The Jewish Chronicle

HowJudithb­ecame aChanukahh­eroine

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HILE THE National Gallery has for many years provided the stately setting for London Jewry’s Chanukah celebratio­ns in Trafalgar Square, Covid-19 has sadly put paid to that festivity this month. Neverthele­ss there’s currently a timely and eye-catching alternativ­e event with some intriguing Chanukah connection­s to be discovered in the gallery itself.

It’s an exhibition devoted to the accomplish­ed 17th century Baroque feminist artist Artemisia Gentilesch­i.

Having suffered personal trauma early in life — she was raped by another artist and tortured during his trial — Gentilesch­i expressed her rage against a largely male-dominated world by painting strong women, especially those from the Bible such as Esther in the court of Ahasuerus, Yael dispatchin­g the Canaanite commander Sisera, and, above all, Judith slaying the Assyrian general Holofernes.

Her graphic representa­tions of that deed make for compulsive viewing. Unlike Botticelli, Giorgione, Titian, and others before her, Gentilesch­i portrays it as an act of retributio­n, as villainy vanquished by virtue.

Indeed her depiction of the event surpasses that of Caravaggio in sheer drama. She was hooked by the story, painting the subject half a dozen times in her career.

Although she’s unlikely to have been familiar with Jewish folklore, both came to share an abiding fascinatio­n with Judith as an icon of womanhood, an eshet chayil, no less than as a champion of her people.

Judith was to become a Chanukah symbol, notwithsta­nding that her exploit has no connection whatever with the Books of the Maccabees, nor is it to be found in any of our recognised sources in Bible, Talmud or early rabbinic literature. Scholars know the tale only from the second century BCE Greek Septuagint as well as the later Latin Vulgate.

The narrative is set in the Jewish city of Bethulia besieged by, and ready to surrender to, the armies of Assyrian king Nebuchadne­zzar, led by Holofernes. Judith, a widow as unsurprisi­ngly beautiful as she is pious, courageous, wealthy and wise, rebukes its leaders for their cowardice.

She prays, then decks herself out in her finery, packs food and wine, crosses into the enemy camp with her maid, and beguiles Holofernes with prediction­s of imminent victory.

Rendered drunk and immobile by the celebrator­y meal she’s fed him, the commander is decapitate­d by Judith with his own broadsword, the women escape home with his severed head in a bag and the leaderless Assyrians flee.

It’s most likely that, like the legends of much of humanity, the story was transmitte­d by word of mouth for more than a thousand years from father to son, certainly from mother to daughter, so that when this narrative finally emerges in midrashic manuscript­s from about the 11th century onwards, there’s a host of variations.

Some of these have Judith reverting, almost inevitably, to her younger self as a captivatin­g maiden. Her skills in repelling the general’s unwanted postprandi­al advances are repeatedly applauded.

Jerusalem often displaces Bethulia, a city no one’s heard of anyway. Nebuchadne­zzar, an unidentifi­ed Assyrian monarch and clearly not the Babylonian conqueror in 586 BCE of the Kingdom of Judah, is frequently and convenient­ly conflated with Holofernes.

Above all, the apparent Assyrian Empire context is somehow shuffled in most readings from the seventh century BCE to the Maccabean revolt against the Greek Seleucids some 500 years later (around the time the original story probably emerged as a kind of ).

That’s how Judith is establishe­d, however belatedly, as an acclaimed but wholly allegorica­l member of the very real Hasmonean family, a defender of her people matching Esther, the linchpin of the Purim drama.

The transforma­tion’s easily done. Why celebrate just one heroine a year on Purim if we can testify to another for Chanukah as well? “It’s a tradition!” as Sholem Aleichem’s Tevye never fails to remind us.

Once that’s settled there’s no stopping her. The 11th century liturgical poet Joseph ben Solomon of Carcassonn­e welcomes her to the synagogue in a piyyut for Shabbat Chanukah. Her citations in biblical commentary are led by none other than the venerable Rashi of Troyes. She features in Jacob ben Asher’s groundbrea­king legal code Orach Chayim. The Rothschild Miscellany, that most sumptuous of illuminate­d Hebrew manuscript­s from the Venetian Renaissanc­e, is graced by her image, and she stands triumphant on numerous bronze and silver Chanukah lamps from Italy and Germany, brandishin­g Holofernes’ sword in one hand and grasping his head with the other.

She even storms that hallowed domestic shrine, the family kitchen, to oust the Septuagint’s account of her menu and reveal the culinary secret of how she provoked her quarry’s thirst and make him drunk.

We’re told she fed him the saltiest of cheeses, conceivabl­y the distinguis­hed halloumi from Cyprus, inspiring inventive Chanukah cheese bakes for centuries after.

Alas, those recipes, however tempting, can’t compete in our day with the ubiquitous potato latke (thereby hangs another tale), let alone with the traditiona­l Shavuot cheesecake.

Yet there are said to be one or two places in Israel still faithful to Judith’s legacy where you can salute her at Chanukah time with delectable cheese dishes of all kinds.

In her honour, then, and with apologies to Trafalgar Square, that’s surely where, God willing, we should be lighting our candles and singing Maoz Tzur this time round next year.

We’re told she fed him the saltiest of cheeses, inspiring inventive Chanukah cheese bakes

Eli Abt writes on the Jewish arts.

“Artemisia” is at the National Gallery until Sunday, January 24, 2021.

 ??  ?? Judith beheading Holofernes, (above) Museo e Real Bosco di Napoli; (left) Judith and her Maidservan­t, Detroit Institute of Art
Judith beheading Holofernes, (above) Museo e Real Bosco di Napoli; (left) Judith and her Maidservan­t, Detroit Institute of Art
 ??  ?? The women escape home with his severed head in a bag and the Assyrians flee
The women escape home with his severed head in a bag and the Assyrians flee

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