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Esther without borders: Artists around the world reimagine the Purim story

For the past 34 years, Jerusalemite David Moss has been asking fellow artists from across the globe to interpret the story of Purim.

March 20, 2024 12:26
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'Sending The Story to All Lands' © Philip Carey, California (Photo: Shira Cohen Beck)

ByMordechai Beck, Mordechai Beck

2 min read

“I gave the artists a copy of the Megilla translated into Indonesian, some parchment paper and asked them to imagine the Purim story was happening in their villages.”

In 1990, the artist and Jerusalemite David Moss was in Bali. While marvelling at the island’s stepped-pyramid temples and other facets of its ancient Hindu culture, he happened across the work of some local artists, a collection of “beautiful minatures that immediately reminded me of the story of Esther.

“I drew six small, blank rectangles on the parchment paper and asked them to envisage six scenes from the story: Achashverosh’s party, the beauty contest in which Esther takes part; the moment she touched the king’s gold spectre; Haman leading Mordechai through the city streets, astride the king’s horse; the hanging of Haman’s ten sons, and the writing of Megilla.”

David Moss pictured with 'Golden Scepter and Mordechai on Horse Scenes'  © Gebre Merha, Ethiopia (Photo: Shira Cohen Beck)David Moss pictured with 'Golden Scepter and Mordechai on Horse Scenes' © Gebre Merha, Ethiopia (Photo: Shira Cohen Beck)[Missing Credit]

Most important, Moss, a book illustrator and calligrapher who also designs ketubot, wanted them to imagine that story had taken place in Bali and to tell it in local vernacular.