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Purim Masquerade

Hiddenness
The Sages found a hint to Purim in the Biblical phrase ". . . and I will surely hide ("haster astir panai") My face from you on that day. . . " (Deuteronomy 31:18). This is a reference to the hiddenness of the Purim miracles. Since God's name does not appear in the Megilla text, and Purim events appear to unfold "randomly," one could assume that the rescue of the Jews was just "good luck" or shrewd politics. Unlike an event such as the Exodus, when one technicolor miracle followed another, Purim's events are shrouded in the workings of political intrigue. The Sages tell us that this is a message for the future - just as the unlikely events in Purim were orchestratedfrom Above, so too is God at work, even when His Hand is unseen. The mask represents this hiddenness.

Purim Masks

The World is Topsy-Turvy!

On Purim, everything is turned upside down
. This is exemplified by the phrase V'nahafuch Hu "And it was turned about" (Megillat Esther 9:1). One minute, all the Jews were destined to die, courtesy of Haman. The next, Haman and his illustrious ten sons were hanging on the gallows he built for Mordechai, and the Jews rise up and kill their attackers. One minute, Haman anticipates dressing in the king's robes and parading through the streets. The next, he is leading Mordechai through the streets, and his daughter dumps sewage on his head.

On Purim, we dress up in costumes to say things are not always as they seem, and in a minute, they can change. Behind the mask of Nature, God is at work, and although Haman might be wearing a crown this moment, in the next -- it belongs to Mordechai.

Masqerade ball in New York, 1800s

The Masquerade: Then and Today

This custom of masquerading was firmly a part of Purim celebrations by Italy in the 1500s. Masquerade balls, no doubt influenced by the Springtime carnivals of their non-Jewish neighbors, became popular.

Today, it is children who most of all dress up in costumes. Throughout Israel, children come to school in costume the days before Purim. In parties throughout the country, children are dressed as Esther and Mordechai, not to mention clowns and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

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