
| Classes
| |
Stories
| | Bibliography | | What's New |
Publications
|
Main Menu
PURIM: The Masks Jews Wear
Thoughts and Study
Questions by Rabbi Goldie Milgram
A version of this article that appeared in an Israeli newspaper in
Hebrew
by
Rabbi Goldie Milgram, author of
Reclaiming Judaism as a Spiritual Practice, Meaning and
Mitzvah, & Make Your Own Bar/Bat Mitzvah
|
The price of true
freedom is indeed eternal vigilance, It is our practice to cross-dress on Purim - find the other in yourself. Dress up and try on Esther’s role, be Haman the villian, the king and the assassin. The Scroll of Esther invites you onto the stage of history. For what cause would you risk giving up your privilege, position, and lifestyle? For what would you risk your life? For what principles or causes ought a person to risk life? Is the King of unawareness and apathy, Ahashverosh there inside too? Better to discover these qualities in play than to act them out and destroy what it means to be a Jew. Intermarried like Esther? Here's another Purim Question:
If
you are not Jewish, and you are in a relationship with a Jewish person,
how can you support your partner in exploring and securing the treasures
and security of his/her people? How will you help this precious legacy
live through your children, your students, your art, your work?
In Megillat Esther G*d
is never mentioned. This might be further
documentation of the Jewish people's spiritual evolution away from the
G*d-as-parent model and their recognition that events may have Mystery
behind them and yet require human involvement if we are going to be of
service in shaping creation. This absence of G*d-by-name in the story also
seems to facilitate the permission participants feel to give full
expression to the playfulness of the holiday. Our sages find G*d in Megillat Esther by pointing to Deuteronomy 31:18. Listen to the sound of the Hebrew words: Ah-noe-hi ha-stehr ahsteer, "I will hide my face on that day." Can you hear how ahsteer sounds like Esther? So, on Purim, G*d is also wearing a mask, that of Esther. Every day, you, a stranger, your teacher, a partner, your neighbor, your enemy, each has the potential to realize s/he is in the Esther position—able to unmask and bring a mitzvah-centered consciousness into difficult circumstances. The choice belongs to the individual; the consequences belong to all. In the Purim story, the orphan who became a queen by winning a beauty contest learns the evil advisor to the king has obtain a writ to kill all the Jews. Queen Esther develops a plan to save her people that involves appearing before the king to invite him to a party. Since the Queen is not allowed in the king’s presence without prior invitation, she will be taking her life in her hands. Esther prays and fasts before she acts. She prepares a feast to which she also invites Haman. Haman arrives first and launches himself at her with the expectation of a sexual encounter. The king enters and catches Haman doing this to his beloved young Queen. Esther uses this moment to reveal her Jewishness while denouncing Haman’s plot, which would have required her to die along with all the other Jews in the kingdom. The King turns against Haman and adopts a plan presented by Esther to save her people, giving us the right to defend ourselves in particular and elevating Mordecai to Haman's former position. ·
Provocative
Purim Questions
|