Purim Torah

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Purim Torah are humorous and satirical writings customarily read on the Jewish holiday of Purim. Purim Torah can be simple or elaborate, and require no qualifications to write, other than a good sense of humor. Purim Torah authors, often displaying an amazing grasp of Jewish knowledge, playfully use some of the far-fetched methods of Talmudic logic and Biblical exegesis in order to reach absurd conclusions.[1]

Parodies of Jewish life and the world have been found as early as the 12th century.[2]

Ashkenazi culture has a variation of the Purim Torah that is acted out, often with elaborate costumes and is referred to as a Purim Shpiel, from the Yiddish for play.[2]

Talmudic sources

Eliezer Segal points to a passage in the Talmud as the first Purim Torah. In a passage on Hulin 139b, a sage offers up a series of ridiculous puns in order to find allusions to characters from the Purim story in the Torah.[2] Others such as Israel Davidson claim that while there is humor present in the Talmud, calling any part of it a parody is an overstatement.[3]

Example of Purim Torah

The Purim Rabbi asks the question: Why is it said in the Talmud that the generation of Jews who were with Moses in the desert do not have a share in the world to come? Because those Jews quarreled with Moses and with God about water, and never asked for a bit of wine. Such bad taste deserves punishment and thus, they lost their share in the hereafter.

References

  1. Websters Online - Purim Torah
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Segal, Eliezer. "Purim, Parody, and Pipul". Retrieved 2009-06-02. 
  3. Davidson, Israel (1907). Parody in Jewish Literature. New York. 
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