Today is the festival of Purim. Well, it started at
sundown yesterday and runs to sundown today. It commemorates the unmasking of a
plot by a Persian courtier to kill all Jews in the empire.
The person who foiled the genocide was the wife of King Ahaseurus,
Queen Esther, who was a Jew. This took place in the 4th Century BCE,
but you’ll notice that history has been repeating itself pretty much ever since
then.
Anyhow, Esther found out that the prime minister, Haman,
was planning genocide, and she outed him in a clever way, which forms the basis
of today’s celebration.
Esther won her position in a sort of beauty contest, which
is a different history lesson altogether. However, her physical appeal does play
into her ability to influence Ahaseurus, who hanged Haman. Then the Jews, given
the right to defend themselves, killed a lot of those who wanted to destroy
them.
And the next day they celebrated. Ergo Purim, which is a festival,
involving feasting.
Here’s why I bring it up.
This image of Esther came around on social media, and I
freely admit that Esther is quite the dish here, and you can see how Ahaseurus
would let himself be guided by her rather than by Haman (who, by some accounts,
had triangular ears).
However, I’ve always been more of a Judith girl myself.
Her story is about triumphing over those who’d wish to destroy you, too, only
she’s more of an actor than an influencer.
It seems that Holofernes led an invading army in behalf
of Nebuchadnezzar, and he was proving successful against everyone, including
the Jews, who had not actually been defeated, but they had become mightily
discouraged.
One night, a widow named Judith sneaked into the enemy
camp, entered the general’s tent and seduced him. Then, while he was lying
basically exhausted, she cut off his head.
That proved enough to discourage his army, as well as
invigorate the Jews’ army and they were saved.
Judith’s story did not make it into the mainstream Jewish
and Protestant holy books (although the Roman and Orthodox Old Testaments
include it). Possibly—and I’m just spitballing here—because it makes
patriarchal power holders really uncomfortable to consider that while masses of
armed males quail, a single woman has a set big enough to take care of business
in a very direct, up-close-and-personal kind of way, involving a sharp blade
and a swift stroke.
(I think there may also be some crossover angst revolving
around the fact that a “head” was involved. You know how easy it is to confuse your
heads when you’ve only got sufficient blood supply for one at a time.)
But it’s always appealed to me. Judith sees the problem,
she weighs the possibilities, she makes a plan and she executes it. (Um.) She’s
beautiful (you did see the part about seducing Holofernes, right?), smart,
resolute, good with the cutlery and utterly courageous. Here's a woman who cuts through the crap, cuts to the chase, cuts through the carotid. I really like that in a broad.
As for images of Judith in action—there are quite a few
famous ones. Here are two of my favorites. First by Gustave Klimt, painted in
1901.
I adore Klimt, and this is a gorgeous rendition, even
though it’s lacking all context. Just this stunning woman, shimmering in gold,
who happens to be holding the severed head of a barbarian.
Well, as you do.
My second—actually my very favorite—is by Artemisia
Gentileschi, from the early 17th Century. This one captures all the
violence, power and resolve of Judith’s action.
Gentileschi was an incredible painter. She turned her own
experience of being raped into the most vivid depiction yet of this story. It
beats the daylights out of Caravaggio’s version. (I saw them both at an exhibition at the Royal Academy in 2001.)
Okay, well—back to today’s feast, which involves (among
other things) Hamantashen and kreplach pastries. Sweet things to recall a good
outcome.
And let me close with what a colleague of mine once said is
the summary of all Jewish holidays:
“They tried to kill us. We won. Let’s eat.”
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