The Jewish Chronicle

Queen Esther and the Red Rebel Brigade

What is the connection between the climate ‘artivists’ and the story of Purim. explains

- Shalev Rabbi Zahavit

THIS PURIM I’ll be dressing up as a member of the Red Rebel Brigade “an internatio­nal performanc­e artivist [sic] troupe” associated with Extinction Rebellion. To understand the Red Rebel Brigade you have to watch their performanc­es. In their flowing red robes, white faces and theatrical­ly highlighte­d features, they move in stately formation through public spaces and natural environmen­ts, stopping to create silent, expressive tableaux.

They represent the earth and they express the earth’s torment at the hands of humanity. If, as we know from the Torah, the role of a prophet is not to predict the future but to warn about a possible future which must be urgently avoided, then the Red Rebel Brigade is a vivid, phantasmag­orical embodiment of the prophetic mode.

The ancient biblical prophets used creative ways to communicat­e God’s message. Like performanc­e artists, they undertook acts that were evocative, emblematic or even embarrassi­ng to command people’s attention.

Isaiah, for example is instructed to go about naked and barefoot. Ezekiel at various times is required to eat a paper scroll, lie on his side, and eat a cake baked on human excrement.

The Red Rebel Brigade have a commanding eloquence that comes from their unified, and mostly feminine, aesthetic. They use silence and stately movement to cut across a visually noisy world. Their protest performanc­es and

These modern-day QueenEsthe­rs convey an urgent propethic message about a disaster we must avert

the strategies of Queen Esther in the Purim demonstrat­e exactly how powerful such tools can be.

The Kingdom of Shushan, rather like the world we inhabit, is obscenely materialis­tic and easily distracted by spectacle. King Ahasuerus throws an ostentatio­us party “to display the vast riches of his kingdom and the splendid glory of his majesty”. His queen, Vashti, is simply another accessory to be shown off. Her refusal to submit to him arouses the fear that the performanc­e of power is not the same as actual power.

Lest women everywhere come to “despise their husbands in their eyes”, to use the biblical expression, and rise up in rebellion, Vashti is banished and a new bride sought. A “goodlookin­g” woman, “pleasing to the eye”, who will be appropriat­ely submissive.

Queen Esther wins the beauty contest, but in this superficia­l and deeply paranoid world her position is precarious. And so, in the first chapter of her life at the palace Esther is entirely passive. She says nothing of her background, undergoes extensive beauty treatments and waits to be summoned, all the while learning the ways of the court.

But when Mordecai dresses in sackcloth and ashes and tells the Jews that they have been condemned to death, Esther is ready to instruct him that this is not the way. She sends him appropriat­e clothing and follows that up with a message explaining that royal protocol forbids anyone from approachin­g the king without an invitation.

Mordecai urges Esther to be a hero, using language that is both inspiring and also lightly threatenin­g: “If you keep silent (hacharesh tacharishi) in this crisis, relief and deliveranc­e will come to the Jews from another quarter, while you and your father’s house will perish.”

With hacharesh tacharishi, Mordecai impels Esther not to stay silent. But the verbal root ch-r-sh also has another meaning, one relating to crafting and devising. The opening of the sentence might also be read as saying something like “you must certainly use yourself as a tool for crafting/devising”.

In Mordechai’s words Esther, perhaps sees the summons, in the words of the Red Rebel Brigade, to turn herself into an “artivist”. Esther is indeed creative, adopting two strategies simultaneo­usly. She takes pious action by fasting for three days, and also does things the Shushan way by dressing up and organising drinking parties.

Our rabbis understood this. Queen Esther is one of seven prophetess­es recognised by the Talmud. (Megillah 14b). The prooftext for Esther’s status is the verse, “And it came to pass on the third day that Esther clothed herself in royalty.” The Talmud remarks that the Megillah really ought to specify that Esther clothed herself in royal clothing. Because it doesn’t say this, the Talmud creatively reads the term “royalty” as gesturing at something beyond actual clothing, concluding rather that she “clothed herself with a divine spirit of inspiratio­n”.

The creative misreading allows for Esther both to dress up in royal clothing and also elevates her dress to a form of prophetic behaviour. In fact there is no contradict­ion here, for prophecy is the robe that Esther dons both literally and metaphoric­ally. She exploits the medium of the spectacle, positionin­g herself where she can be seen by Ahaseurus and where she will “find favour in his eyes.” She proceeds to curate tableaux which will arouse pity and jealousy in Ahaseurus so as to bring about salvation for her people.

And so to the Red Rebel Brigade. These modern-day prophets and Queen Esthers use beauty to “illuminate the magic realm beneath the surface of all things” and convey an urgent prophetic message about a future

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom