Purim traditions include reading the Megillah, exchanging food gifts, giving to the needy, and dressing in costumes.
Jewish ultra-Orthodox men and children, some wearing costumes, read the Book of Esther, which tells the story of the Jewish ...
The post Thousands gather in Hostages Square to read Book of Esther on Purim eve appeared first on The Times of Israel.
The festival of fun and frivolity has been harder for some Jews to celebrate in the wake of the destruction of Gaza.
One of the staples of Purim is the reading of The Megillah, also known as The Book of Esther. It's done once on Purim night (this year, that'd be the evening of March 13) and once on Purim day ...
This information is written on the megillah itself. The Book of Esther featured in the exhibit: Beautiful Esther. Purim, A Timeless Story (credit: Courtesy) “This illuminated megillah is one of ...
or almost all of the book of Esther during Purim. Why? How much of the scroll of Esther must one read to fulfill the Mitsvah of reading the Megillah, asks the Mishnah. Rabbi Meir says, ...
Video shows Yehuda Gerami dancing with students, reading megillah scroll at site believed by local community to be in ancient ...
Esther's uncle Mordechai gets wind of the ... Here he is in a column in the Guardian, based on his recent book, explaining Purim in the same terms as the Nazis and other antisemites: On the ...