A story about a Roman historian who allegedly kept a private journal detailing the first Hanukkah reappears online every December. A non-Jewish eyewitness writing in real time while witnessing the Maccabees light their lamps in Jerusalem sounds alluring. The problem is that no historian who has thoroughly examined the archives is able to identify such a diary. It is not found in any papyrus collection, monastery library, or catalog. And the story itself is not as important as that absence.
What does exist is something less neat but nearly as fascinating. About two centuries after the Temple’s rededication, Flavius Josephus, a Jewish commander who later became a Roman citizen, wrote about it. He wasn’t there. He was writing for a Roman audience that had never heard of Antiochus or his desecrated altar, and he was drawing from earlier sources, some of which were now lost. Josephus is the first author to refer to Judah Maccabee’s eight-day celebration as the Festival of Lights, not because of the well-known oil but rather because, according to him, the Jewish people experienced an unanticipated liberation akin to light breaking through.
It’s easy to forget that distinction. Josephus makes no mention of the miracle of the single jar of oil lasting eight nights. Centuries later, it appears in the Babylonian Talmud, which was composed circa 500 CE, which is closer to our time than the actual events of 164 BCE. Therefore, the holiday that people envision today—candles growing in number every night—is actually a multi-layered narrative that has been gradually constructed over hundreds of years by various authors rather than a single journal entry that depicts a single dramatic evening.

It’s worthwhile to consider why the notion of the “forgotten diary” persists. Imagining an outsider’s perspective on a Jewish victory is appealing because it almost seems like proof that it actually occurred, attested to by someone who has no stake in the result. Eventually, Rome did notice Judea, but usually for less festive purposes; by the time Roman legions were established in the area, their interest in regional religious calendars was primarily administrative. A private journal entry expressing admiration for the Temple’s lamplight simply doesn’t align with our understanding of the Romans’ writing style or the things they took the time to document.
This doesn’t make the holiday any less poignant or genuine. If anything, the patchwork of sources—a politically charged Jewish text left out of the Hebrew Bible, a Roman citizen historian writing for a foreign audience decades later, and rabbis arguing over how many candles to light on which night centuries later—says more about how memory functions. Stories endure not because a single observer captured them perfectly in real time, but rather because communities continue to tell them.
All of this has a tiny irony. The holiday of Hanukkah, which is about light enduring in the face of adversity, has given rise to a type of folklore about lost manuscripts and unseen witnesses. A story about rediscovery creating its own myths of rediscovery is a recurring pattern that is difficult to ignore. It is unlikely that the diary will ever be found in an uncataloged archive. Strangely, though, the hunt for it keeps people wondering how the holiday came to be, which may be the more beneficial miracle.
