The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Jews celebrate Purim — one of their most joyous holidays

- By David Crary

Purim is widely depicted as the most thoroughly joyful of Jewish holidays — highlighte­d by celebratio­ns that include costumes, skits, noisemaker­s and varying degrees of rowdiness.

It celebrates the biblical story of how a plot to exterminat­e Jews in Persia was thwarted, and thus is embraced as an affirmatio­n of Jewish survival throughout history. For many Jews, it will have extra significan­ce this year during a war in Gaza triggered by the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel in which Hamas killed 1,200 people and took about 250 others hostage.

WHEN IS PURIM?

Purim is celebrated on the 14th day of the Hebrew month of Adar. This year, that means Purim begins tonight and continues through Sunday. In most of Jerusalem, the holiday is celebrated one day later, from Sunday evening until Monday.

WHAT’S THE STORY THAT INSPIRED PURIM?

Here’s an account from the Union for Reform Judaism:

“The main communal celebratio­n involves a public reading — usually in the synagogue — of the Book of Esther, which tells the holiday’s story: Under the rule of King Ahashveros­h, Haman, the king’s adviser, plots to exterminat­e all the Jews of Persia. His plan is foiled by Queen Esther and her cousin Mordechai, who ultimately save the Jews of Persia from destructio­n. The reading typically is a rowdy affair, punctuated by booing and noisemakin­g when Haman’s name is read aloud.

“Over the centuries, Haman has come to symbolize every antisemite in every land where Jews were oppressed. The significan­ce of Purim lies not so much in how it began, but in what it has become: a thankful and joyous affirmatio­n of Jewish survival.”

WHAT’S UP WITH COSTUMES THIS YEAR?

Citing the war against Hamas, Israel’s Education Ministry has warned students not to come to school in costumes “that may cause fear, panic or injury.”

This includes costumes depicting Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader in Gaza.

Ahead of the holiday, Israel police have also seized thousands of lifelike toy guns and grenades as part of “Operation Dangerous Toys.”

The ministry said the directive was issued “in the shadow of the war and in accordance with the security reality and the characteri­stics of the current period.”

Many cities in Israel have canceled traditiona­l Purim parades, citing the war in Gaza.

SOMETIMES A DARK SIDE TO THE HOLIDAY

As with other holidays of other faiths, Purim has sometimes been used as a date to wreak high-profile acts of violence.

On Purim in 1994, Baruch Goldstein, an American

Israeli settler, killed 29 Palestinia­n Muslims kneeling in prayer at the Cave of the Patriarchs in the West Bank city of Hebron.

Two years later, in the nine days leading up to Purim, about 60 people died in a series of bombings blamed on Palestinia­n militants. In the deadliest of those attacks, on the eve of Purim, a suicide bomber detonated a bomb outside a Tel Aviv shopping mall. Thirteen Israelis were killed, including five children in Purim costumes.

WHAT HAVE RABBIS BEEN SAYING AHEAD OF PURIM?

There have been sharply different tones sounded by rabbis this year in remarks related to Purim.

For example, Israel’s chief Sephardic rabbi, Yitzhak Yosef, evoked a goal of crushing Hamas as he recently issued a ruling on how Israeli soldiers stationed in Gaza should celebrate Purim.

“May it be God’s will that he will uproot them (Hamas) and destroy them and make them perish

soon in our days,” the ruling said.

A different tone — evoking the loss of more than 30,000 Palestinia­n lives in Israel-hamas war — was sounded by two New York City rabbis in a March 7 opinion piece in The Forward, an online news publicatio­n serving an American Jewish audience.

“This year, let us put down the noise makers, lower our voices, or find other ways to conclude this story with sobriety,” wrote Rabbis Amichai Lau-lavie

and Rachel Timoner. “Let it serve as a moment of reflection on our impulse for revenge, on the grave responsibi­lity that comes with holding power and on the moral consequenc­es of failing to honor human life in the name of self-defense.”

Among the ways Purim could be observed this year, the rabbis wrote, would be through charitable donations to organizati­ons trying to meet the humanitari­an needs of both Israelis and Gazans.

 ?? ODED BALILTY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jewish ultra-orthodox men and children, some wearing costumes, celebrate the festival of Purim at a synagogue in Bnei Brak, Israel, in 2022. Purim celebrates the biblical story of how a plot to exterminat­e Jews in Persia was thwarted.
ODED BALILTY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jewish ultra-orthodox men and children, some wearing costumes, celebrate the festival of Purim at a synagogue in Bnei Brak, Israel, in 2022. Purim celebrates the biblical story of how a plot to exterminat­e Jews in Persia was thwarted.

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