Jewish Group
Related: About this forumAn opinion piece on Purim, antisemitism, diaspora, and survival as a people.
Last edited Thu Mar 13, 2025, 08:54 PM - Edit history (1)
Last week, the Israeli actress Gal Gadot gave a wonderful speech about standing up against antisemitism. The interesting point she made was that, in the world today, it is considered radical to say you are Jewish.
snip
This leads me to the Jewish holiday that is happening this week. It is the holiday of Purim. The story goes, that King Achashverosh (Xerxes to the historians among us), a misogynistic megalomaniacal pig, wanted his wife Vashti to dance naked in front of his friends. When she refused, he sent her away and began to look for a new wife. (There of course was a harem of hundreds of women at his disposal, but this is the story.) There was a nationwide contest and he chose the beautiful woman Esther.
Now Esther’s uncle Mordecai, someone of importance in elite circles, was not supplicant to the king’s advisor Haman. So Haman decided he was going to have all the Jews in the Persian kingdom slaughtered in one big genocide. (If you think collective punishment when it comes to Jews is new, think again.) Mordecai, upon hearing of this plot, went to Esther and begged her to intercede with the King. And eventually she did. The King had Haman and his sons hanged.
snip
But the part of the story that people like to forget is that this was not the end. Getting rid of the leaders did not end Jew-hatred or the desire to slaughter. There ended up being a huge battle between the Jews of Persia and Haman’s acolytes. The Book of Esther says that over 70,000 of Haman’s army were killed at the battle. But the Jews secured their future. There would be no Jewish genocide in Persia.
https://open.substack.com/pub/futureofjewish/p/jews-who-dont-fight-back-dont-survive?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=2r9s5y
Chag Sameach Purim!

FirstLight
(14,826 posts)I'm sendng this to my daughter too....
Richard D
(9,648 posts). . . Most of them are no longer walking the earth. And here we still are, the eternal people.
Ancient Egypt (Pharaoh’s decree)
Assyrian Exile (722 BCE)
Babylonian Exile (586 BCE)
Persian Attempted Genocide (Haman, ~480 BCE)
Greek Seleucid Persecution (167-160 BCE)
Roman Destruction of the Second Temple (70 CE)
Bar Kokhba Revolt Suppression (132-136 CE)
Byzantine Persecutions (4th-7th Century CE)
Islamic Conquests (7th-12th Century CE)
Almohad Persecutions in Spain and North Africa (12th Century)
First Crusade Massacres (1096)
Second Crusade Massacres (1147)
Third Crusade Persecutions (1189-1192)
Expulsion from England (1290)
French Expulsions (1182, 1306, 1322, 1394)
Black Death Persecutions (1348-1351)
Spanish Inquisition and Expulsion (1492)
Portuguese Expulsion (1497)
Persecutions in the Papal States (16th-19th Century)
Khmelnytsky Massacres (1648-1657)
Russian Empire Pogroms (19th-Early 20th Century)
Hep-Hep Riots (1819, Germany)
Damascus Blood Libel (1840)
First Congress of Damascus (1860)
Persian Anti-Jewish Persecutions (19th Century)
Moroccan Pogroms (19th-20th Century)
Ottoman Empire Persecutions (Late 19th Century)
Kishinev Pogroms (1903, 1905)
Odessa Pogroms (1905)
Baku Pogrom (1905)
Lviv Pogroms (1914, 1918, 1941)
Hungarian White Terror (1919)
Polish Anti-Jewish Riots (1918-1939)
Hebron Massacre (1929)
Safed Massacre (1929)
Farhud Pogrom (1941, Iraq)
Holocaust (1933-1945)
Kielce Pogrom (1946)
Anti-Jewish Riots in Libya (1945, 1948, 1967)
Egyptian Persecution and Expulsion (1948-1956)
Moroccan Anti-Jewish Riots (1948, 1954, 1967)
Iraqi Jewish Persecutions (1950-1970)
Yemenite Jewish Persecutions (1947-1970)
Pogrom in Aleppo (1947)
Pogrom in Cairo (1945)
Pogrom in Tripoli (1945)
Expulsion of Jews from Arab Countries (1948-1970s)
Pogrom in Oujda and Jerada (1948)
Baghdad Hangings (1969)
Iranian Jewish Persecutions (1979-Present)
Buenos Aires Bombing (1992, 1994)
Palestinian Terrorist Attacks (20th-21st Century)
Resurgent Antisemitic Attacks in Europe and U.S. (2000s-Present)