By Joseph Shattan on 3.12.09 @ 6:06AM
This might correct an Egyptian cleric's misunderstanding of the
Jewish holiday observed yesterday and what role Starbucks might
have played in it.
On January 25, Egyptian cleric Safwat Higazi rocked viewers of
Al-Nas TV with a mind-boggling revelation. Here,
courtesy of MEMRI (Middle East Media Research Institute), are
some highlights from his broadcast:
Today, I would like to talk to you about the Starbucks coffee
shop. Starbucks is to be found in Mecca, in Al-Madina…as well
as in Cairo. Starbucks is to be found everywhere, with this
logo.
Has any of you ever wondered who this woman with a crown on her
head is? Why should we boycott Starbucks? I will tell you, so
you will know why you should boycott this company, and what
this logo stands for.
The girl in the Starbucks logo is Queen Esther. Do you know who
Queen Esther was and what the crown on her head means? This is
the crown of the Persian kingdom. This queen is the queen of
the Jews. She is mentioned in the Torah, in the Book of Esther.
The girl you see is Esther, the queen of the Jews in Persia.
King Xerxes gave an order that the seven most beautiful girls
in the kingdom be brought to him. So they held contests and
auditions, and selected the seven most beautiful virgins, one
of whom was the Jewish Esther, whose uncle, Mordecai -- or
actually, it was her cousin's brother -- was a villain.
It was Mordecai who hatched this plot. Esther was one of the
seven girls brought before King Xerxes in the palace. When
Esther, who was very beautiful, was shown to King Xerxes, she
captured his heart, and he chose her to be his queen. He placed
a crown on her head, and the crown you see here [Higazi
indicates the Starbucks logo] is the crown of the kingdom
of Xerxes, and this is Esther, who became Queen of Persia,
instead of Queen Vashti…
We want Starbucks to be shut down throughout the Arab and
Islamic world…It is inconceivable that in Mecca and Medina
there will be a picture of Queen Esther.
Safwat Higazi was certainly on to something in his Starbucks
expose, but the choleric cleric missed the true significance of
his own discovery. So here, for the first time in the history of
the world, is the real story of Esther, Mordecai and the Jewish
holiday of Purim:
The Old Testament's Book of Esther describes events that took
place in the court of Xerxes I, who ruled Persia from 486 -- 465
BC -- in other words, about 2,500 years ago. Xerxes favored an
official named Haman, and "advanced him and seated him higher
than any of his fellow-officials." (Esther 3:2) Haman was a
physicist and administrator of genius, and his mission was to
oversee Xerxes' nuclear weapons program. But Haman ran afoul of
Persia's powerful Israel Lobby, which defamed him with its usual
combination of lies and half-truths. Deeply offended, Haman
implored Xerxes to abolish the Israel Lobby. King Xerxes agreed,
and issued a Royal Edict calling for the destruction of all the
Zionists in his kingdom -- and not, as the Book of
Esther wrongly maintains, of all the Jews.
With the Israel Lobby on the verge of extinction, Mordecai -- the
Mossad's station chief in Sussa, the administrative capital of
the Persian empire -- swung into action. He urgently cabled -- or
rather cameled, since cables didn't exist back then -- Mossad
Headquarters in Tel Aviv to send him their most seductive agent,
and shortly thereafter, Ms. Esther Feigenbaum, ("the Blond
Bombshell of Balfour Street") appeared on his doorstep. Mordecai
claimed that, "He was foster father to Hadassah -- that is,
Esther -- his uncle's daughter" (Esther 2:7), but this was merely
a cover story. With the help of a few well-placed bribes,
Mordecai infiltrated Esther into Xerxes' court, where she quickly
caught Xerxes' eye (she really was a stunner!) and became his
wife.
With his agent in place, Mordecai began to weave the web that
would bring about Haman's downfall. He ordered Esther to invite
Xerxes and Haman to a party -- what could be more innocent? --
and Esther complied. "'If it please Your Majesty [Esther told
Xerxes] let Your Majesty and Haman come today to the feast that I
have prepared for him.' The King commanded 'Tell Haman to hurry
and do Esther's bidding.' So the King and Haman came to the feast
that Esther prepared." (Esther 5:4 -- 5.5)
At the "wine feast" (as the Bible calls it) Esther pretended to
be head-over-heels in love with Xerxes, but the real target of
her attentions was Haman. Through winks, nods and related
feminine wiles, Esther led the brilliant but sexually-naïve
Persian to believe that she had the hots for him -- an impression
only re-enforced at the close of the feast, when she asked King
Xerxes to come again tomorrow, and to bring the charming Mr.
Haman along with him.
Now Esther sprung the trap Mordecai had so well prepared. At the
close of this second feast, while Xerxes staggered off half-drunk
to his Royal Chamber, Esther had her faithful eunuch, Harbonah,
escort Haman into her quarters via a secret passage. When Haman
and Esther met, they promptly began making up for lost time.
Little did hapless Haman suspect that Harbonah, whose real name
was Goldberg ("Har" is Hebrew for mountain -- or "Berg" in German
-- and "Bonah," of course," means "Precious Yellow Metal" in
ancient Na'hautl) was Mordecai's Deputy. While Haman and Esther
went at it, Harbonah informed Xerxes that there was something
strange happening in the Queen's chambers. Together, Xerxes and
Harbonah went off to investigate, and as the Book of Esther
records:
When the king returned from the palace garden to the banquet
room, Haman was lying prostrate on the couch on which Esther
reclined. "Does he mean," cried the king, "to ravish the queen
in my own palace?" No sooner did these words leave the king's
lips than Haman's face blanched. Then Harbonah, one of the
eunuchs in attendance on the king, said, "What is more, a stake
is standing at Haman's house, fifty cubits high, which Haman
made for Mordecai…" "Impale him on it!" the king ordered. So
they impaled Haman on the stake which he had put up for
Mordecai, and the king's fury abated. (Esther 7:8 -- 7:10)
In short, Haman fell victim to one of the oldest tricks in the
book (and I'm not referring to the Good Book) and with his
downfall, Persia's nuclear program was effectively side-lined --
a miraculous act of deliverance commemorated to this day in the
Jewish festival of Purim.
It's important to bear in mind, however, that Iran's nuclear
program was not destroyed, but merely delayed for a millennium or
two. Today, Iranians have re-started Haman's program, and other
states in the region are also planning to go nuclear. That's why
the diabolically clever Mossad placed Queen Esther's picture on
Starbucks coffee-houses throughout the Middle East. The threat to
any latte-loving Iranian or Arab nuclear researcher is
all-too-obvious: "Keep this up, sucker, and what happened to
Haman will happen to you."
Any questions?