Jerusalem Post
 
 
Tradition  Today: The whole megila 
03/08/2012  15:41   By REUVEN HAMMER
Scholars  believe that Esther was written to give a Jewish slant to a 
Persian holiday Jews  already observed.

 
Every  time I read the Book of Esther I am astounded anew.

“Did the author of  this book really expect us to take it seriously?” I 
ask myself. “Are we to  believe the whole megila? Can it be that a king could 
be so clueless, that such  a tragedy could be averted so easily, that there 
just happened to be a Jewish  queen? There are just too many coincidences to 
make it believable. Is life  really like that, or is it not more likely to 
end in disaster?” We have enough  examples of the latter in Jewish history, 
including the Holocaust, which can be  compared to the Purim story in many 
ways – except that there was no happy end.  The Haman of that story may have 
died as he deserved, but not until he had  achieved one third of his goal of 
destroying every Jewish man, woman and  child.

One is also astounded at the breach of all accepted Jewish  practices found 
in this story. The heroine enters into marriage with a pagan,  and does so 
at the urging of her uncle Mordecai, identified as “the Jew”! Before  the 
marriage, she undergoes a kind of preliminary test that sounds anything but  
innocent. Who performed the marriage? What about kashrut at all those 
banquets  the story describes, including the two that Esther herself sponsors? 
And 
prayer  – where is it? Esther declares a fast, but not prayer.

More than that,  where is God? No one prays to God, no one even thanks God 
for the eventual  deliverance. Even the declaration instituting the 
celebration of Purim is devoid  of any reference to Divine deliverance: “The 
Jews 
undertook... to observe these  days in the manner prescribed” (Esther 9:27) is 
all it says. No wonder the Sages  added all of these elements in their 
midrashic interpretations of the story and  canonized this in the prayer 
recited 
on Purim: “You [God], in great mercy,  thwarted his [Haman’s] designs, 
frustrated his plot and visited upon him the  evil he planned to bring on 
others,” something never mentioned in the megila  itself.

Many biblical scholars have therefore concluded that Esther was  written to 
give a Jewish slant to a Persian holiday that Jews already observed.  H.L. 
Ginsberg, for example, wrote, “The Book of Esther may be described... as a  
mock-learned disquisition to be read as the opening of a carnival-like  
celebration.” If so, religious concerns and mention of God would have been  
totally out of place.

NEVERTHELESS, THE story does have a serious side.  Some traditional 
commentators, especially those of a mystical inclination, have  seen the story 
as 
teaching that there are times when God acts in a hidden way  rather than a 
way that is easily seen, as occurred in Egypt. They point out that  even the 
name Esther in Hebrew is related to the word meaning “hidden” –  nistar.

My own view is that the author indeed had a hidden meaning, but  it was 
that the story was so outrageous as to indicate that one should not  depend on 
such coincidences; rather, one must take every action possible when  Jewish 
lives are in danger. It is forbidden to wait for miracles and miraculous  
intervention.

For all that the story is “mock-learned,” there is one  section that is so 
serious that it cannot be ignored. When Esther hesitates to  place her life 
in danger by going unbidden to the king, Mordecai says to her,  “Do not 
imagine that you, of all the Jews, will escape with your life by being  in the 
king’s palace. On the contrary, if you keep silent in this crisis, relief  
and deliverance will come to the Jews from another quarter, while you and 
your  father’s house will perish” (Esther 4:13-14). Mordecai has faith that 
Jews will  be saved – perhaps meaning that the Jewish people as such will 
survive – but  those who do nothing will perish. It is the duty of each Jew to 
stand up and  defend Jews when their enemies attempt to annihilate them. They 
must not be  silent at such a moment. That lesson is as important today as 
it was when first  uttered.

-- 
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