1. There Is None Else Besides Him
2. Shechina [Divinity] in Exile
3. The Matter of Spiritual Attainment
4. What Is the Reason for the Heaviness One Feels when Annulling before the Creator in the Work?
5. Lishma Is an Awakening from Above, and Why Do We Need an Awakening from Below?
6. What Is Support in the Torah, in the Work?
7. What Is, “A Habit Becomes a Second Nature,” in the Work?
8. What Is the Difference between a Shade of Kedusha and a Shade of Sitra Achra?
9. What Are Three Things that Broaden One’s Mind in the Work?
10. What Is “Run Away, My Beloved,” in the Work?
11. Joy with Trembling
12. The Essence of Man’s Work
13. A Pomegranate
14. What Is the Exaltedness of the Creator?
15. What Is Other Gods in the Work?
16. What Is the Day of the Lord and the Night of the Lord, in the Work?
17. What Does It Mean that the Sitra Achra Is Called “Malchut without a Crown”?
18. My Soul Shall Weep in Secret – 1
19. What Is “The Creator Hates the Bodies,” in the Work?
20. Lishma [for Her sake]
21. When One Feels Oneself in a State of Ascent
22. Torah Lishma
23. You Who Love the Lord, Hate Evil
24. He Will Save Them from the Hand of the Wicked
25. Things that Come from the Heart
26. One’s Future Depends and Is Tied to Gratitude for the Past
27. What Is “The Lord Is High and the Low Will See”? - 1
28. I Shall Not Die but Live
29. When Thoughts Come to a Person
30. The Most Important Is to Want Only to Bestow
31. Anyone Who Pleases the Spirit of the People
32. A Lot Is an Awakening from Above
33. The Lots on Yom Kippur and with Haman
34. The Advantage of a Land
35. Concerning the Vitality of Kedusha
36. What Are the Three Bodies in Man?
37. An Article for Purim
38. The Fear of God Is His Treasure
39. And They Sewed Fig Leaves
40. What Is the Measure of Faith in the Rav?
41. What Is Greatness and Smallness in Faith?
42. What Is the Acronym Elul (I am for My Beloved, and My Beloved Is for Me) in the Work?
43. Concerning Truth and Faith
44. Mind and Heart
45. Two Discernments in the Torah and in the Work
46. The Domination of Israel over the Klipot
47. In the Place Where You Find His Greatness
48. The Primary Basis
49. The Most Important Are the Mind and the Heart
50. Two States
51. If You Encounter This Villain
52. A Transgression Does Not Extinguish a Mitzva
53. The Matter of Limitation
54. The Purpose of the Work – 1
55. Haman from the Torah, from Where?
56. Torah Is Called Indication
57. Will Bring Him Closer to His Will
58. Joy Is a “Reflection” of Good Deeds
59. Concerning the Staff and the Serpent
60. A Mitzva that Comes through Transgression
61. Round About Him It Storms Mightily
62. Descends and Incites, Ascends and Complains
63. I Was Borrowed on, and I Repay
64. From Lo Lishma, We Come to Lishma
65. Concerning the Revealed and the Concealed
66. Concerning the Giving of the Torah – 1
67. Depart from Evil
68. Man's Connection to the Sefirot
69. First Will Be the Correction of the World
70. With a Mighty Hand and with Fury Poured Out
71. My Soul Shall Weep in Secret – 2
72. Confidence Is the Clothing for the Light
73. After the Tzimtzum
74. World, Year, Soul
75. There Is a Discernment of the Next World, and There Is a Discernment of This World
76. On All Your Offerings You Shall Offer Salt
77. One's Soul Shall Teach Him
78. The Torah, the Creator, and Israel Are One
79. Atzilut and BYA
80. Concerning Achor be Achor
81. Concerning Raising MAN
82. The Prayer that One Should Always Pray
83. Concerning the Right Vav and the Left Vav
84. What Is “He Drove the Man Out of the Garden of Eden so He Would Not Take from the Tree of Life”?
85. What Is the Fruit of a Citrus Tree, in the Work?
86. And They Built Arei Miskenot
87. Shabbat Shekalim
88. All the Work Is Only Where There Are Two Ways – 1
89. To Understand the Words of The Zohar
90. In The Zohar, Beresheet
91. Concerning the Replaceable
92. Explaining the Discernment of Luck
93. Concerning Fins and Scales
94. And You Shall Keep Your Souls
95. Concerning Removing the Foreskin
96. What Is Waste of Granary and Winery, in the Work?
97. Waste of Granary and Winery
98. Spirituality Is Called That Which Will Never Be Lost
99. He Did Not Say Wicked or Righteous
100. The Written Torah and the Oral Torah – 1
101. A Commentary on the Psalm, “For the Winner over Roses”
102. And You Shall Take You the Fruit of a Citrus Tree
103. Whose Heart Makes Him Willing
104. And the Saboteur Was Sitting
105. A Bastard Wise Disciple Precedes a Commoner High Priest
106. What the Twelve Challahs on Shabbat Imply
107. Concerning the Two Angels
108. If You Leave Me One Day, I Will Leave You Two
109. Two Kinds of Meat
110. A Field that the Lord Has Blessed
111. Breath, Sound, and Speech
112. The Three Angels
113. The Eighteen Prayer
114. Prayer
115. Still, Vegetative, Animate, and Speaking
116. He Who Said, “Mitzvot Do Not Require Intention”
117. You Labored and Did Not Find, Do Not Believe
118. To Understand the Matter of the Knees Which Have Bowed to Baal
119. That Disciple Who Learned in Secret
120. The Reason for Not Eating Nuts on Rosh Hashanah
121. She Is Like Merchant-Ships
122. Understanding What Is Written in Shulchan Aruch
123. His Divorce and His Hand Come as One
124. A Shabbat of Beresheet and of the Six Thousand Years
125. He Who Delights the Shabbat
126. A Sage Comes to Town
127. The Difference between Core, Self, and Added Abundance
128. Dew Drips from that Galgalta to Zeir Anpin
129. The Shechina in the Dust
130. Tiberias of Our Sages, Good Is Your Sight
131. Who Comes to Purify
132. In the Sweat of Your Face Shall You Eat Bread – 1
133. The Lights of Shabbat
134. Wine that Causes Drunkenness
135. Clean and Righteous Do Not Kill
136. The Difference between the First Letters and the Last Letters
137. Zelophehad Was Gathering Wood
138. Concerning Fear that Sometimes Comes Upon a Person
139. The Difference between the Six Workdays and Shabbat
140. How I Love Your Torah
141. The Holiday of Passover
142. The Essence of the War
143. Only Good to Israel
144. There Is a Certain People
145. What Is He Will Give Wisdom Specifically to the Wise
146. A Commentary on The Zohar
147. The Work of Reception and Bestowal
148. The Scrutiny of Bitter and Sweet, True and False
149. Why We Need to Extend Hochma
150. Sing unto the Lord, for He Has Done Pride
151. And Israel Saw the Egyptians
152. For Bribe Blinds the Eyes of the Wise
153. A Thought Is a Result of the Desire
154. There Cannot Be an Empty Space in the World
155. The Cleanness of the Body
156. Lest He Took from the Tree of Life
157. I Am Asleep but My Heart Is Awake
158. The Reason for Not Eating at Each Other's Home on Passover
159. And It Came to Pass in the Course of Those Many Days
160. The Reason for Concealing the Matzot
161. Concerning the Giving of the Torah – 2
162. Concerning the Hazak We Say After Completing the Series
163. What the Authors of The Zohar Said
164. There Is a Difference between Corporeality and Spirituality
165. An Explanation to Elisha's Request of Elijah
166. Two Discernments in Attainment
167. The Reason Why It Is Called Shabbat Teshuva
168. The Customs of Israel
169. Concerning a Complete Righteous
170. You Shall Not Have in Your Pocket a Big Stone
171. In The Zohar, Emor – 1
172. The Matter of Preventions and Delays
173. Why We Say LeChaim
174. Concealment
175. And If the Way Be Too Far for You
176. When Drinking Brandy after the Havdala
177. Atonements
178. Three Partners in Man
179. Three Lines
180. In The Zohar, Emor – 2
181. Honor
182. Moses and Solomon
183. The Discernment of Messiah
184. The Difference between Faith and Intellect
185. The Uneducated, the Fear of Shabbat Is on Him
186. Make Your Shabbat a Weekday, and Do Not Need People
187. Choosing Labor
188. All the Work Is Only Where There Are Two Ways – 2
189. The Action Affects the Thought
190. Every Act Leaves an Imprint
191. The Time of Descent
192. The Lots
193. One Wall Serves Both
194. The Complete Seven
195. Rewarded - I Will Hasten It
196. A Grip for the External Ones
197. Book, Author, Story
198. Freedom
199. To Every Man of Israel
200. The Hizdakchut of the Masach
201. Spirituality and Corporeality
202. In the Sweat of Your Face Shall You Eat Bread – 2
203. Man's Pride Shall Bring Him Low
204. The Purpose of the Work – 2
205. Wisdom Cries Out in the Streets
206. Faith and Pleasure
207. Receiving in order to Bestow
208. Labor
209. Three Conditions in Prayer
210. A Sightly Flaw in You
211. As Though Standing before a King
212. Embrace of the Right, Embrace of the Left
213. Revealing the Deficiency
214. Known in the Gates
215. Concerning Faith
216. Right and Left
217. If I Am Not for Me, Who Is for Me?
218. The Torah and the Creator Are One
219. Devotion
220. Suffering
221. Multiple Authorities
222. The Part Given to the Sitra Achra to Separate It from the Kedusha
223. Clothing, Sack, Lie, Almond
224. Yesod de Nukva and Yesod de Dechura
225. Raising Oneself
226. The Written Torah and the Oral Torah – 2
227. The Reward for a Mitzva–a Mitzva
228. Fish before Meat
229. Haman Pockets
230. The Lord Is High and the Low Will See - 2
231. The Purity of the Vessels of Reception
232. Completing the Labor
233. Pardon, Forgiveness, and Atonement
234. He Who Ceases Words of Torah and Engages in Conversation
235. Looking in the Book Again
236. My Adversaries Curse Me All the Day
237. For Man Shall Not See Me and Live
238. Happy Is the Man Who Does Not Forget You and the Son of Man Who Exerts in You
239. The Difference between Mochin of Shavuot and that of Shabbat at Minchah
240. Seek Your Seekers when They Seek Your Face
241. Call Upon Him When He Is Near
242. What Is the Matter of Delighting the Poor on a Good Day, in the Work?
243. Examining the Shade on the Night of Hosha’ana Rabbah
244. All the Worlds
245. Prior to the Creation of the Newborn
246. An Explanation about Luck
247. A Thought Is Regarded as Nourishment
248. Let His Friend Begin
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An Article for Purim
 
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37. An Article for Purim

I heard in 1948

We must understand several precisions in the Megilla1:

1. It is written, “After these things, King Ahasuerus promoted Haman.” We must understand what is “After these things,” meaning after Mordecai had saved the king. It seems reasonable that the king should have promoted Mordecai. But what does it say? That he promoted Haman.

2. When Ester told the king, “for we are sold, I and my people,” the king asked, “Who is he and where is he?” It means that the king knew nothing of it, although it explicitly says that the king told Haman, “The silver is given to you, the people also, to do with them as it seems good to you.” Thus, we see that the king did know about the sale.

3. Our sages said about “according to every man’s wish”: “Raba said, ‘to do according to the will of Mordecai and Haman’” (Megilla 12). It is known that where it says only “king” it refers to the King of the world. Thus, how can it be that the Creator would act according to the will of a wicked one?

4. It is written, “Mordecai knew all that was done.” This implies that only Mordecai knew, since prior to that, it is written, “and the city of Shushan was perplexed.” Thus, the whole city of Shushan knew about it.

5. It is written, “for a writing that was written in the king’s name and sealed with the king’s ring may not be reversed.” Thus, how did he give the second letters afterward, which ultimately cancel the first letters?

6. What does it mean that our sages said, “On Purim, one must intoxicate until he cannot tell the cursed Haman from the blessed Mordecai”?

7. What does it mean that our sages said about the verse, “And the drinking was according to the law,” what is “according to the law?” Rabbi Hanan said in the name of Rabbi Meir, “according to the law of Torah.” What is the law of Torah? More eating than drinking.

To understand the above, we must first understand the matter of Haman and Mordecai. Our sages said about the verse, “according to every man’s wish,” meaning Haman and Mordecai. We should interpret that Mordecai’s wish is called “the view of Torah,” which is more eating than drinking, and Haman’s wish is the opposite, more drinking than eating.

We asked, “How can it be that he would make a meal according to the will of a wicked one”? The answer to this is written next to it: “none did compel.” It means that the drinking was not compulsory, and this is the meaning of “none did compel.”

It is as our sages said about the verse, “And Moses hid his face for he was afraid to look.” They said that in return for “And Moses hid his face,” he was rewarded with, “and the image of the Lord does he behold.” This means that precisely because he did not need that (meaning he could make a Masach [screen] over it), he was permitted to receive. This is the meaning of the verse, “I have laid help upon one who is mighty.” It means that the Creator gives help to one who is mighty and can walk in the ways of the Creator.

It is written, “And the drinking was according to the law.” What is “according to the law?” Because “none did compel.” It means that he did not need the drinking, but once they began to drink, they were taken after it, meaning they were tied to the drinking, they needed the drinking, or else they would not be able to go forward.

This is called “compel,” and this is considered that they canceled the method of Mordecai. This is also the meaning of what our sages said, that that generation was sentenced to perish because they enjoyed the meal of a wicked one.

In other words, had they received the drinking in the form of “none did compel,” they would not have canceled Mordecai’s wish, and this is the method of Israel. However, afterward, when they took the drinking in a form of “did compel,” it follows that they themselves sentenced the law of Torah to perish, which is the quality of Israel.

This is the meaning of more eating than drinking. Drinking refers to disclosing Hochma [wisdom], called “knowing.” Eating, on the other hand, is called Ohr de Hassadim [light of mercy], which is faith.

This is the meaning of Bigtan and Teresh, who sought to lay hands on the king of the world. “And the thing became known to Mordecai… … inquisition was made of the matter, and it was found to be so.” The matter of seeking was not at once, and Mordecai did not obtain it easily, but after much work was the matter of this flaw revealed to him. Once it had become evident to him, “they were both hanged.” That is, after the sensation of the blemish in it, they were hanged, meaning they removed these actions and desires from the world.

“After these things,” meaning after all the labor and the exertions Mordecai had made by the scrutiny that he had made, the king wanted to reward him for his effort of working only Lishma [for Her sake] and not for himself. Since there is a rule that the lower one cannot receive anything without a need, as there is no light without a Kli [vessel], and a Kli is called a “need,” since he does not need anything for himself, how can he be given anything?

Had the king asked Mordecai what he should give him for his labor, since Mordecai is righteous, whose work is only to bestow without any need to ascend in degrees, and he is content with little, while the king wished to give the light of wisdom, which extends from the left line, and Mordecai’s work was only from the right line.

What did the king do? He promoted Haman, meaning he made the left line important. This is the meaning of “and set his seat above all the ministers.” In addition, he gave him the control, meaning that all the king’s slaves kneeled and bowed before Haman, “for the king had so commanded,” that he would receive control, and everyone accepted him.

The matter of kneeling is the acceptance of the ruling since they liked Haman’s way in the work more than Mordecai’s way. All the Jews in Shushan accepted Haman’s control until it was hard for them to understand Mordecai’s view. After all, everyone understands that the work of walking in the left line, called knowing, is easier than walking in the ways of the Creator.

It is written that they asked, “Why are you transgressing against the king’s commandment?” Since they saw that Mordecai persisted with his opinion of walking in the way of faith, they became perplexed and did not know who was right.

They went and asked Haman who was right, as it is written, “They told Haman to see whether Mordecai’s words would stand, for he had told them that he was a Jew.” It means that the way of the Jew is more eating than drinking, meaning faith is the rudiment, and this is the whole basis of Judaism.

This caused Haman a great disturbance; why would Mordecai not agree with his view? Hence, when everyone saw Mordecai’s way, who argued that he alone was taking the path of Judaism, and those who take another path are regarded as doing idol worship, as it is written, “Yet all this is worthless to me each time I see Mordecai the Jew sitting at the king’s gate,” since Mordecai claims that only through him is the gate to the king, and not that of Haman.

Now we can understand why it is written, “Mordecai knew,” meaning that it is specifically Mordecai who knew. But it is written, “but the city of Shushan was perplexed,” meaning that everyone knew.

We should interpret that the city of Shushan was perplexed and did not know who was right, but Mordecai knew that if there would be Haman’s control, that would mean the annihilation of the people of Israel, meaning that he would obliterate the whole of Israel from the world, meaning the people of Israel’s way of Judaism, whose basis of the work is faith above reason, called “covered Mercy,” to go with the Creator with eyes shut, and to always say about oneself, “They have eyes but they see not,” since Haman’s whole grip is on the left line, called knowing, the opposite of faith.

This is the meaning of the lots that Haman cast, as it was on Yom Kippurim [Day of Atonement], as it is written, “one lot for the Lord, and one lot for Azazel.” The lot for the Lord means a discernment of “right,” which is Hassadim [mercy], called “eating,” which is faith. The lot for Azazel is the left line, which is in fact considered “good for nothing,” and all the Sitra Achra [other side] stems from here.

Hence, a blockage on the lights extends from the left line, as only the left line freezes the lights. This is the meaning of “cast pur, that is, the lot,” meaning he interprets what he cast. He says “pur,” which means Pi Ohr (pronounced Pi Ohr [a mouth of light]).

All the lights were blocked through the lot for Azazel, and you find that he cast all the lights down. Haman thought that “the righteous shall prepare and the wicked shall wear.”

In other words, Haman thought that concerning all the efforts and the exertions that Mordecai had made, along with all who accompanied him, the reward that they deserve, Haman thought that he would take that reward. That is, Haman thought that he would take the lights that appear through the corrections of Mordecai into his own authority. All this was because he saw that the king had given him the power to extend light of wisdom below.

Hence, when he came to the king saying “to destroy the Jews,” meaning revoke Israel’s dominion, which is faith and mercy, and make knowledge disclosed in the world, the king had replied to him, “The silver is given to you, the people also, to do with them as it seems good to you,” meaning as Haman sees fit, according to his dominion, which is left and knowing.

The whole difference between the first and second letters is in the word Jews. In “The written synopsis” (the copy refers to the content that came out from the king. Afterward, the written synopsis is interpreted, explaining the intention of the synopsis) it was said, “to be given out for a decree in every state, revealed to all peoples, that they should be ready for this day.” It does not say for whom they should be ready, but Haman interpreted the synopsis, as it is written, “and he wrote all that Haman commanded.”

The word Jews is written in the second letters, as it is written, “The written synopsis, to be given out for a decree in every state, revealed to all the peoples, and that the Jews should be ready for this day to avenge themselves on their enemies.”

Hence, when Haman came to the king, the king told him, “The silver that had been pre-prepared is given to you,” meaning you need not do anything more since “the people also [are given to you], to do with them as it seems good to you.”

In other words, the people already want to do as seems good to you, meaning the people want to receive your control. Yet, the king did not tell him to revoke the control of Mordecai and the Jews. Instead, it had been preordained that now, at this time, there would be a disclosure of Hochma, which is as “being favored by you.”

The written synopsis was “to be given out for a decree in every state, revealed to all peoples.” It means that the decree was that it will be published that the matter of the disclosure of Hochma (is) for all the nations.

However, it did not say that the quality of Mordecai and the Jews would be revoked, which is faith. Instead, the intention was that there would be disclosure of Hochma [wisdom], but they would still choose Hassadim [mercy].

Haman said that since now is the time of disclosure of Hochma, the disclosure of Hochma is certainly given so as to use the Hochma, as who does something that is not to be used? If it is not used, it follows that the operation was in vain. Hence, it must be the will of the Creator, and the Creator had made that disclosure so as to use the Hochma.

Mordecai’s argument was that the disclosure is only to show that what they take for themselves, to walk in the right line, which is covered Hassadim, is not because there is no choice, and this is why they take this path. This seems like coercion, meaning that they have no other choice since presently there is no revealed Hochma. Instead, now that there is revealed Hochma, there is room for choosing of their own free will. In other words, they choose a path of Hassadim more than the left, which is the disclosure of Hochma.

This means that the disclosure was only so they could reveal the importance of Hassadim, that it was more important to them than Hochma. It is as our sages said, “thus far coercively, henceforth willingly.” And this is the meaning of “the Jews observed and took upon them.” It follows that the disclosure of Hochma came now only so they would be able to receive the way of the Jew willingly.

And this was the dispute between Mordecai and Haman. Mordecai’s argument was that what we now see, that the Creator reveals the authority of Hochma is not so they would receive the Hochma, but in order to improve the Hassadim, meaning that now they will be able to show that their reception of the Hassadim is voluntary. That is, they have room to receive Hochma, since now is the time of the control of the left, which shines Hochma, yet they choose Hassadim. It follows that now they show—by receiving the Hassadim—that the right rules over the left.

Thus, the Jewish law is the important one, and Haman claimed the opposite, that the Creator’s current disclosure of the left line, which is Hochma, is in order to use the Hochma. Otherwise, it would mean that the Creator did something needlessly, meaning that He did something and there is no one to enjoy it. Hence, we should not regard what Mordecai says, but everyone should listen to him and use the disclosure of Hochma that now appeared.

It follows that the second letters did not revoke the first. Rather, they presented an explanation and interpretation to the first written synopsis, that the matter of the publication to all the peoples, the matter of the disclosure of Hochma that now shines, is for the Jews. In other words, it is so that the Jews would be able to choose Hassadim of their own will, and not because there is no other path to choose.

This is why it is written in the second letters, “and that the Jews should be ready for this day to avenge themselves on their enemies.” It means that the control that Hochma now has is in order to show that they prefer Hassadim to Hochma. This is called “to avenge themselves on their enemies.” This is because their enemies want specifically Hochma, whereas the Jews reject the Hochma.

Now we can understand what we asked about the question of the king, “Who is he, and where is he, who dared to do so?” And why did He ask? After all, the king himself had told Haman, “The silver is given to you, the people also, to do with them as it seems good to you.”

(It is as we have said that the meaning is that the matter of disclosing Hochma is with the intention that the people will do as seems good to you, meaning that there would be room for choice. This is called “the people also, to do with them as it seems good to you.” However, if there is no disclosure of Hochma, there is no room for choice, but the Hassadim that they take, it seems that it is because they have no choice.)

It means that all this came about because the king gave the order that now would be the time of disclosing Hochma. The intention was that the left would serve the right. By that it would become apparent that the right is more important than the left, and this is why they choose Hassadim.

This is the meaning of Megillat Ester [the scroll of Ester]. There seems to be a contradiction in terms here, since Megillah [scroll] means that it is Galui [revealed] to all, while Ester means that there is Hastara [concealment]. However, we should interpret that the whole disclosure is in order to give room to choose concealment.

Now we can understand what our sages said, “On Purim, one must intoxicate until one cannot tell between the cursed Haman and the blessed Mordecai.” The matter of Mordecai and Ester was prior to building of the Second Temple, and the building of the Temple signifies the extension of Hochma, and Malchut is called “The Temple.” This is the meaning of Mordecai sending Ester to go to the king and ask for her people, and she replied, “all the king’s servants,” etc., “who is not called, there is one law for him, that he be put to death,” etc., “and I have not been called to come in unto the king these thirty days.”

It means that it is forbidden to extend the quality of GAR de Hochma below, and one who does extend GAR (which are three Sefirot, each comprising ten, which are thirty) is sentenced to death, because the left line causes separation from the life of lives.

“Except he to whom the king shall hold out the golden scepter, that he may live.” Gold means Hochma and GAR, meaning that only by the awakening of the upper one can one remain alive, meaning in Dvekut [adhesion], called life, but not by the awakening of the lower one.

Although Ester is Malchut, who needs Hochma, it is only by the awakening of the upper one. However, if she extends Hochma she loses her own quality entirely. In that regard, Mordecai replied to her, “(if) then relief and deliverance will arise to the Jews from another place,” meaning by completely revoking the left line, and the Jews will have only the right line, which is Hassadim, then “you and your father’s house will perish.”

In the state of “Father founded the daughter,” she must have Hochma within her. But it must be more eating than drinking. However, if the Jews have no counsel, they will have to revoke the left line, and thus her whole quality would be canceled. It is about that that she said, “if I perish, I perish.”

In other words, if I go, I am lost, because I might come to separation, as when the lower one awakens, it induces separation from the Life of Lives. And if I do not go “then relief and deliverance will arise to the Jews from another place,” meaning in another way. They would completely revoke the left line, as Mordecai had told her. This is why she took the path of Mordecai by inviting Haman to a feast, meaning that she extended the left line as Mordecai had told her.

Afterward, she included the left in the right and thus there could be disclosure of lights below, and also to remain in a state of Dvekut. This is the meaning of Megillat Esther, meaning although there is disclosure of the light of Hochma, she still takes the concealment that is there (because Ester is Hester [“concealment,” same as Hastara]).

In the matter of him not knowing, it is explained in The Study of the Ten Sefirot (Part 15, Ohr Pnimi, Item 217) that although lights of Hochma illuminated, it is impossible to receive without the light of Hassadim, as this induces separation. However, a miracle was made where by fasting and crying they extended the light of Hassadim, and then they could receive the light of Hochma.

However, there is no such thing before the end of correction. But since this discernment is from the discernment of the end of correction, at which time it will already be corrected, as it is written in The Zohar: “SAM is destined to be a holy angel.” It follows, that then there will be no difference between Haman and Mordecai, for Haman, too, will be corrected. This is the meaning of “on Purim, one must intoxicate until one cannot tell the cursed Haman from the blessed Mordecai.”

It should also be added with regard to the words that they were hanged, that it is an indication to the hanging on the tree, meaning they understood that it is the same sin as the sin of the tree of knowledge, as there, too, the blemish was in the GAR.

Regarding “sat in the king’s gate,” it can be added that this implies that he was sitting and not standing, since sitting is called VAK, and standing is called GAR.


  1. Megillat Ester (Scroll of Ester), referring to The Book of Esther