Megillah 101: Purim Lessons for the Trump Era

 

What is so profound about the Bible is its refusal to shy away from difficult questions or to give easy answers. I do not think we have any right to go around dispensing vigilante justice, now or at any time. I do think there is something powerful in realizing that the triumph of the Jews of Persia was not due to one queen and her advisor, but to actions of the group. “The Jews gathered themselves together in their cities and in all the provinces of the king Ahasuerus,” Esther 9:2 tells us. This gathering ultimately is what made the difference for the people in their success at overcoming Haman’s threat to them and his plot to harm them. They did not rely on Esther alone, assuming that her influence would enable them to remain safe. 

There are American Jews today who think the intercessions of those in the palace alone will make a difference. However a reading of the book of Esther through to the end shows that it is ultimately the actions of the group rather than the influences of the queen, that enable the Jews to resist. 

The Jews of Persia gathered and they acted. While I believe that in today’s world, gatherings should be peaceful and non-violent, they must occur.   

As the product of human activity, Purim is held to be a holiday that will continue beyond historical time, into the time of the Messiah. Why? Humans were act properly without the need for divine guidance; God is never mentioned explicitly in the book of Esther, the Bible’s only book with this feature. Maimonides in Hilkhot Megillah 2:18, quotes Esther 9:28 about the endurance of the holiday in every generation, even beyond historical time. Even when the Messiah comes we are told, and no action is needed on our part, Jews will remember this one holiday.  I would suggest that this values the fact that even without divine intervention, sometimes we humans are capable of making good decisions, in order to put power in the hands of those who will use it well.  

There is a threefold strategy to be learned from Esther. Listen and be vigilant, at the king’s gate and elsewhere, about what is going on in the precincts of the palace and where power is contained. Be willing to risk everything as Esther did in chapter 4:16 – lives are at stake if a tyrant is not stopped. Send letters as Mordechai and Esther do in chapters 9 and 10, commit things to writing as an effective means of both protest and of establishing a new order. 

Human action and vigilance will save the day, I am hopeful. The morning after the election, my husband said to me, “I feel like I am Mordechai in the book of Esther” and explained that the first thing Mordechai did was to be vigilant, to sit at the king’s gate and see what was going on (Esther 2: 19,21). He added that by sitting at the gate and observing, we have a chance to see wrongful activity and intervene. Sitting at the gate, Mordechai overheard some terrorists plotting to assassinate the king, told Queen Esther (significantly, here in 2:22 is the first use of her title) and she informed the king who investigated and thwarted the attempt on his life. 

Like Esther and Mordechai,  Jews need to use the playbook of the book of Esther to observe our world, as well as to write down facts and send letters and act as a group to consolidate the power we  have.  We can’t leave matters in the hands of others, but need to gather together in order to create a just society where the values of Esther and Mordechai rather than of Ahasuerus and Haman are in ascendance.


Beth Kissileff is the author of the novel Questioning Return and  editor of the anthology Reading Genesis. She has taught Bible and English literature and has a PhD in comparative literature; visit her on line at www.bethkissileff.com.


The views and opinions expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of Lilith Magazine.