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Purim is
a great holiday of fun food and festivity for everyone.
It is the celebration of a great
victory and our survival as a Jewish people.
Click the above links to
get started.
March 18,
2003
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14 Adar 5763
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March 7,
2004
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14 Adar 5764
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March 25,
2005
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14 Adar 5765 |
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Traditions
& Story
Purim
is celebrated on the day after the
great
battle in the Book of Esther, which
is
on the 14th of Adar.
In walled cities, such as Jerusalem it is celebrated
on
the 15th because the Jews had to defend
the
walled city of Shushan which was also walled
for
two days.
There are four
mitzvot (requirements) at Purim:
Reading the Book of Esther out loud
Being festive and rejoicing
Giving Gifts of fruits and nuts
Offering gifts to the poor
Traditionally the book of Esther is read out loud at synagogue
twice
on
Purim: once at night and once during the day. The scroll is called
a megillah
and it contains the story of Esther. The whole story is read
for
people to hear. One of the most fun things about the reading is that
when
the name of Haman is read out, people stamp their feet and make
noise
(many have noise makers for this) to drown out the evil name of
the
villain.
Many
children, and grownups too, dress up in costumes for Purim.
There
are contests for the best costume, games, plays and fun for
everyone.
Giving
gifts of food (Shalach Manot) to friends, family and neighbors
is
traditional. Fruit, nuts and hamantashen are the usual gifts.
Remmbering
the poor (Matanot l'evyonim) and giving to those less
fortunate
then you are.
The
day before Purim is the fast of Esther. It is a minor fast which lasts
from
sunrise to nightfall. If it should happen to fall on Shabbat, then it is
moved
to a day earlier.
So, when did this all happen?
| Achashverosh
becomes king of Persia |
3392
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Achashverosh's
Feast (180 days)
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3395
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Esther taken to Achashverosh
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Tevet, 3399
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Haman casts
lots
|
Nissan, 3404
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First decrees dispatched by Haman
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13 Nissan
3404
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Three days'
Fast ordered by Esther
|
14-16 Nissan
3404
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Haman's downfall and execution
|
17 Nissan
3404
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Second decrees,
reversing the first
|
23 Sivan
3404
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Haman's ten sons executed
|
13 Adar 3405
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Purim celebration
|
14 Adar 3405
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Purim celebration in Shushan
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15 Adar 3405
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The Megillah
recorded
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3406
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Purim celebrates a victory over those who sought to bring about
our
destruction.
It is a victory of people over hatred and violence to others
and
trusting HaShem to make it possible if we do our part.
Blessings
Blessed are you Adonai, King of the Universe, who has sanctified
us with your commandments, and commanded us concerning the reading of the
Megillah.
Boruch Atah Adonoi Eloheinu Melech Haolom
Asher
Kideshonu Bemitzvotov Vetzivonu Al Mikra Megillah.
Purim Play for Children
Scene 1
Narrator: The setting is the
palace of King Ahashverosh. The king is surrounded by his wise men and Haman
as he sits on the throne
Haman: My king, your decision to
do away with your disobedient wife Vashti was very wise. This kingdom offers
many beautiful who desire to prove their worthiness to you and who will submit
to your will.
Ahashverosh: Organize a beauty pageant
at once so I may choose the fairest woman for my new bride, Ah ... it's good
to be King!
Scene 2
Narrator: Meanwhile in a nearby
village ...
Mordecai: My dear niece Ester, your
position next to King Ahashverosh as his queen would help our people be aware
of the evil plans towards the Jews. Please sign up for that training course
on "How to marry a Persian King." You can use me as one of your "lifelines".
Esther: I'll agree to enter the
contest. I will do what is necessary for the safety of my people. But, I
won't wear a bikini. I won't tell anyone that I am Jewish.
Scene 3
Narrator: The parade of beauties
is held in front of the King. Esther wins hands down! She and the King are
married and Esther is crowned Queen [put crown on
Esther ] Later that same day ...
Haman: Your majesty, there are people
among us who refuse to bow down to us and are trying to cause the collapse
of your kingdom. They are very dangerous. I feel we must do away with them.
Ahashverosh: [While taking off his ring and giving it to Haman
] You have my permission to kill whoever these people are.
Haman: [with dice surrounded by his friends] Ok, a
one will stand for Monday and a six for Saturday. [Haman throws the dice] All right, three - Let
the killing of the Jews commence Wednesday. [Looking
at a Jewish calendar] Let's see ... that falls on Purim, the 14th
of Adar.
Scene 4
Narrator: Unknown to the King
and Haman, Mordecai overhears this conversation and runs to tell Queen Esther.
[Setting is a side room away from the throne]
Mordecai: You must convince the
King to stop the war against the Jews. Take him some of those hamantaschen
you baked for last weeks Hadassah luncheon.
Esther: It is a very dangerous task
you ask of me. I shall pray and fast for three days. [whispers] I hope your plan works.
Scene 5
Narrator: Following the dinner
party, the queen asks for admittance to King Ahashverosh's throne. When he
sees his beautiful Esther, he lowers his scepter to allow her to enter.
Esther: My generous king, I beg
of you -- Don't kill the Jews. You would have to kill me as well ... for
you see I am also a Jew. Besides, if you check your Book of Records you will
find that my uncle Mordecai saved your life.
Scene 6
Narrator: The next day the
king receives Haman in his Royal Chamber.
Ahashverosh: You know Haman I was
reading in the Book of Records last night and I saw I never properly thanked
the person who saved my life. What should be done for such a hero?
Haman: Why, I believe he should
be allowed to ride your beloved horse throughout Shushan for all to see.
Ahashverosh: Fine. Go fetch a saddle
large enough for Mordecai the Jew.
Haman: But ... but ... Surely you
jest sire !
Ahashverosh: Do as I say ... and
don't call me Shirley!
Scene 7
Narrator: The battle takes
place on Purim day. Under the fearless direction of Mordecai, the Jews are
victorious. Following the victory the King walks over to his men. [Setting is on the outside grounds of the palace]
Ahashverosh: Take Haman to the gallows
that he prepared for Mordecai. Haman and his sons are the ones that will
hang from these gallows! Have Esther make some hamentashen for the celebration
to follow.
Ahashverosh:
[King Ahashverosh, Queen Esther and Mordecai
Esther:
go back to the palace and Yell]
Mordecai:
YES !!!
Narrator: And the Jews were respected
throughout Persia after the whole Megillah was over.
Our thanks to the Valdosta Hebrew Congregation for contributing
this play.
Megillah
And it came to pass in the days of Achashverosh the same
Achashverosh who ruled from Hodu to Cush, one hundred and twenty-seven provinces.
In those days, when King Achashverosh sat on his royal throne, which was
in Shushan the capital, In the third year of his reign, he made a feast for
all his ministers and servants; the army of Persia and Media, the nobles
and all the ministers of the provinces in his service. For many days, one
hundred and eighty days, he displayed the glorious wealth of his kingdom
and the splendorous beauty of his majesty. And when these days came to an
end, the king made a seven-day feast in the courtyard of the king's palace
garden, for all the people in Shushan the capital, nobleman and commoner
alike. There were hangings of white, green and blue, held by cords of linen
and purple wool to silver rods and marble pillars. There were divans of gold
and silver on a floor of alabaster and marble arranged in patterns of rows
and circles. Drinks were served in golden vessels, vessels of assorted design,
and the royal wine was in abundance as befitting the king. 8 The drinking
was by the law, without force, for so had the king ordered all the stewards
of his household, to comply with each man's wish.
Queen Vashti, too, made a feast for the women in the royal palace of King
Achashverosh. On the seventh day, when the king's heart was merry with wine,
he ordered Mehuman, Bizzeta, Charvona, Bigta, Avagta, Zeitar and Charkas,
the seven chamberlains who attended King Achashverosh, to bring Queen Vashti
before the king wearing the royal crown, to show her beauty to the nations
and ministers, for she was indeed beautiful. But Queen Vashti refused to
appear by the king's order brought by the chamberlains, and the king grew
furious and his wrath seethed within him.
So the king conferred with the sages, those knowledgeable of the times for
this was the king's custom, to bring such matters before those who were versed
in every law and statute. Those closest to him were Carshina, Sheitar, Admata,
Tarshish, Meress, Marsina and Memuchan. These were the seven ministers of
Persia and Media, who had access to the king and ranked highest in the kingdom.
He asked them: "By law, what should be done with Queen Vashti for failing
to obey the order of King Achashverosh, brought by the chamberlains?"
Memuchan declared before the king and the ministers: "It is not against the
King alone that Queen Vashti has sinned, but against all the ministers and
all the nations in all the provinces of King Achashverosh. For word of the
queen's deed will reach all the women and it will belittle their husbands
in their eyes. For they will say: 'King Achashverosh commanded that Queen
Vashti be brought before him, yet she did not come!' This very day, the noblewomen
of Persia and Media who have heard of the queen's deed will repeat it to
all the King's nobles and there will be much disgrace and anger. If it please
the King, let a royal edict be issued by him, and let it be written into
the laws of Persia and Media and let it not be revoked, that Queen Vashti
may never again appear before King Achashverosh, and let the King confer
her royal title upon another woman who is better than she. And the King's
decree which he shall proclaim will be heard throughout his kingdom, for
it is indeed significant, and all the women will respect their husbands,
nobleman and commoner alike."
The idea pleased the king and the ministers, and the king did as Memuchan
had advised. He sent letters to all the king's provinces to each province
in its script and to each nation in its language saying that every man shall
be master in his home and that he speak the language of his nation.
After these events, when King Achashverosh's wrath had abated, he remembered
Vashti and what she had done and what had been decreed upon her. So the king's
attendants advised: "Let beautiful girls be sought for the King. And let
the King appoint officers in all the provinces of his kingdom, and let them
gather every beautiful virgin girl to Shushan the capital, to the harem,
under the charge of Heigai, chamberlain of the King, custodian of the women,
and let their cosmetics be provided. Then let the girl who finds favor in
the King's eyes become queen in Vashti's stead." The plan pleased the king
and he acted accordingly.
There was a Jewish man in Shushan the capital, whose name was Mordechai,
son of Yair, son of Shim'iy, son of Kish, a Benjaminite, who had been
exiled from Jerusalem with the exiles that had been exiled along with Jechoniah,
King of Judah, whom Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, had sent into exile.
He had raised his cousin Hadassah, also called Esther, for she had neither
father nor mother. The girl was shapely and beautiful, and when her father
and mother died, Mordechai adopted her as his daughter. Now when the king's
order and edict became known, and many girls were gathered to Shushan the
capital under the charge of Heigai, Esther was also taken to the palace under
the charge of Heigai, custodian of the women. The girl found favor in his
eyes and won his kindness, so that he hurried to provide her with her cosmetics
and meals, and the seven maids that were to be given her from the palace.
He also transferred her and her maids to the best quarters in the harem.
All the while Esther did not divulge her race or ancestry, for Mordechai
had instructed her not to tell. Every day Mordechai would stroll in front
of the harem courtyard to find out how Esther was faring and what would be
done with her. Now when each girl's turn came to go to King Achashverosh,
after undergoing the prescribed twelve-month care for women (for only then
would their period of beauty-care be completed: six months with oil of myrrh
and six months with perfumes and women's cosmetics, with which the girl would
appear before the king), she would be provided with whatever she requested
to accompany her from the harem to the palace. In the evening she would go
to the king, and in the morning she would return to the second harem, under
the charge of Shaashgaz, the king's chamberlain, custodian of the concubines.
She would not go to the king again, unless the king desired her, whereupon
she would be summoned by name.
And when the time came for Esther, daughter of Avichayil uncle of Mordechai,
who had taken her as a daughter, to go to the king, she did not ask for a
thing other than that which Heigai, the king's chamberlain, custodian of
the women, had advised. And Esther found favor in the eyes of all who saw
her. Esther was taken to King Achashverosh, to his palace, in the tenth month,
which is the month of Tevet, in the seventh year of his reign. And the king
loved Esther more than all the women and she won his favor and kindness more
than all the girls; he placed the royal crown on her head and made her queen
in Vashti's stead. Then the king made a grand feast for all his ministers
and servants, The Feast of Esther. He lowered taxes for the provinces and
gave presents befitting the king. And when the virgins were gathered a second
time, Mordechai was sitting at the king's gate. Esther would still not divulge
her ancestry or race, as Mordechai had instructed her. Indeed, Esther followed
Mordechai's instructions just as she had done while under his care.
In those days, while Mordechai sat at the king's gate, Bigtan and Teresh,
two of the king's chamberlains from the threshold guards, became angry and
planned to assassinate King Achashverosh. The matter became known to
Mordechai and he informed Queen Esther. Esther then informed the king of
it in Mordechai's name. The matter was investigated and found to be
true and the two were hanged on the gallows. It was then recorded in the
Book of Chronicles before the king.
After these events, King Achashverosh promoted Haman, son of Hamdata, the
Agagite and advanced him; he placed his seat above all his fellow ministers.
All the king's servants at the king's gate kneeled and bowed before Haman,
for so had the king commanded concerning him. But Mordechai would not kneel
or bow. The king's servants at the king's gate said to Mordechai, "Why do
you go against the King's command?" Finally, when they had said this
to him day after day and he did not listen to them, they informed Haman to
see if Mordechai's words would endure, for he had told them that he would
never bow because he was a Jew. When Haman saw that Mordechai would not kneel
or bow before him, Haman was filled with wrath. But he thought it contemptible
to kill only Mordechai, for they had informed him of Mordechai's nationality.
Haman sought to annihilate all the Jews, Mordechai's people, throughout Achashveirosh's
entire kingdom. In the first month, which is the month of Nissan, in the
twelfth year of King Achashverosh's reign, a pur, which is a lot, was cast
before Haman, for every day and every month, and it fell on the twelfth month,
which is the month of Adar.
Haman said to King Achashverosh, "There is one nation scattered and dispersed
among the nations throughout the provinces of your kingdom, whose laws are
unlike those of any other nation and who do not obey the laws of the King.
It is not in the King's interest to tolerate them. If it please the King,
let a law be issued for their destruction, and I will pay ten thousand silver
talents to the functionaries, to be deposited in the King's treasuries."
The king removed his signet ring from his hand and gave it to Haman, son
of Hamdata, the Agagite, persecutor of the Jews. The king said to Haman,
"The money is yours to keep, and the nation is yours to do with as you please."
The king's scribes were then summoned on the thirteenth day of the first
month, and all that Haman commanded to the king's satraps and the governors
of each province and to the nobles of each nation was written to each province
according to its script and each nation according to its language. It was
written in King Achashveirosh's name and sealed with the king's signet ring.
Letters were sent with couriers to all the provinces of the king: to annihilate,
murder and destroy all the Jews, young and old, children and women, on one
day the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, which is the month of Adar and
to plunder their possessions. Copies of the edict were to be proclaimed as
law in every province, clearly to all the nations, so that they should be
ready for that day. The couriers hurried out with the order of the king and
the law was proclaimed in Shushan the capital. Then the king and Haman sat
down to drink, while the city of Shushan was in turmoil.
Mordechai knew all that had happened, so Mordechai tore his clothes in mourning
and put on sackcloth and ash. He went out into the city crying loudly and
bitterly. He went up until the king's gate, for it is improper to enter the
king's gate wearing sackcloth. And in every province, wherever the edict
of the king and his law reached, there was great mourning among the Jews,
with fasting, crying and wailing; sackcloth and ash were spread out for the
masses. Esther's maids and chamberlains came and told her about it and the
queen was terrified. She sent garments with which to dress Mordechai so that
he would remove his sackcloth from upon him, but he did not accept them.
Esther summoned Hatach, one of the king's chamberlains whom he had placed
in her service, and she commanded him to go to Mordechai to find out the
meaning of this and what it was about. Hatach went out to Mordechai, to the
city square that was in front of the king's gate. And Mordechai told him
about all that had happened to him and about the sum of money that Haman
had promised to pay to the king's treasuries for the right to destroy the
Jews. He also gave him a copy of the law that was proclaimed in Shushan calling
for their annihilation, to show Esther and to tell her about it, and to instruct
her to go to the king to beseech him and to plead with him on behalf of her
nation. Hatach went and relayed the words of Mordechai to Esther.
Esther told Hatach to relay to Mordechai: "All the king's servants and the
people of the king's provinces know that any man or woman who goes to the
king and enters the inner courtyard without being summoned, his is but one
verdict: execution; except for the person to whom the king extends his golden
scepter only he shall live. And I have not been summoned to come to the king
for thirty days now."
They relayed Esther's words to Mordechai, and Mordechai said to relay to
Esther, "Do not think that you will escape the fate of all the Jews by being
in the king's palace. For if you will remain silent at this time, relief
and salvation will come to the Jews from another source, and you and the
house of your father will be lost. And who knows if it is not for just such
a time that you reached this royal position."
Esther said to relay to Mordechai: "Go and gather all the Jews who are in
Shushan and fast for my sake, do not eat and do not drink for three days,
night and day. My maids and I shall also fast in the same way. Then I shall
go to the king, though it is unlawful, and if I perish, I perish."
Mordechai then left and did all that Esther had instructed him.
On the third day Esther donned garments of royalty and stood in the inner
courtyard of the palace, facing the palace. The king was sitting on his royal
throne in the palace facing the palace entrance. When the king saw Queen
Esther standing in the courtyard she found favor in his eyes. The king extended
to Esther the golden scepter that was in his hand and Esther approached and
touched the tip of the scepter.
The king said to her, "What is it, Queen Esther? What is your request? Even
if it be half the kingdom, it will be granted you."
Esther said, "If it please the King, let the King and Haman come today
to the feast that I have prepared for him."
The king said, "Tell Haman to hurry and fulfill Esther's bidding." And the
king and Haman came to the feast that Esther had prepared.
At the wine feast, the king said to Esther, "What is your plea? It
will be granted you; what is your request? Even if it be half the kingdom
it shall be fulfilled."
So Esther replied and said, "My plea and my request: If I have found
favor in the King's eyes, and if it please the King to grant my plea and
fulfill my request, let the King and Haman come to the feast that I shall
prepare for them, and tomorrow I shall fulfill the King's bidding."
That day Haman left happy and content. But when Haman saw Mordechai at the
king's gate and Mordechai neither rose nor trembled before him, Haman was
filled with wrath against Mordechai. Haman restrained himself and went to
his house and sent for his friends and his wife Zeresh. Haman told them of
his glorious wealth and his many sons, and all about how the king had promoted
and raised him above all the king's ministers and servants.
Then Haman said: "In addition, along with the king, Queen Esther invited
only me to the feast that she prepared. Tomorrow, too, I am invited to her
feast along with the king. Yet all this is worthless to me whenever I see
Mordechai the Jew sitting at the king's gate!"
Then his wife Zeresh and all his friends said to him, "Have gallows erected
fifty cubits high, and tomorrow tell the king to have Mordechai hanged on
it. Then you will be able to go in good spirits with the king to the feast."
Haman was pleased with the idea and erected the gallows.
That night, the king's sleep was disturbed. He ordered that the Book of Records,
the Chronicles, be brought, and they were read before the king. It was found
written that Mordechai had informed on Bigtan and Teresh, two of the king's
chamberlains from the threshold guards, who had planned to assassinate King
Achashverosh.
The king asked, "What splendor and honor has been accorded to Mordechai for
this?"
"Nothing was done for him," the king's attendants replied.
"Who is in the courtyard?" asked the king. And just then Haman had come to
the outer courtyard of the king's chambers to tell the king to hang Mordechai
on the gallows he had prepared for him.
"Haman is standing in the courtyard," the king's attendants answered him.
"Let him come in," said the king.
Haman entered, and the king said to him, "What should be done for a man whom
the king wishes to honor?"
Now Haman said to himself, "Who would the king wish to honor more than me?"
So Haman said to the king, "For a man whom the king wishes to honor, let
them bring a royal garment that the king has worn, and a horse upon which
the king has ridden, and upon whose head the royal crown has been placed.
And let the garment and the horse be entrusted in the hands of one of the
king's noble ministers, and they shall dress the man whom the king wishes
to honor and lead him on the horse through the city square, proclaiming before
him, 'So is done for the man whom the king wishes to honor!'"
The king said to Haman, "Hurry! Take the garment and the horse just as you
have said, and do just so for Mordechai the Jew who sits at the king's gate.
Do not leave out a thing from all that you suggested."
So Haman took the garment and dressed Mordechai, and he led him through the
city square and proclaimed before him: "So is done for the man whom the King
wishes to honor!"
Then Mordechai returned to the king's gate while Haman hurried to his house,
miserable, his face covered. Haman told his wife Zeresh and all his friends
about all that had happened to him. And his wise men and his wife Zeresh
told him, "If this Mordechai, before whom you have begun to fall, is of Jewish
descent, you will not prevail over him, for you will certainly fall before
him."
While they were still talking with him, the chamberlains of the king arrived,
and they rushed to bring Haman to the feast that Esther had prepared.
The king and Haman came to drink with Queen Esther.
And again on the second day the king said to Esther during the wine feast,
"What is your plea, Queen Esther? It will be granted you. What is your request?
Even if it be half the kingdom it will be fulfilled."
Queen Esther replied and said: "If I have found favor in your eyes, O King,
and if it please the King, let my life be granted me by my plea, and the
life of my people by my request. For my people and I have been sold to be
annihilated, killed and destroyed! Had we been sold as slaves and maidservants
I would have kept silent. But indeed the persecutor is not bothered by the
King's loss."
King Achashverosh said he said to Queen Esther, "Who is this, and which one
is he, that has the audacity to do such a thing?"
"A man who is a persecutor and an enemy: this evil Haman!" Esther replied.
And Haman shuddered in the presence of the king and the queen. The king arose
in wrath and left the wine feast and went to the palace garden, while Haman
stood up to beg Queen Esther for his life, for he realized that the king's
hostility towards him was irrevocable. And the king returned from the palace
garden to the wine-feast chamber, and Haman had fallen upon the divan upon
which Esther was reclining.
The king said, "Does he even intend to have his way with the queen while
I am in the palace!"
As soon as these words left the king's mouth the face of Haman was covered.
Then Charvonah, one of the chamberlains that attended the king, said, "In
addition, there is the gallows that Haman erected for Mordechai, who spoke
for the King's good, standing at Haman's house, fifty cubits high! Hang him
upon it!" said the king.
And they hanged Haman on the gallows that he had prepared for Mordechai and
the king's wrath abated.
On that day, King Achashverosh gave Queen Esther the estate of Haman, persecutor
of the Jews. And Mordechai came before the king, for Esther had told the
king how he was related to her. And the king removed his signet ring which
he had taken from Haman and gave it to Mordechai, and Esther put Mordechai
in charge of Haman's estate.
Esther again spoke before the king and fell before his feet and she cried
and begged him to nullify the evil decree of Haman the Agagite and his plot
that he had plotted against the Jews. The king extended the golden scepter
to Esther and Esther rose and stood before the king.
She said, "If it please the King, and if I have found favor before him, and
the idea is proper to the King, and I am pleasing in his eyes, let an order
be issued ordering the withdrawal of the letters containing the plot of Haman,
son of Hamdata, the Agagite, in which he ordered the destruction of the Jews
throughout the King's provinces. For how can I behold the calamity that will
befall my people? And how can I behold the destruction of my race?"
King Achashverosh said to Queen Esther and Mordechai the Jew, "See, I have
given Haman's estate to Esther, and he himself was hanged on the gallows
for raising his hand against the Jews. Now you can issue decrees concerning
the Jews as you please, in the King's name and sealed with the King's signet
ring. For an edict written in the King's name and sealed with the King's
signet ring cannot be withdrawn."
The king's scribes were then summoned, in the third month, which is the month
of Sivan, on its twenty-third day, and an edict was written according to
all that Mordechai instructed the Jews, the satraps, the governors, and the
nobles of the provinces from Hodu to Cush, one hundred and twenty-seven provinces
to each province according to its script and to each nation according to
its language, and to the Jews according to their script and language.
He wrote it in King Achashverosh's name and sealed it with the king's signet
ring. He sent the letters by couriers on horseback, riding mules bred of
mares from the king's stables saying that the king had allowed the Jews of
every city to gather and stand up for their lives; to annihilate, kill and
destroy every army of any nation or province that might attack them, including
their children and women, and to steal their possessions, on one day in all
the provinces of King Achashverosh, on the thirteenth of the twelfth month,
which is the month of Adar. Copies of the edict were sent to be proclaimed
as law in every province, clearly to all the nations, so that the Jews would
be ready for that day to take revenge upon their enemies. The couriers, riding
mules from the king's stables, left urgently and hurriedly with the king's
edict, and the law was proclaimed in Shushan the capital.
And Mordechai left the king's presence wearing a royal garment of blue and
white, a large golden crown, and a shawl of fine linen and purple wool. And
the city of Shushan celebrated and rejoiced. For the Jews there was light
and happiness, joy and glory. And in every province and city to which the
king's edict and law reached, there was happiness and joy for the Jews, a
celebration and a holiday. Many of the gentiles converted to Judaism, for
fear of the Jews had fallen upon them.
On the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, which is the month of Adar, when
the time for the carrying out of the king's edict and law had arrived, on
the day the enemies of the Jews had thought they would dominate them, the
situation was reversed: the Jews dominated their enemies. The Jews gathered
in their cities throughout the provinces of King Achashverosh to attack those
who sought to harm them. No man stood in their way, for fear of them had
fallen upon all the nations. And all the ministers of the provinces, the
satraps, the governors and the king's functionaries honored the Jews, for
fear of Mordechai had fallen upon them. For Mordechai was prominent in the
king's palace and his fame was spreading throughout all the provinces, for
Mordechai was growing in power.
And the Jews struck at all their enemies with the sword, killing and destroying,
and they did with their enemies as they pleased. In Shushan the capital the
Jews killed and destroyed five hundred
men. And they killed Parshandata and Dalfon and Aspata, 8 and Porata and
Adalya and Aridata 9 and Parmashta and Arisai and
Aridai and Vaizata, 10 the ten sons of Haman, son of Hamdata,
persecutor of the Jews, but they took none of the spoils.
That day, the number of killed persons in Shushan the capital was relayed
to the king.
The king said to Queen Esther, "In Shushan the capital, the Jews killed and
destroyed five hundred men and the ten sons of Haman; what have they done
in the other provinces of the King? What is your plea? It will be granted
you. What is your additional request? It will be fulfilled."
Esther replied, "If it please the King, let the Jews of Shushan be allowed
to do tomorrow what was lawful today, and let the ten sons of Haman be hanged
on the gallows."
The king ordered this done, and the law was proclaimed in Shushan, and the
ten sons of Haman were hanged. So the Jews of Shushan gathered again on the
fourteenth day of the month of Adar and killed three hundred men in Shushan,
but took none of the spoils. And the rest of the Jews of the king's
provinces gathered and stood up for their lives to relieve themselves of
their enemies and killed seventy-five thousand of their foes, but took none
of the spoils. On the thirteenth day of the month of Adar, and they
rested on the fourteenth day and made it a day of feasting and rejoicing.
And the Jews of Shushan gathered on the thirteenth and fourteenth of Adar,
and rested on the fifteenth and made it a day of feasting and rejoicing.
Thus the Jews, those who live in unwalled cities, make the fourteenth day
of the month of Adar a holiday, a day of feasting, rejoicing and sending
portions of food one to another.
Now Mordechai recorded these events and sent letters to all the Jews living
throughout the provinces of King Achashverosh, near and far instructing them
to obligate themselves to celebrate annually the fourteenth and fifteenth
days of the month of Adar, like the days upon which the Jews were relieved
of their enemies, and the month which had been transformed for them from
one of sorrow to joy, from mourning to festivity to make them days of feasting,
rejoicing, sending food portions one to another and giving gifts to the poor.
And the Jews accepted as an obligation that which they had begun
to observe, and that which Mordechai had written to them. For Haman, son
of Hamdata, the Agagite, persecutor of all the Jews, plotted against the
Jews to destroy them, and he cast a pur, which is a lot, to shatter them
and destroy them. But when she came before the king, the king said and ordered
letters to be written to the effect that Haman's evil plot against the Jews
be returned upon his own head, and he and his sons were hanged upon the gallows.
For this did they call these days "Purim," after the pur, because of all
of the events of this story, which explains what happened to them and why
they saw fit to establish the holiday.
The Jews established and accepted upon themselves, and upon their descendants,
and upon all who might convert to their faith, to annually celebrate these
two days in the manner described here, on their proper dates never to be
abolished. And these days are commemorated and celebrated in every generation,
by every family, in every province and every city. And these days of Purim
will never pass from among the Jews nor shall their memory depart from their
descendants.
Queen Esther, daughter of Avichayil, and Mordechai the Jew, wrote about the
enormity of all the miracles, to establish the holiday with this second Purim
dispatch. And he sent letters to all the Jews, to the one hundred and twenty-seven
provinces of Achashveirosh's kingdom, words of peace and truth, instructing
them to observe these days of Purim on their proper dates, in the manner
established for them by Mordechai the Jew and Queen Esther, just as they
had accepted upon themselves and upon their descendants the observance of
the fasts and their lamentations. And the behest of Esther confirmed the
observances of these Purim days, and the story was included in Scripture.
King Achashverosh levied a tax upon the mainland and the islands of the sea.
And the entire history of his power and strength, and the account of Mordechai's
greatness, whom the king had promoted, are recorded in the Book of Chronicles
of the kings of Media and Persia. For Mordechai the Jew was second to King
Achashverosh, a leader to the Jews, and loved by his many brethren. He sought
the welfare of his people and spoke peace for all their descendants.
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