Making A Purim Custom Safe Continued from Page L-1 as leaders for a day and marched through the streets with great fanfare. The actual leaders — sages or rulers — were mocked in parodies, and drinking and disorder overturned normal values. Some of this survives in Purim." Today we find ourselves immersed in a society which is filled with chaos caused by substance abuse. The use of alcohol for ritual observance continues to sanctify Jewish life and drinking wine at kiddush and enjoying the taste of wine and the scent of spices at Havdalah are a beautiful part of our heritage. If we are truly to be happy and not worry, let's look at the custom of drinking to excess at Purim and see if we can reconstruct a way to make this custom safe, without compromising our happiness. We knew of no parallel to the precept of our ancient sages that on Purim we should drink until we no longer can distinguish between It's A Start Prior to 1989, there was virtually no opportunity for Jews who were suffering from substance abuse to find an Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) group or Narcotics Anonymous (N.A.) group that met in a Jewish facility or to learn about this problem in a comforting Jewish atmosphere. Now we have: • Both A.A. and Alanon (For spouses, children and parents of Alcoholics) meet at Temple Israel (Thursdays, 8:00 p.m.) • A.A. group meets at the J.P.M. Oak Park Jewish Community Center (Tuesday evenings at 8:00 p.m.) • The J.A.C.S. group (Jewish Alcoholics Chemically Dependent Persons and Significant Others Foundation, Inc.) is underway and has meetings for recovering Jewish addicts. Mordecai" is to eliminate the gray area between the bad and good. In order to fulfill the obligation one needs to forget all the gradations between doing good and bad since our lives are so filled with ambiguities. What we do can be considered right and wrong determined by the perception of the one who is judging. Becoming intoxicated makes life simple; there is no middle ground. "cursed is Haman" and "blessed is Mordecai." Why are we supposed to become so inebriated we can't tell the difference between the names of Haman and Mordecai? The sages suggest that during the period of Esther and Mordecai, the Jewish people derived pleasure from Ahashverosh's feast in which he desecrated sacred vessels in the Temple and behaved evilly after drinking too much wine at his party. God's mercy prevented their destruction and thus we say after the reading of the Megillah, "You were our hope in every generation." Thus we realize that the redemption of the Jewish people has not been brought about by their merit but because of Divine mercy. Therefore, we drink to excess to reaffirm that we must rely on God since we sometimes do not know the difference between right and wrong, good and evil. Our own teshuvah (repentance) is reliant upon a merciful God who recognizes our inability to distinguish between good and evil. The rabbis teach that each one of us has a yetzer ha tov (a good inclination) and a yetzer hara (an evil inclination) and our lives are filled with tension as we try to respond to these two urges. The motivation to get so drunk as to not determine between "cursed is Haman" and "blessed is order to raise ourselves, we celebrate the failure of others. Jewish tradition provides a reference point as we face the danger of drinking excessively and still wish to feel the joy of Purim. I wish to suggest several, which if we do with all our hearts can help us feel the joy of triumph of good over evil without having to drink. First of all, when we practice shalach manot, the giving of food gifts to friends and family, we enjoy the closeness of dear ones. Bake hamantashen and prepare food packages, not only for your immediate family and close friends, but widen your gift giving to the elderly, the developmentally disabled, and those who are less fortunate. Another interpretation of this custom comes from "God's desire that we praise the just. Sometimes when the just don't deserve to be praised, we seek our praise through the degradation of the wicked. If we are "not evil" we feel as if we deserve praise for not being as bad as someone else. The joy which emerges from this point of view is limited. However, on Purim, the downfall of Haman is equal to the joy we feel in praising Mordecai since Haman is a descendant of Amalek of whom it is said, "When the wicked perish — there is song." Thus we are faced with three issues for which we need to provide alternative customs to drinking excessively: 1) each of us has a good and bad inclination (i.e., a piece of Haman and Mordecai); 2) sometimes we can't tell the difference between good and bad because issues are not black or white, but filled with gray; 3) in Secondly, practice the mitzvah of matanot l'evyonim — giving gifts to the poor. Collect food and bring it to Yad Ezra, the new Jewish community Food Bank and help the poor who are in need. Finally, prepare purimspiels (parodies) that mock the evils of our day (male chauvinism, anti-Semitism), or celebrate a festival of Jewish folk arts through Jewish humor or storytelling and enjoy the joyful heritage of our people, (P. 125 — Arthur Waskow, Seasons of Our Joy.) Most importantly, it's Adar — so BE HAPPY, BUT BE SAFE, and do it in a non-alcoholic way. PURIM POEM ANSWERS It Purim, Poem, With, k 111Gsage/ PUZZLE By TUDy S. WEBL More Needed DON ) S A 0 A o Co OL *--t . 6 <-, FOOL L 1 KE tOX g tA“-- 4-t K I NG x p --*/ LI KE (QUEEN EST fGXE Y Ed,••\gA EE-> TO DRI *AO-4X ASKS w A 0S-4* odx6 (1) 4- 0 G I w E- V E ti 8 A tit) \Qs< t —><—*. • r • A 0 RS Y ( i) - • • AL 01-10L_ T OTA<- \ (1) VWX 0 • II - NK I A 13CDEF GHITKLMNOP 0 0.-÷* *•*- FR IEND 0 Ecpti MoR 1 A*8 op AND ER you A N 0 --÷ E- AHR.su EROS \06 • I IF BE o e • 8E oE r •• - El * *-- --> • There remains much to be done both by the organized Jewish community and by all of us as individuals. Consider the following: • The organized Jewish community does not have available an out-patient treatment facility which can provide counseling on a sliding payment program or free, if necessary. • There is no residential (live-in) treatment program that addresses Jewish needs. • There are no half-way house facilities catering to Jews, nor any similar houses that might be available to the Juvenile Court in placing problem cases. • There is no co-ordinated effort among our educators and Rabbis to provide a structure for our education and that of our children as relates to addiction. — Stephen C. Cooper % l e - Z -61' *DECIPHER THIS CODE TO FIND THE MESSAGE THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS L 7 -