Purim
Among Jews today the 13th of Adar is kept as the Fast of Esther. This custom of fasting before Purim is first heard of in the eighth century A.D. In the evening which is the beginning of the 14th, they assemble in the synagogue. After the evening service the reading of the book of Esther is begun. When the name of Haman is reached, the people cry out, "Let his name be blotted out," or "The name of the wicked shall rot," while the children spring rattles. The names of Haman's sons are all read in a breath, to indicate that they were hanged simultaneously.
The next morning they return to the synagogue,
and finish the formal services
and then devote the day to mirth and rejoicing.
The wealthy give gifts to the poor.
Purim masquerades,
Purim dramas, and many other customs attend the season.
Some' burn an effigy of Haman,
others write his name on stones and rub them together until it disappears,
still others chalk his name upon the soles of their shoes and stomp and shuffle until it is wiped out. Most Jewish children would agree that, "Purim is the jolliest of all holidays."
Truth Magazine XXII: 1, pp. 16-20
January 5, 1978
January 5, 1978
Daddy
Yiddish Purim Rap