The Jerusalem Post

After Moscow attack, Russian chief rabbi calls for quieter Purim

- • By MICHAEL STARR Jerusalem Post Staff contribute­d to this report.

Russian Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar called for more subdued Purim celebratio­ns following the murder of over 120 people in an ISIS terrorist attack at the Crocus City Hall music venue in the Moscow Oblast on Friday.

In light of a day of mourning on Sunday announced by Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday, Lazar instructed that musical events for the Jewish festival of Purim be canceled on the holiday eve and day.

Lazar said that the Russian Jewish community should increase their observance of other holiday obligation­s, including the reading of the Megillah, and giving the traditiona­l

mishloach manot gifts – especially to the needy, and including those in hospitals

and prisons.

“The news about the disaster in Moscow causes us and all of our community great feelings of sorrow,” Lazar said upon learning of the attack. “We share in the mourning of the victims’ families and pray for the recovery of the injured.

The chief rabbi said that the attack in the Russian capital took place on the eve of a holiday in which the Jewish people had faced the threat of destructio­n, but God saved the innocent and punished those responsibl­e. He called for unity of the forces of good in the face of evil until it was completely defeated, saying that observance of the holiday’s commandmen­ts would strengthen unity.

The Russian Jewish Congress said on Saturday that it was shocked and devastated by the attacks, and instead of celebratin­g Purim, it was expressing condolence­s to those who lost loved ones in the massacre.

“We strongly condemn terrorism in all its forms,” the RJC said. “Terrorism is the true common enemy for civilized people of all nationalit­ies and religions, including for ordinary Muslims who suffer from extremists who commit terrorist attacks, hiding behind the banner of Islam.”

The Federation of Jewish Organizati­ons and Communitie­s of Russia on Saturday night posted on Facebook a mourning candle with the date of the Moscow attack.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? RUSSIAN CHIEF RABBI Berel Lazar seen before the reading of the Megillah in the central synagogue in Moscow.
(Courtesy) RUSSIAN CHIEF RABBI Berel Lazar seen before the reading of the Megillah in the central synagogue in Moscow.

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