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Ta’anit Esther with Hadar: Reading the Megillah After October 7th

Thu, Mar 21 • 9:30 AM - 2:20 PM

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Purim parades itself as the most joyful day of the year, however, Megillat Esther is a story of intense crisis and violence. At the beginning, Jews face an existential threat, and at the end, Jews kill their enemies on a massive scale. In the wake of October 7th, these crises of Purim feel very real, as we mourn unimaginably cruel acts of violence against Israelis, encounter increased antisemitism and fear in Jewish communities worldwide, and confront the sobering fact of so many Palestinians killed in recent months.

As a day of fasting and prayer before Purim, Ta’anit Esther is an opportunity to reflect and confront these crises. What can the Megillah teach us about understanding and holding together both realities of violence against Jews and violence by Jews? What theological and practical answers can we glean from the story this year, especially about how to respond in moments of deep fear?

Join Hadar as we explore these questions in observance of Ta’anit Esther and in preparation for reading the Megillah this year.

Schedule:

9:30 AM – 10:45 AM
Shaharit with Selihot
Livestream from Yeshivat Hadar

11:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Show Me Your Face
Rabbi Avi Strausberg
In a story that is about the near demise and heroic salvation of the Jewish people, God is quite noticeably absent. The salvation comes not through the hand of God but through the very human hands of Mordechai and Esther. If the backdrop of Megillat Esther is God’s hiddenness, what is Megillat Esther teaching us about living in a world in which, as in our own, God’s presence is unseen?  In this session, we’ll turn to Torah, Midrash and poetry, to search for God in a world in which God’s presence is hidden.

12:10 PM – 1:10 PM
A Sobering Look at Violence in the Megillah
Rabbi Aviva Richman
This year, the existential threat to the Jewish people at the beginning of the megillah and the staggering display of Jewish military power at the end feel all too close to home.  What does it look like to approach both of these unnerving parts of the story not as a drama from long ago but as real challenges we must confront in our own world and times?  Through intertextual study we will refuse the incomplete and dangerous pathways of a singular focus on either Jewish fear of antisemitism or unselfconscious embrace of Jewish power.  Instead, our tradition insists that the only righteous path is to hold fast to two fears – the fear of being victims violence and the fear of being perpetrators of violence.  In this lens, Purim is not a day of a drunken revenge fantasy; it is a sobering story of confronting violence.

1:10 PM – 1:20 PM
Closing Remarks

1:30 PM – 2:20 PM
Minhah Livestream from Yeshivat Hadar