Difference between revisions of "Achashverosh's Shock and Fury/2"

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<category name="">Misled by Haman
 
<category name="">Misled by Haman
 
<p>Achashverosh had been deceived by Haman, who had hidden the identity of the nation he was planning on destroying and/or misled him regarding what he intended to do to that nation.&#160; Thus, it was with Esther's comment that Achashverosh first realized that Haman planned to annihilate the Jews.</p>
 
<p>Achashverosh had been deceived by Haman, who had hidden the identity of the nation he was planning on destroying and/or misled him regarding what he intended to do to that nation.&#160; Thus, it was with Esther's comment that Achashverosh first realized that Haman planned to annihilate the Jews.</p>
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<mekorot><multilink><a href="MalbimEsther3-8-15" data-aht="source">Malbim</a><a href="MalbimEsther3-8-15" data-aht="source">Esther 3:8-15</a><a href="MalbimEsther4-7" data-aht="source">Esther 4:7</a><a href="MalbimEsther7-4" data-aht="source">Esther 7:4</a><a href="R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</a></multilink></mekorot>
 
<point><b>Haman's request - "יֶשְׁנוֹ עַם אֶחָד"</b> – These commentators point out that throughout Haman's speech he never mentions which nation it is that he is referring to,<fn>According to most of these commentators Haman knew that the king admired the Jews for their wisdom and would never agree to harm them.&#160;&#160; The Gr"a and -- add that Haman was thinking specifically about the kings feelings towards Mordechia.&#160; After his role in saving the king's life it would not be easy to convince Achashverosh to kill off his nation.</fn> and only explains why they are problematic.&#160; Achashverosh, either due to trust in his closest adviser,<fn>See Reggio and Malbim who defend Achashverosh, painting him not as a foolish king but as one who understandably relied on trusted advisers to act in his kingdom's best interests.</fn> or from pure stupidity,<fn>See R. Avraham Saba and R. Aharon Wolf who view Achashverosh negatively, critiquing him and painting him as a fool.&#160; Since both these commentators suggest that Haman only misled Achashevrosh regarding the nation to be destroyed but assume that he was upfront about the actual destruction, Achashverosh emerges even worse. How can a king simply give his approval to annihilate a nation without even knowing who is referred to and without further questioning?</fn> does not ask questions and just gives his stamp of authority.</point>
 
<point><b>Haman's request - "יֶשְׁנוֹ עַם אֶחָד"</b> – These commentators point out that throughout Haman's speech he never mentions which nation it is that he is referring to,<fn>According to most of these commentators Haman knew that the king admired the Jews for their wisdom and would never agree to harm them.&#160;&#160; The Gr"a and -- add that Haman was thinking specifically about the kings feelings towards Mordechia.&#160; After his role in saving the king's life it would not be easy to convince Achashverosh to kill off his nation.</fn> and only explains why they are problematic.&#160; Achashverosh, either due to trust in his closest adviser,<fn>See Reggio and Malbim who defend Achashverosh, painting him not as a foolish king but as one who understandably relied on trusted advisers to act in his kingdom's best interests.</fn> or from pure stupidity,<fn>See R. Avraham Saba and R. Aharon Wolf who view Achashverosh negatively, critiquing him and painting him as a fool.&#160; Since both these commentators suggest that Haman only misled Achashevrosh regarding the nation to be destroyed but assume that he was upfront about the actual destruction, Achashverosh emerges even worse. How can a king simply give his approval to annihilate a nation without even knowing who is referred to and without further questioning?</fn> does not ask questions and just gives his stamp of authority.</point>
 
<point><b>Haman's request - "יִכָּתֵב לְאַבְּדָם"</b> – According to most of these commentators, when speaking to the king, Haman was purposefully misleading in choosing the language of "לְאַבְּדָם", a word which can sustain more than one meaning.<fn>All the variations of this position must assume that Tanakh is preserving the ambiguity of the original Persian in which Haman would have spoken to the Achashverosh. Since he picked a word which could have been interpreted in more than one way, when Esther recounted the story she tried to find a matching word in Hebrew which would have a similar double meaning.</fn> Only in the official letters to the various states does Haman disambiguate, adding &#8206;"&#8207;&#8206;לְהַשְׁמִיד לַהֲרֹג וּלְאַבֵּד&#8206;".<fn>Since Achashverosh had given Haman his signet ring and told him to do as he pleased, Haman could easily have added these words without the king's knowledge.</fn> The exegetes disagree, though, regarding what it was that Haman meant for Achashverosh to understand:<br/>
 
<point><b>Haman's request - "יִכָּתֵב לְאַבְּדָם"</b> – According to most of these commentators, when speaking to the king, Haman was purposefully misleading in choosing the language of "לְאַבְּדָם", a word which can sustain more than one meaning.<fn>All the variations of this position must assume that Tanakh is preserving the ambiguity of the original Persian in which Haman would have spoken to the Achashverosh. Since he picked a word which could have been interpreted in more than one way, when Esther recounted the story she tried to find a matching word in Hebrew which would have a similar double meaning.</fn> Only in the official letters to the various states does Haman disambiguate, adding &#8206;"&#8207;&#8206;לְהַשְׁמִיד לַהֲרֹג וּלְאַבֵּד&#8206;".<fn>Since Achashverosh had given Haman his signet ring and told him to do as he pleased, Haman could easily have added these words without the king's knowledge.</fn> The exegetes disagree, though, regarding what it was that Haman meant for Achashverosh to understand:<br/>

Version as of 10:34, 5 February 2015

Achashverosh's Surprise

Exegetical Approaches

Unaware and Fickle

Achashverosh had been unaware of Esther's Jewish identity, and being both drunk and foolish, did not immediately make the connection to Haman's edict.

Haman's request – This position assumes that Haman was upfront when discussing his plan to annihilate the Jewish people and that Achashverosh knew from the beginning both which nation was referred to and what Haman planned to do them.
10,000 pieces of gold
How did Esther hide her identity?
Honor to Mordechai
Significance to hanging?
Esther's tactics

Misled by Haman

Achashverosh had been deceived by Haman, who had hidden the identity of the nation he was planning on destroying and/or misled him regarding what he intended to do to that nation.  Thus, it was with Esther's comment that Achashverosh first realized that Haman planned to annihilate the Jews.

Haman's request - "יֶשְׁנוֹ עַם אֶחָד" – These commentators point out that throughout Haman's speech he never mentions which nation it is that he is referring to,1 and only explains why they are problematic.  Achashverosh, either due to trust in his closest adviser,2 or from pure stupidity,3 does not ask questions and just gives his stamp of authority.
Haman's request - "יִכָּתֵב לְאַבְּדָם" – According to most of these commentators, when speaking to the king, Haman was purposefully misleading in choosing the language of "לְאַבְּדָם", a word which can sustain more than one meaning.4 Only in the official letters to the various states does Haman disambiguate, adding ‎"‏‎לְהַשְׁמִיד לַהֲרֹג וּלְאַבֵּד‎".5 The exegetes disagree, though, regarding what it was that Haman meant for Achashverosh to understand:
  • Religious persecution – Malbim asserts that the word "לאבד" can refer not only to physical destruction, but to spiritual destruction as well.6 Haman convinced the king that the nation's observance of different religious customs were detrimental to the kingdom and that they should be forced to act like the other religions.7
  • Enslavement – R. Astruc8 suggests that Haman told Achashverosh that the nation was rebellious9 leading Achashverosh to conclude that they needed to be subdued and enslaved.10
  • Exile – Y"S Reggio points to the verse, "וּבָאוּ הָאֹבְדִים בְּאֶרֶץ אַשּׁוּר "‎11 as evidence that the root can refer to exile and suggests that Haman told the king that it was best to banish this lawless nation from his empire.12
  • Despoiling - Alternatively, Haman thought the king would assume he simply wanted to plunder the problematic nation, understanding "לְאַבְּדָם" to mean that they would be dispossessed and lose their property.13
10,000 pieces of gold – Haman's offer is understood differently by the commentators, in line with their individual understandings of the connotations of "לְאַבְּדָם" above:
  • Self-financed – According to Malbim, Haman was saying that, in their religious fervor, the officers would be so happy to fulfill the decree that they would finance it by themselves. 
  • Tax replacement - Y"S Reggio might suggest instead that Haman was offering to pay the amount that would be lost in taxes if the nation was to be exiled.14
  • Profits – According to those who suggest that Haman's words were understood as either selling the nation into slavery or dispossessing them, Haman might be telling the king that the profits from such a sale/plundering would go to the royal treasury.15 
Different letters – Malbim points out that Haman sent out two sets of letters, sealed missives which contained the the identity of the nation to be killed and which were not to be opened until the thirteenth of Adar, and open letters which simply told the provinces to prepare themselves for war on that date.  Haman thus attempted to ensure that word of his true plans did not get back to Achashverosh until it was too late.
Did Achashverosh know Esther was Jewish? According to this approach it is possible that Achashverosh knew all along that Esther was Jewish; he simply did not know that the edict referred to Jews.  See -- for positions that suggest that Esther never tried to conceal her nationality but only her specific lineage and connections to the royal line.
Honor to Mordechai – According to this approach Achashverosh's honoring of Mordechai is not the product of a fickle king who decides to exterminate the Jews one day and revere them the next, but part of a consistently positive attitude towards the Jewish nation.  In fact, according to most of these sources, this very attitude is what led Haman to hide the identity of the nation he wanted to harm.
Mordechai's report – Y. Grossman suggests that Mordechai told Esther both about the money that Haman meant to give the treasury "לְאַבְּדָם" and the letters that were sent "לְהַשְׁמִידָם"‎16 because he wanted to share not just the impending tragedy, but more importantly, the fact that  Haman misled the king,17 telling him one thing but writing another.18
Esther's tactics - "וְאִלּוּ לַעֲבָדִים וְלִשְׁפָחוֹת נִמְכַּרְנוּ הֶחֱרַשְׁתִּי" – -- that Esther tried to cast blame off Achashevrosh and pin it solely on Haman,  She thus "innocently" suggests that if the only wrong done was to slave her nation into slavery (what Achashverosh assumed he agreed to),  that would not be worth troubling the king over, but when the stakes are ife and death she cannot remain quiet.
Significance to hanging?
Biblical Parallels

Playing Innocent

Achashverosh immediately understood that Esther was referring to Haman's plan which he himself had approved, but he feigned innocence so as to cast the blame solely on Haman.