Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
FAQ: What is Purim?
FAQ: What is Purim?
May 10, 2025 4:38 AM

This year in most of the world, the Jewish feast of Purim lasts from sundown on March 20 to sundown March 21. Here are the facts you need to know:

What is Purim?

Purim (pronounced “pooh-REEM”) is a celebration of the deliverance of the Jewish people from genocide in the Persian kingdom. This story, as recorded in the Book of Esther, says in brief that King Ahasuerus (Xerxes I) had a servant named Haman, who became incensed when a Jewish citizen named Mordechai refused to bow to him. In revenge, Haman convinces the king that “a certain people” living in the kingdom are disloyal. The king agrees to give Haman the right to exterminate the Jewish people, unaware that his new queen, Esther, is Jewish. She eventually confronts the king. Since no royal decree can be revoked, he issues a new proclamation giving the Jewish people the right to defend themselves. On the day marked for their extinction, the Jewish people wipe out their attackers. This took place in the fifth century B.C.

When is Purim celebrated?

Purim is a joyous Jewish festival celebrated every year on the 14th day of the Hebrew month of Adar. On 13 Adar, the Jews defeated their enemies, then feasted the next day. However, in Jerusalem and a few other walled cities like Shushan, the feast is observed on the 15th day of the month, because the Ketuvimsays walled cities did not win their battles until 14 Adar. (See Esther 9:13-19.)

The dating of Adar is confusing, since seven out of every 19 years contains two months known as Adar, one of which occurs during these leap years. In those years, Purim is held in Adar II. (The same day in Adar I is the minor feast of Purim Katan.)

What does Purim mean?

The name Purim is the Hebrew word for “lots,” because Haman cast lots to determine the day he would eradicate the Jewish people from the kingdom (Esther 3:6-7).

How is Purim celebrated?

Observant Jews prepare to celebrate this joyous holiday by fasting from daybreak until sundown on the day before Purim in what is known as Fast of Esther(Taanit Esther), based on Esther 4:16. Purim begins that evening.

There are mandments (mitzvot) for Purim, three of which are found in Esther 9:13-25:

Listen to the full Megillah(the entire Book of Esther) in the synagogue, or read it, twice: once in the evening and again during the next calendar memorating God’s deliverance. Each one of the 54 times Haman’s name is mentioned, the congregation will make noise (often by twirling a gragger)or yelling curses as a way to drown out his name;Give charity to the poor (Matanot LaEvyonim) to at least two poor people. In some places, no one is denied charity on this day;Send a ready-to-eat food to at least two friends (Mishloach Manot). By tradition, this is to be delivered by a third party, so streets in Jewish neighborhoods are often clogged during this time of year; andEating and drinking a festive meal, which often includes generous servings of wine.

What other customs traditionally mark this holiday?

Purim is one of the most joyous celebrations of the Jewish calendar. People of all ages wear masquerade costumes and have parties. Families eat hamantaschen(oroznay Haman)– triangular-shaped pastries filled with poppy seeds or sweet filling, intended to represent Haman’s tricornered hat (or in some tellings, his ears) – although, as with other religions, modern speculation has attempted to vulgarizeits symbolism. Some burn Haman in effigy. The day concludes with a family meal shared with friends. One rabbi said that those celebrating the festival should drink wine at dinner “until he cannot tell the difference between ‘cursed be Haman’ and ‘blessed be Mordecai.’”

Is there a special prayer for the occasion?

A prayer known as Al HaNisim. An English translation says:

In the days of Mordechai and Esther, in Shushan, the capital, when Haman, the wicked, rose up against them and sought to destroy, to slay, and to exterminate all the Jews, young and old, infants and women, on the same day, on the thirteenth of the twelfth month, which is the month of Adar, and to plunder their possessions; But You, in Your abundant mercy, nullified his counsel and frustrated his intention and caused his design to return upon his own head and they hanged him and his sons on the gallows.

Is there a specific greeting for Purim?

Jews may greet each other with the Hebrew phrase “chagPurim sameach” or the Yiddish phrase “Ah freylichen Purim,” which translate to “Happy festival of Purim!”

What is the message of Purim?

The holiday began as a way of “publicizing the miracle” of God’s preservation of His people (Megillah 18a). As centuries of anti-Semitic persecution unfolded, the holiday took on new depths of meaning. Modern Jews see a Purim miracle in the fact that Josef Stalin had a stroke on Purim (March 1, 1953); he died four days later. In 1945, American soldiers held a Purim celebration, a few days late, in a castle that once belonged to Joseph Goebbels.

For lovers of liberty, this Jewish feast is also a holiday celebrating religious liberty and tolerance, as God triumphs over government persecution.

Related:

FAQ: What is Sukkot, the ‘Feast of Tabernacles’?

FAQ: What is Yom Kippur?

FAQ: What is Hanukkah?

A Jewish perspective on justice, for Rosh Hashanah

Further resources from the Acton Institute on Judaism and economics:

Judaism, Law & the Free Market: An Analysisby Joseph Isaac Lifshitz

Judaism, Markets, and Capitalism: Separating Myth from Realityby Corinne Sauer and Robert M. Sauer

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Church as ‘hinge point’
A couple of weeks ago, I noted the amazing “just do it” outpouring passion in response to the wildfires in the Central Plains. My small home town in Oklahoma was among those areas burned or seriously damaged by the fires. Since Nov. 1, more than 363,000 acres, 220 structures and four deaths have been attributed to these wildfires. Much of the destruction has occurred on Indian trust lands within such areas as the Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muskogee Creek and Seminole tribal...
Feel-good hybrid hype
Richard Burr has an mentary in the Weekly Standard on the growing — and for some reasons puzzling — popularity of hybrid vehicles. Puzzling because these things don’t get the promised gains in fuel economy and don’t seem to work very well. Imagine buying a Chevy Impala or a Toyota Camry and being told that you can’t run the air conditioner on high. Or you need lessons from the dealer on how to brake the vehicle in order to recharge...
A harsh but good market
Apologies for a second Apple-related post in a row, but I thought this example might prove to be a decent case-study petition in the marketplace. One of the new products that Apple recently introduced was iWeb, a new program that makes it easy “to create websites and blogs plete with podcasts, photos and movies — and get them online, fast.” Why do I bring this up? The reason is that a small pany has been working on a similar program,...
Liberty for Liberia
After decades of civil unrest, the African nation of Liberia has elected the first female head of state in the history of the continent. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, a Harvard-educated economist and veteran of international affairs, was sworn in yesterday in the capital city of Monrovia. Founded in 1822, Liberia is Africa’s oldest republic, and the result of the work of the “American Colonization Society to settle freed American slaves in West Africa. The society contended that the immigration of blacks to...
Christ and the culture wars
Mark your calendars: The Institute for the Study of Christianity and Culture at Michigan State University is hosting a conference on April 7-8 with the keynote address to be given by Dr. Randall Balmer, Ann Whitney Olin Professor, Barnard College, Columbia University. From the conference site: “Dr. Balmer will be giving a lecture and a panel discussion on the topic of his ing book Taking the Country Back: How the Religious Right is Winning the Culture Wars.” There will also...
Shake your groove thing
Many of you may have already heard of the new line of Levi’s jeans due out later this year, the patible RedWire DLX jeans: “With a joystick remote control built into the watch pocket, the new jeans will allow wearers to play, pause, track forward or back and adjust the volume on their iPods without having to take them out of their pockets.” There is also a built-in pocket designed to “conceal the bulge of the iPod.” But Levi Strauss...
New human rights group
The U.N. and many of its attendant NGOs have often supported dubious and even Orwellian interpretations of human rights (pushing, for example, for coercive population control measures in the name of reproductive “freedom”). A new group, the International Solidarity and Human Rights Institute aims to promote an agenda more in keeping with a Christian concept of rights. One of its goals is to influence the U.N. positively on this issue. Godspeed. ...
Armstrong on government and charity
John H. Armstrong tackles the question, “How Should Government Deal with Poverty?” He writes, “A regular argument made, at least from some evangelical political voices from the political left, is to cite numerous Old Testament texts about poverty and then suggest that one of the central concerns of a just government is to solve the problems associated with poverty.” He cuts to the heart of such fallacious reasoning, recognizing “No one who has an ounce passion disagrees that Christians should...
Unintended consequences
There’s interesting news on the global warming front in today’s Financial Times: Everyone knows trees are “A Good Thing”. They take in the carbon dioxide that threatens our planet with global warming and turn it into fresh, clean oxygen for us all to breathe. But now it seems we need to think again. In a discovery that has left climate scientists gasping, researchers have found that the earth’s vegetation is churning out vast quantities of methane, a greenhouse gas far...
Does American charity cheat the tax man?
A Stanford expert on philanthropy argues that tax-deductible American charity is actually a government subsidy and that philanthropy is not ‘redistributive’ enough. Acton’s Karen Woods points out (obvious to most) that helping the needy is not the exclusive domain of the state. “The real problem with government ‘charity’ is that government takes a ‘one size fits all’ approach to the problem of poverty,” Woods writes. Read mentary here. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved