Judaism - Events
Originally at: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/555098.html

The monument over the tombs of Esther and Mordechai in Hamadan, Iran.
Esther's Iranian tomb draws pilgrims of
all religious stripes
By Helen Eliassian
Tue., March 22, 2005 Adar2 12, 5765
Generations of Jews have protected the holy site. Will the Iranians
continue to do so? Women of all religious backgrounds visit the site
to pray for children, bringing colorful curtains and cloths to place
on the tombs and to donate to an adjacent prayer room.
Though the holiday of Purim is celebrated by Jews worldwide, the story,
based as it is in Persia, has special resonance for the Jews of Iran.
Recent decades have proved difficult for Persian Jews, many of whom
fled the country after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. From a community
of about 100,000, an estimated 25,000 to 35,000 now remain.
This month, Jews from across Iran will pray at a shrine in Hamadan,
in northwestern Iran, dedicated to the heroes of the Purim story. They
will likely be met upon arrival by Muslims and Christians, who pray
year-round at the unusual shrine. The building follows the architecture
of emamzadeh ("Islamic shrine"), but has walls adorned with
Hebrew inscriptions describing Esther and Mordechai's origins. In fact,
it might come as a surprise to learn that the story of Purim has resonance
for all Iranians.
Not only was Esther a Jewish queen, but, as the wife of King Ahasuerus
(Xerxes I), she also continues to be revered as a Persian queen and,
thus, an icon of national Iranian history.
Though her original name, Hadassah, means "hidden" in Hebrew,
she is known as Esther. Scholar and writer Haideh Sahim explains that
"Esther" is derived from the Persian word astaar, meaning
"star." It is believed that Esther and Mordecai were buried
in the shrine at Hamadan, originally called Hegmataneh, in the fifth
century B.C.E.
According to one Persian legend, the resting place and its surrounding
land served as a refuge for Iranians during the Arab conquest of Persia
in 621 C.E. As the story goes, when the Arabs began to conquer the city
of Hegmataneh, the people of Iran came to the gravesite so that the
spirit of Esther and Mordechai would protect them. A monument - the
exact date of origin has been disputed, ranging from the 13th to the
17th century - has been built over the tombs, and both Jewish and non-Jewish
Iranians now believe that the site is holy and cannot be destroyed.
For generations, the Jews of Hamadan safeguarded the tomb and the customs
of the holiday of Purim. Touba Somekh, a woman who was instrumental
in bringing about the restoration of the site in the 1920s, explained
in an interview in 1998, four years before her death, how the Jews were
able to continue maintenance of the tombs.
Somekh used to be an active member of a small women's group in Hamadan,
progressive for its time, named Hadassah, after Esther. The women would
recite Psalms, talk about the news of the day and study together.
Around 1925, Somekh learned that the city government planned to build
a wall around the tomb and to take it over, unless the local hebra,
or Jewish organization, could accomplish such a task. Though she was
only 15 - and already the mother of two - Somekh immediately thought
of Hadassah's monetary savings of 300 toman (a significant sum for the
day) and boldly declared to her brother-in-law that the women's committee
had the means to safeguard the shrine. The next day, her brother-in-law
informed the members of the hebra of this.
"I began to sweat under the chador," Somekh remembered. "I
was a young girl who had declared something and was now being taken
seriously. What was going to happen?" The women's committee was
indeed able to provide the initial funding for the restoration and expansion
needed at the time.
These days, the shrine - and the holiday in general - is of particular
importance to women. Women of all religious backgrounds visit the site
to pray for children, bringing colorful curtains and cloths to place
on the tombs and to donate to an adjacent prayer room. It is believed
that a cloth coming into contact with the shrine will be blessed. A
person in monetary or spiritual need would then take some raw cloth
and make from it articles of clothing.
Of the Jews left in Iran, only four or five families live in Hamadan,
leaving some with fears about the future of the shrine. According to
Houman Sarshar, editor of "Esther's Children: A Portrait of Iranian
Jews," "To my knowledge, the issue was never one of custody.
The caretaker now is not Jewish. The synagogue attached to the sight
is the only functioning one in Hamadan."
Some believe it is the spirit of Esther and Mordechai that will live
on and protect the Jews of Iran, extending a legacy of 2,500 years.
Others, including Sahim, wonder, "Who will take care of our Esther?"
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