections of hanukkiahs, including the
Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, and the
Jewish Museum in London (which owns the
Lindo lamp). There is a collection in the small Jewish Museum in
Rio de Janeiro. ==Name==