
Permission to Live Is Not Enough — Yom Ha-Nikhalim and the Jewish Duty to Stand
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Show Notes
There was no breakfast this morning, but maybe we gained a touch of clarity.
On the thirteenth of Adar — what Ḥazal call yom ha-nikhalim — the Jews of Shushan faced a strange and terrifying reality: they had royal “permission” to defend themselves, but the original decree to annihilate them still stood in every
archive of the empire. Two edicts. One promising their destruction. One allowing them to assemble and stand for their lives. The question was simple and brutal: Would they live as a people who merely survive on paper, or as a nation willing to act?
In this class we explore the tension inside Megillat Esther that has echoed through Jewish history ever since — from Shushan to the modern State of Israel.
What does the Torah really mean when it says, “If someone comes to kill you,
rise early to kill him first”? Is pre-emption aggression — or halachic necessity? And when the world says, “You have a right to defend yourself,” who actually grants that permission? This is not a comfortable conversation. It is, however, a necessary one.