The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Escape from Shushan

- MOSHE TARAGIN

Things in Shushan appeared to be humming along. Seventy years earlier, Jerusalem fell to the invading Babylonian armies, and we scattered across the Middle East. Most Jews landed in Babylon, and we gradually reconstruc­ted our lives and communitie­s.

For the first time, Judaism proved to be a portable religion, capable of traveling beyond the boundaries of Israel. We embedded ourselves into the local culture and began to enjoy a semblance of normalcy.

We also inserted ourselves into local government. Daniel the Prophet rose to prominence as the most celebrated adviser of several Babylonian tyrants. His supernatur­al ability to decipher dreams won him the respect of a temperamen­tal and brutal tyrant named Nebuchadne­zzar.

Even as the Persian Empire overthrew Babylonia, Daniel continued to be an admired adviser. His influence and that of his successor Zerubbabel were partially responsibl­e for our return to Israel, as Cyrus, a Persian king, was lobbied to authorize and fund this project. Jews had every right to feel confident and optimistic about their future in the empire.

After Daniel retired, a new Jewish political figure emerged. Mordechai, an elderly survivor from the generation of Jerusalem refugees, was appointed as one of Ahasuerus’s advisers, and he frequented the palace courtyards. With the crowning of Esther, our political influence surged, as we now had “one of our own” sitting on the throne. The Jews of Shushan could sleep comfortabl­y, knowing that they had an insider who had the ear of the king. Additional­ly, Mordechai and Esther uncovered a conspiracy to assassinat­e the king, and their heroic efforts were entered into the public record. Mordechai was now a public celebrity, having prevented Shushan from falling into political anarchy.

A melting pot

Not only did we enjoy political influence in Persia, but we lived in a society perfectly suited to our cultural needs. Persia was a tolerant and inclusive society in which every race and ethnicity was welcomed. At the festive palace meals, every traditiona­l cuisine was accommodat­ed. Official palace documents and decrees were translated into every language. No one, including the Jews, was meant to feel like an outsider in the multicultu­ral society of Persia.

Though we settled across the expansive Persian kingdom, our population was concentrat­ed in the capital of Shushan, which gradually became a predominan­tly Jewish city. Unsurprisi­ngly, we were also invited to Shushan’s eight-day gala celebratio­n, and we dined alongside fellow Persians. It being that Shushan was so pluralisti­c, Jewish dietary laws were strictly maintained at this party. Imagine the scene: Only 70 years after being marched out of Jerusalem in chains, we had made it, dining alongside fellow Persians in the royal palace, while eating kosher food.

We had dramatical­ly transforme­d from a rag-tag bunch of refugees into a prominent community, living peacefully in Shushan, eagerly participat­ing in national celebratio­ns and positionin­g ourselves within the inner chambers of power.

Into thin air

Abruptly, everything shifted. Ahasuerus promoted a relatively unknown named Haman to the second-highest office in the land, effectivel­y catapultin­g him above Mordechai and other government officials. Haman, a megalomani­ac, had a tense altercatio­n with Mordechai, who refused to bow in his honor. This personal encounter incensed Haman, who escalated their personal rivalry into an all-out assault against our people.

Haman convinced Ahasuerus to launch a genocide against his own citizens. Not only did the king concede, but he mustered the entire Persian government to implement this heinous pogrom. From soldiers to scribes to letter writers, the entire government apparatus was mobilized.

At the local level, our former neighbors and friends suddenly turned against us, eagerly preparing for the bloody massacre of the 13th of Adar. All the political influence and social goodwill we had amassed over the previous 70 years proved worthless in preventing this calamity.

Return to Shushan

The collapse in Shushan foreshadow­ed Jewish history, as the exact same scenario repeated itself throughout our tortured exile.

During exile, we faced intermitte­nt violence and religious persecutio­n, but we also enjoyed extended periods of relative calm and stability, during which we recovered from tragedy and rebuilt our lives. Often, within a few generation­s of expulsions or violence, we entrenched ourselves in local culture and local politics, bringing an exceptiona­l blend of talents and benefits to our host societies. However, as we amassed political clout and social goodwill, we became too confident and too comfortabl­e. We didn’t realize how quickly the situation could turn and how deep latent antisemiti­sm runs.

Sadly, we often didn’t realize our fragility in exile until it was too late.

The collapse of the ‘golden era’

It happened in Spain.

For approximat­ely five centuries Jewish communitie­s thrived, while delivering unpreceden­ted prosperity to the Iberian Peninsula. Jewish merchants and financiers built profitable internatio­nal financial networks which helped fund discovery expedition­s such as the Columbus mission. Jewish intellectu­als were major contributo­rs in almost every sector of Spanish culture, while Jewish doctors served in prominent positions in academia and in royal courts.

In 1391 violence erupted, as political instabilit­y combined with seething hostility toward Jewish success triggered horrific pogroms, which obliterate­d dozens of Spanish Jewish communitie­s. One hundred years later, the expulsion of 1492 brought our golden era to a crashing halt. The political influence and social positionin­g that we developed over five centuries proved meaningles­s in the face of hatred and religious intoleranc­e. Many didn’t realize this until it was too late.

The new Europe

It happened again in modern Europe. Toward the end of the 18th century, the Enlightenm­ent invited us into mainstream gentile society, offering full rights and citizenshi­p. Eagerly accepting this warm invitation, we spearheade­d meteoric growth across the continent, driving progress in art, culture, science, industrial­ization, and finance.

Democracy replaced outdated monarchies and offered political freedom and freedom of worship.

A new day was dawning in Europe, and for the first time in 300 years, we felt at home on the Continent.

One madman changed everything. Hitler’s rise to power also awakened dormant antisemiti­sm in neighborin­g European countries. In just a few years, everything we built vanished into thin air.

Once again, we learned this lesson too late. Despite the goodwill and despite the progress we authored, life in modern-day Shushan was brittle and could be washed away in an instant.

Déjà vu

Oct. 7 reminded us of this painful lesson, yet again. The Jewish experience in the US has been spectacula­rly successful. We have built prosperous and thriving Jewish communitie­s while attaining previously unimaginab­le liberties and security. We have embedded ourselves within American culture while eagerly participat­ing in the democratic process. We spearheade­d the crusade for social justice and for racial equality, rallying to protect vulnerable members of society against bigotry and hate. We have ignited phenomenal intellectu­al growth, powering American academia to worldwide prominence.

On Oct. 7 everything came crashing down, as we realized, once again, how fragile Jewish life is outside of our homeland. We have watched, in horror, as previous allies and colleagues have turned their backs on us, distorting truth and spewing hate. The academic stronghold­s we so diligently and lovingly constructe­d have turned into cesspools of racism and bigotry. The monster of antisemiti­sm has awakened and proven again how quickly it can devour political clout and social goodwill.

Hopefully, in the post-Oct. 7 world, Jews will be a bit more circumspec­t and less naive. Hopefully, Jewish communitie­s will continue to remain stable and prosperous but see through the facade of Shushan.

The writer is a rabbi at Yeshivat Har Etzion/Gush, a hesder yeshiva. He has smicha and a BA in computer science from Yeshiva University, as well as a master’s degree in English literature from the City University of New York. He is the author of the upcoming Dark Clouds Above, Faith Below (Kodesh Press, April, 2024), providing religious responses to the Oct. 7 massacre and the ensuing war.

 ?? (Sean Gallup/Getty Images) ?? EATING KOSHER in the royal palace: Kosher in Berlin, 2002. At the time, a police spokesman advised the city’s Jewish community against openly displaying Jewish symbols in light of recent attacks by young Arabs.
(Sean Gallup/Getty Images) EATING KOSHER in the royal palace: Kosher in Berlin, 2002. At the time, a police spokesman advised the city’s Jewish community against openly displaying Jewish symbols in light of recent attacks by young Arabs.
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