"Memory is the secret to redemption" – Ba’al Shem Tov
Today, Jews, the world
over, celebrate the joyous holy day of Purim. We wear costumes, eat the
traditional hamentaschen and read Megilat Esther, the Book of
Esther. It also so happens that yesterday, Shabbat, as on every Shabbat
before Purim, the Torah portion that is recited is “Zachor,” (remember) along
with its related Haftarah, which is taken from Samuel 1, Chapter 15.
It is no coincidence that these three important occasions
are contiguous to each other. There is a golden thread that runs through them.
At the core of all three rest the importance of Jewish collective memory and
the lessons of history that need to be learned and internalized.
In Parashat “Zachor,” we are commanded, “Remember what
Amalek did to you as you came out of Egypt; how he met you on the way, and cut
down all the weak who straggled behind you when you were weary and exhausted,
and he did not fear G-d. Therefore, when the Lord, your G-d will relieve you of
all your enemies around you, in the Land which the Lord your G-d gives you as a
hereditary portion, you shall blot out the memory of Amalek from under heaven.
Do not forget” (Deuteronomy, 25:17-19). Amalek, the Torah tells us, ambushed
our People during their wandering in the desert when they came out of Egypt.
They killed the weak, the vulnerable and slaughtered babies in their mothers’
arms. “Zachor” is the only Parasha that is read aloud in synagogue each year
and is considered one of the few Torah portions that every Jew should hear.
The corresponding Haftarah to this portion is taken from
Samuel 1,15:1-34 where we are reminded of what the Amalekites did to our People
in the desert. Samuel, upon G-d’s order, commands King Saul to erase
Amalek in its entirety including its possessions, its sheep, men women, babies,
toddlers, camels, and donkeys, without compassion. “Go and you shall destroy
the sinners, the Amalekites, and you shall wage a war against them until you
destroy them all. Saul succeeds in harming Amalek, kills their people yet
captures their king Agag and saves some of the prime sheep and cattle to use
them as sacrifice to G-d.
Samuel is surprised to find out that Saul has spared some
of sheep and cattle and reproves while Saul, apologetically explains that the
People are the ones who collected the spoils. In other words, Saul caves in to
the People rather than carry out the word of G-d. “Even if you are small in
your own eyes,” responds Samuel, “are you not the head of the tribes of
Yisrael? And the Lord anointed you as king over Yisrael….. Has the Lord (as
much) desire in burnt offerings and peace offering, as in obeying the voice of
the Lord?” Behold, to obey is better than a peace-offering; to harken (is
better) than the fat of teraphim.” Every deed, we are told, bears
its consequences. “For rebellion,” proclaims Samuel, “is as the sin of
divination, and stubbornness is as idolatry and teraphim. Since you rejected
the word of the Lord. He has rejected you from being a king.”
Eventually, Saul does carry out the order. He kills Agag,
and whatever is left of his possessions but not before he must pay a dear price
for his disobedience to G-d’s directive.
Saul’s and Am Yisrael’s violation of G-d’s command,
regarding Amalek, proves that Jewish collective memory and its necessary
lessons have failed the practical test. Unfortunately, Saul’s irresponsible leadership and infraction of G-d’s command
would eventually rebound and expose our People to further threats of
annihilation.
And that is, precisely, dear readers, where the story of Purim enters the
scene.
The Book of Esther chronicles the story of the Jewish
community in ancient Persia. We witness the ideological struggle between the
wicked Haman and a Jewish hero, Mordechai. A look into the text will
reveal that Haman is described as "the Agagite.” He is a descendant of Agag the king of Amalek
whose life, king Saul, initially, spared.
Furthermore, the script also discloses Mordechai’s
pedigree. It tells us that “There was a Jewish
man in Shushan the capital, whose name was Mordechai, the son of Yair, the son
of Shimei the son of Kish, a Benjamite” (Esther, 2:5).
With your permission, let me rewind back to Samuel 1
chapter 9 and focus on verses 1 and 2. They describe the lineage of King Saul
and read, “There was a Benjamite, a man of standing, whose name was Kish, son
of Abiel, the son of Zeror, the son of Aphiah of Benjamin. Kish had a son named
Saul.”
Lo and behold, the Jew, Mordechai, and King Saul share the
same family tree. They are distant kinspersons, in the same manner that Haman,
the “Agagite” is a kinsperson to the worst enemy of Am Yisrael, Agag, the king
of Amalek.
The Book of Esther is the last piece of that golden thread that connects yesterday’s Parasha and Haftarah to the story of Purim. As the story of Purim unveils itself, we learn that Haman and his seed are obliterated off the face of the earth which is, of course, a cause for celebration.
In addition to the important lesson of the Haftarah
regarding the necessity to obey G-d’s command, there is, however, another, no
less important, lesson delivered to us in the Book of Esther.
The narrative of Purim also teaches us the significance of
carrying out G-d’s commands promptly and without procrastination, be the reason
whatever it is. As we learned from the Haftarah, King Saul did not fully follow
G-d’s orders. Had he done that, had he and Am Yisrael committed to memory the
decree to eradicate Amalek and its offspring, the descendants of King Saul
would not have had to face those of Amalek, the Book of Esther would
most likely not have been written and the holy day by the name of “Purim” would
have never seen the light of day.
Unfortunately, Amalek is a chameleon that changes its forms
and emerges in different forms, during different times in our Jewish history.
As these words are being written, Yisrael is fighting for its survival against
one of Amalek’s reincarnations, a terrorist group by the name of Hamas. There
are two lessons that last Shabbat teaches us.
The first, as we all saw, is the importance of obeying G-d and following the decree to “remember what Amalek did to you…” The second is the significant message that is enciphered in it.
It is the message that we should commit
to memory the decree of Parashat “Zachor,” fight and destroy, today, those who
wish to harm and kill us so that our future generations will be spared the need to
face them, or worse ones, tomorrow.
Not until such time will the Jewish People be redeemed and
free to realize its glorious destiny.
Purim Sameach, fellow Jews.
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