U.S. Pressure on Iran Is Curbing the Mullahs’ Ability to Shed Blood
The way to moderate Tehran’s behavior does not involve “strengthening the moderates.”
March 9, 2020
A new exegesis and its flaws.
In a recently published work, Seymour Epstein offers a radical reinterpretation of Esther—the biblical scroll (megillah) read in synagogues tonight to mark the holiday of Purim. The book, he suggests, is in fact a critique of its ostensible heroes. In Epstein’s understanding, Mordechai and Esther, having passed up the opportunity to return to the Land of Israel with other Jewish exiles, are portrayed as representing the confusion and vulnerability of life in the Diaspora. In her review, Sarah Rindner summarizes his case:
The way to moderate Tehran’s behavior does not involve “strengthening the moderates.”
Its edict crippling lame-duck governments has led voters to rally around Prime Minister Netanyahu.
Jerusalem can learn a lesson from Riyadh.
A new exegesis and its flaws.
Tel Hai’s other hero.
In a recently published work, Seymour Epstein offers a radical reinterpretation of Esther—the biblical scroll (megillah) read in synagogues tonight to mark the holiday of Purim. The book, he suggests, is in fact a critique of its ostensible heroes. In Epstein’s understanding, Mordechai and Esther, having passed up the opportunity to return to the Land of Israel with other Jewish exiles, are portrayed as representing the confusion and vulnerability of life in the Diaspora. In her review, Sarah Rindner summarizes his case:
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