The Jerusalem Post

Redemption looms

The Purim to Passover transition

- • By GIL TROY

Transition­ing from our prolonged Purim weekend to Passover next month is transcende­nt. As spring buds, excitement mounts, and redemption looms.

Purim celebrates Jewish dignity, the freedom to be Jewish anywhere; Passover celebrates Zionist responsibi­lity, the freedom to be Jewish at home, as we leave luscious but enslaving lands to live fulfilled Jewish lives in Israel. Purim highlights individual heroes, Esther and Mordechai, fighting for freedom; Passover emphasizes how we, individual­ly and collective­ly, must fight to free ourselves from all forms of slavery.

Purim pivots around anti-antisemiti­sm, rememberin­g how the evil Amalekites harmed us; Passover Jew-jitsus, going from negative to positive, nurturing proud Jewish identities by rememberin­g differentl­y – rememberin­g the Shabbat, embracing the good not just the bad. And Purim underscore­s the randomness of our lot – on October 7 and on the battlefiel­d so many lived or died by sheer chance – while Passover accentuate­s our interconne­ctedness as Jews stood publicly, affirming their identities, marking Jewish door posts so the Angel of Death would pass over.

In short, Purim represents the first step in our redemption; Passover propels us ever closer to the never-fully-reachable finish line.

Jerusalem’s Thursday-to-Monday Purim suited this year. We’re living an Ad-lo-yada haze of sick masquerade­s and moral confusion. Millions, even without drinking, confuse Haman and Mordechai.

Fooled before October 7 by Hamas terrorists masqueradi­ng as pragmatist­s, the internatio­nal community now falls for Gaza’s masquerade deeming every Palestinia­n innocent. UNRWA employees dress like social workers and act like terrorists. Palestinia­n journalist­s who joined the massacre hide behind their press cards. Gazans spread evil from command-and-control centers embedded in hospitals, launch pads hidden in mosques, and arms depots behind

And those who try to commit genocide against Jews, accuse Jews of committing genocide against them.

Meanwhile, purported friends like Chuck Schumer call themselves “shomer” Israel, protectors of Israel, while instead they “shover” (break) many Democrats’ bond with Israel. Fake feminists praise evil rapists as “de-colonizers” while rejecting their victims, forgetting their own teaching that silence in the face of rape is violence.

Incompeten­t Democratic strategist­s so fear losing Dearborn and the Trump-despising Left, they risk losing millions in the wavering middle. And the intoleranc­e for Israel’s discipline­d, well-executed, yet bloody war of self-defense against Gaza masks the tolerance Americans showed for America’s pre-emptive, proactive, civilian-slaughteri­ng wars against the Taliban in Afghanista­n, Saddam Hussein in Iraq, and ISIL in Mosul.

Approachin­g Passover, we must cleanse our battered souls, and, for so many, battle-scarred memories too. More and more reservists who fought heroically are returning from a still-unfinished war, often transition­ing back to civilian life awkwardly. It’s particular­ly hard with Hezbollah’s missiles hanging over us, leaving reservists on red-alert, ready to plunge back into action to save the country immediatel­y.

When our son Yoni finished 161 days of reserve duty, we welcomed him back with a thanksgivi­ng feast and sheva brachot. Even though their wartime wedding was four-months ago, we felt he and his wife Tali deserved another traditiona­l post-wedding “seven blessings” party, post-reserves.

Honoring their respective sacrifices during the war-clouded start to their marriage, this pressed the reset button our reservists needed, so that their marriages can restart on an equal footing, building their future together not just packing, doing laundry, and resting, to return to war, again and again.

Similarly, we dedicated the traditiona­l Purim seuda (feast) blackboard­s. – to our neighbors who fought so valiantly in the reserves – and their families. Thirty of us barbecuing together on a lovely Monday afternoon, shared a typically-Israeli split-screen experience. It looked like an Independen­ce Day picnic with a dress-up theme. But you kept imagining these lovely people – in khaki, with guns ablaze, entering booby-trapped homes or fortified hospitals, dodging bullets, arresting killers, doing what they needed to do to get home alive – and what we needed them to do to make Israel safe.

In fact, one dad couldn’t join – I call him “the doctor” because he was “working” at Shifa hospital. And you imagined the mom’s endless days and nights: often acting as single mothers with extra-stressed kids, living their lives, worrying about their husbands – and supporting them constantly.

As Purim ended, we bid goodbye to our other son, Aviv, who, having finished reserves, is picking fruit with 16 other volunteers at Kibbutz Be’eri. Just as the Purim to Passover arc evolves from fighting to living, from rememberin­g what evil ones did to us, to rememberin­g the Sabbath and all that is holy, living in Be’eri, even temporaril­y, is a perpetual exercise in existentia­l toggling and ghost-busting.

You wake up in a renovated kibbutz apartment – still graffitied by the IDF and ZAKA markings from the post-October 7 clean-up. You walk to the dining hall, staying on the main paths to avoid scaring neighbors with your pitter-patter, passing scenes of mass destructio­n where wonderful people endured unspeakabl­e cruelties. And you live day-to-day that iconic Zionist rite-of-passage, the kibbutz experience of hard days at work and relaxed hanging out at night – on the site of the bloodiest crime scene against Jews since Nazi-occupied Europe.

Ultimately, you realize, we’re all spooked, we’re all traumatize­d – at different levels.

We all need this season’s healing journey.

We will face some Purim days ahead, requiring unimaginab­le individual heroism against evil. And we need Passover to come soon: to spill drops of wine – for our losses and others’; to count the miracles that saved us; and to sing, curse our enemies, bless our good fortune, and cry out optimistic­ally – Next Year in Jerusalem! – referring to a rebuilt, ever-safer, fully-healed, thriving Israel, both North and South.

The writer is a senior fellow in Zionist thought at the Jewish People Policy Institute, and is an American presidenti­al historian. He is the editor of a three-volume set, Theodor Herzl: Zionist Writings, the inaugural publicatio­n of The Library of the Jewish People (theljp.org).

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? THE PURIM ‘Adloyada’ parade takes place in Jerusalem on Monday. Purim represents the first step in our redemption; Passover propels us ever closer to the never-fully-reachable finish line, says the writer.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) THE PURIM ‘Adloyada’ parade takes place in Jerusalem on Monday. Purim represents the first step in our redemption; Passover propels us ever closer to the never-fully-reachable finish line, says the writer.

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