As we approach Chanukah, I invite you to consider something deeply powerful and potentially life-changing: the special night of Notzer VeNakeh on Zos Chanukah — the eighth and
final, most spiritually potent night of the holiday.
Why This Night Matters
Zos Chanukah is more than the conclusion of eight days of light; it is the moment when the gates of Divine mercy stand wide open —
a rare, profound spiritual opportunity.
The Notzer VeNakeh Tikkun taps into a higher system of compassion (called “Dikna Kadisha”), allowing prayers to bypass strict judgment and reach straight to the source of kindness and blessing.
Through this sacred ceremony — no matter where you are — you can draw down blessings for:
- Children, family, and future generations (Banei),
- Health, longevity, and spiritual vitality (Chayei),
- Livelihood, sustenance, and material stability (U’Mezoni).
Why You Might Want to Join This Year
Perhaps you’ve been carrying heavy worries — about the future of your family, your health, your finances, or simply a sense of emptiness or longing for deeper meaning. Zos Chanukah offers a chance to illuminate those dark corners with Divine light and mercy.
By submitting the names of yourself (and loved ones), you join a global community in this midnight-hour Tikkun. Your requests are handled with reverence and confidentiality.
What You Can Do Now
Reflect: What are your needs? What blessings are you praying for — children, health, peace, sustenance, spiritual awakening?
Submit your name (and names of loved ones). Wherever you are, you can be spiritually connected. The Tikkun
will be performed at the sacred Tomb of King David, on Mount Zion, Jerusalem — during the midnight hour when Divine mercy flows.
Open your heart: allow this light to touch your life — and let faith and connection guide the coming year.