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Israelis celebrating Purim in costumes

 

By Marney Blom

The colourful yearly celebration of the Jewish festival of Purim is an auspicious reminder of an ancient time when Israel was rescued from certain annihilation.  Purim is the Biblical account of the story of Queen Esther – the beautiful young Jewish heroine and her uncle Mordecai who together helped save the entire Jewish race approximately two and a half thousand years ago.

Purim is an occasion for the corporate reading of the book of Esther – in synagogues, often in a light-hearted and joyous fashion.  At Jerusalem’s reform Kol Ha Neshama Synagogue, congregants came for the reading dressed in costume.

“My last name in Hebrew means horses,” said Gaby Sayah.  “So our whole family dressed up as horses.  My brother made [our costumes] out of balloons.”

“Most of the holidays are very heavy,” said an Israeli dressed in a Mexican costume.  “We are talking a lot about wars, how we won, how we lost … [Purim] is about being happy, about releasing all your problems.”

As a tiny island of democracy in a region of growing Islamic hostilities, Israel is faced with a number of existential threats:

The terrorist organization Hamas, responsible for firing over 3,000 rockets at Israeli civilian populations from the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2015, continues to enlarge its stockpile of weapons and its capacity to strike every corner of Israel.

Inside Lebanon along the northern Israeli border, Hezbolla boasts an arsenal of 100,000 rockets and missiles – all pointed directly at Israel.  The militant Shi’a Islamist group has stated that their ‘quote’, “Struggl

Along Israel’s northeast border lies Syriaa nation consumed by civil war and an enormous efflux of refugees.  Syria’s current government is backed by Iran, Hezbolla and Russia.  This in itself is alarming. However, if the current Assad regime falls, the presence of radical Islamist militants on Israel’s northern border with possession of Syria’s military arsenal – believed to include chemical weapons – could be a security nightmare.

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PM Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the U.S. Congress

However, Israel’s greatest concern may arguably be a nuclear Iran.  If not stopped, Iran would have the capacity to carry out its threats of “wiping Israel off the map”, as well as supplying nuclear arms to Israel’s enemies.

According to retired Israeli Major General Amos Yadlin, the director of Israel’s Institute of National Security Studies (INSS), a nuclear-armed Iran is clearly within sight.

“[The] Iranian nuclear program will become even more dangerous.  They have all the ingredients for a nuclear bomb.  They know how to spin centrifuges – they have 10,000 centrifuges. They have enough material for five to seven bombs.  Strategically they are ready,” stated Yadlin at the INSS headquarters in Tel Aviv.

“I’ve come here today because, as Prime Minister of Israel, I feel a profound obligation to speak to you about an issue that could well threaten the survival of my country and the future of my people: Iran’s quest for nuclear weapons,” said PM Benjamin Netanyahu in his address to the joint session of the U.S. Congress on March 3, 2015.

The celebration of the biblical story of Esther is a timely reminder for Israel to ultimately look to the God of Israel for protection.

Marney Blom is news director for the Acts News Network.

Copyright 2015 © Acts News Network, Inc.

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