Efrat, Israel – I constantly marvel at the extent to which the
Hebrew calendar educates – and never more subtly and strikingly than
in the Megillah Scroll with which our spring festivals begin and the
Megillah Scroll with which our spring festivals conclude: from Purim to
Shavuot, from the Scroll of Esther to the Scroll of Ruth.
Purim falls out exactly four weeks before Passover and serves as a kind
of introduction, or warm up, for the Festival of our freedom. Indeed,
our Sages made sure to link Purim with Passover even in a leap year,
when there are two months of Adar, and when logic would dictate that we
ought celebrate Purim on Adar I, our first opportunity to do so;
nevertheless, the Talmudic ruling insists that the Purim Festival be
established on Adar II, so that the holiday of the fourteenth and
fifteenth days of Adar always be celebrated just one month before the
Passover holiday of the fourteenth and fifteenth days of Nissan.
Passover is in turn linked by the counting of the Omer to its concluding
Festival of Shavuot, seven weeks later; the Talmudic Sages even refer to
Shavuot as Atzeret, or the Closing Holiday (paralleling Shemini Atzeret,
the Eighth Day which concludes the fall festival of Succot). And while
Passover only celebrates the very first burgeoning expressions of our
freedom, when we left Egyptian slave-labor and suffering but only got as
far as a hostile and homeless desert, Shavuot marks the Festival of the
first fruits brought by the Israelites who have not only reached their
Israeli homeland but have also established their Holy Temple in
Jerusalem !
Remarkably enough, the holidays of this spring period are sandwiched
between the public readings of two of our five Biblical Scrolls
(Megillot) each of which features a heroic woman as its main
personality: Purim is marked by the reading of the Scroll of Esther and
Shavuot by the reading of the Scroll of Ruth. And just as Passover moves
from the description of a nation still smarting from slavery and only
tasting the beginning of a mere desert freedom to the far more
satisfying Shavuot realization of home and hearth, State and Sanctuary,
the Purim (pre-Passover) Esther Scroll centers upon Jews in vulnerable
galut (exile) and inexorably leads into the culminating Shavuot Scroll
of Ruth, with its majestic reach for messianic geulah (redemption). A
study of the contrasts and comparisons between these two feminist –
featuring Scrolls from galut to geulah will clearly elucidate the upward
march of our calenderical journey, which clearly points us in an
Eastward direction to Zion.
First of all, the entire story of the Scroll of Esther takes place in
Persia, and opens with an exquisitely detailed description of the Dining
Hall of the Persian King in Shushan. (Esther 1:6). The Scroll of Ruth,
on the other hand, opens in Bethlehem, Israel – and although the rest
of that chapter takes place in Moab, the succeeding three chapters of
the Book all take place in Israel, in Bethlehem and Efrat. It is even
fascinating to note that ten years of life in Moab are described in that
first chapter, whereas it takes the next three chapters to detail the
crucial events in Israel of only three months duration: from the
beginning of the barley harvest to the end of the wheat harvest. These
three months prepare the stage for Jewish eternity!
Secondly, according to the Midrash (B.T. Megillah 11a), the Scroll of
Esther describes Jews who have the opportunity to return to Judea but
opt to remain in the "diaspora;" Ahasveros was King of Persia
immediately following Cyrus – who conquered Babylon and permitted the
Jews who were exiled there to return to their homeland and rebuild their
Temple . Esther even has had her name changed from the Hebrew
“Hadassah” to the more Persian “Esther” (probably from the
Persian word for star, and the Persian goddess Astarte). In the Scroll
of Ruth, however, the text makes fairly short shift of the sons of
Elimelekh, who leave Bethlehem (Lit. House of Bread) for the falsely
glittering fields of Moab (lit. "from father," a reminder of a
Biblical act of incest between Lot and his daughter); their names,
Makhlon ( illness) and Kilyon (destruction) succinctly sum up their
galut experience of assimilation and intermarriage. The remaining three
quarters of the Book tell of Naomi's return to her homeland, and of the
triumph she eventually experiences there as the “ancestor” of the
Messiah David. The Scroll of Ruth describes Jews who leave exile for
return to Israel.
Thirdly, the Scroll of Esther tells the story of a Jewess in exile who
is forced to forsake the home of her relative Mordecai (cousin, uncle,
nephew, husband?) and live with a Gentile King in order to save her
people; moreover, the salvation she achieves is only temporary, with the
Talmud ruling that we don't even recite Hallel on Purim since we still
remained slaves of Ahasveros even after Haman's demise (B.T. Megillah
14). The Scroll of Ruth on the other hand, tells the story of a Gentile
Moabite who becomes a Jewess – by – choice, journeys to Israel to
live with her Jewish mother-in-law, and enters the royal family of Judah
when she marries Boaz; moreover, she becomes the progenitrix of ultimate
Jewish salvation through the eventual descendant of her great -
grandson, David.
Finally, the manner in which we celebrate Purim is by drinking until
"we can no longer distinguish between praising Mordecai and cursing
Haman," perhaps because it was the arch anti-Semite Amalekite Haman
who forcibly reminded the assimilating Jews of Persia that they were
after all – Jews; nevertheless, such raucous celebration is certainly
not identified with the way in which our Sages generally asked us to
celebrate. Shavuot, however, is celebrated by our bringing first fruits
to the Temple and singing praises to G-d. Apparently true Jewish piety,
Jewish future and eternal Jewish salvation can only come out of Zion!