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© Leah, True2Torah, 2002-2008, All Rights Reserved. |
Purim
The story of PurimWhen Achashverosh was king of Persia, he gave a royal banquet for the nobility of Persia. This banquet lasted no less than 180 days. After these 180 days, he gave another banquet for all the inhabitants of the royal city of Shushan. This banquet lasted for only seven days. On the last day of this banquet, when the king's heart was merry because of the wine, he demanded that his queen Vashti, who had her own banquet with the women of Shushan, should come to his palace, as he wanted to show her off. The queen boldly refused. In his anger the king sent the queen away, and her royal status was taken from her. After a while, when the king's anger had subsided, his personal attendants suggested that a new wife should be found for the king.
*** Much later Haman, one of the kings highest officials, became to outrank all of the king's other officials, and so he wanted all people to prostrate themselves before him. But Mordechai, Eshter's uncle, refused to do so. This enraged Haman and made a plot to kill, destroy and annihilate all Jews in all the Persian kingdom. To decide on which day this massacre was to take place, he threw lots. After this, Haman went to king Achasverosh to get his permission to have a decree written that all Jews in all the Persian kingdom were to be killed, destroyed and annihilated on the thirteenth day of the month Adar. Soon the word spread, and all Jews in all the kingdom mourned greatly, put on sackcloth and ahshes and weeped and fasted. When Mordechai learned what misfortune had befallen the Jewish people, he tore his clothes too, put on sackcloth and ashes and went into the city, crying out loud. He even went to the gates of the palace, but couldn't enter the gates, because no-one was allowed inside the gates wearing a sackcloth. When queen Esther was told that her uncle was just outside the gates, wearing sackcloth and ashes, she was greatly distressed and sent him proper clothes to wear, but he refused to put them on. Then Eshter sent one of her servants to learn from Mordechai what was wrong, and her told him about what was going to happen to the Jewish people, and gave him a transcript of the decree to show it to the queen. He also told him to ask Esther to go to the king and to beg for mercy for her people. Queen Esther was afraid to go to the king, because in approaching her husband, the king, without being summoned she would risk her own life. But Mordechai told her: "Think not with thyself that thou shalt escape in the king's house,
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© Leah, True2Torah, 2002-2008, all rights reserved. |