Things are Not Always as They Seem
Masks have a long history in the world's culture, and they play an
important role in the Purim story.
By Dr. Pnina Galpaz Feller
The following article offers a cross-cultural, historical
survey of the use of masks in different societies, ending with the motif of
masking in the Bible and the Purim story. Reprinted with permission from the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies.
Masks are a kind of veil that covers the face and hide one's
identity while at the same time highlighting one's character. The Italian word maschera,
the English word mask and the French word masque are all derived
from the word moska that originated in Lombardy and meant dead person,
because in many cultures masks were associated with the world of the dead.
The earliest depiction of a mask was found in a cave
painting in the Ariège region of France. The drawing apparently shows a shaman
wrapped in animal skins and wearing a horned mask. The wearer of the mask is a
male shaman, a priest who mediated between the world of man and the world of
the spirits.
The mask in the image of an animal seems to indicate that
people then believed that animals have magical powers and they somehow roll
over into masks that depict them. The mask wearer believed that the animal's
magical powers passed over to him. Animal masks date back to very ancient
times. In those days people believed that masks could be used to communicate
with the supernatural.
Masks & Magic
Masks were often worn during magical ritual ceremonies in
the ancient world and are still commonly used in Papua New Guinea and among
African tribes. The source of this practice is the custom of trying to mislead
evil spirits and demons. The masks were intended to instill fear and were a
means of frightening these spirits. African, pre-Colombian, Celtic, and other
peoples are known to have used such masks, which were the domain of men and
later evolved into war masks worn in battle against various tribes and other
groups in addition to some other uses among them, fighting impurity and
illness, promoting fertility, and assisting hunters.
During fertility rites, women were actively involved playing
roles that symbolized birth, growth, and the like. Other very ancient
masks--some as old as 9,000 years--made of limestone with two eyeholes and a
mouth filled with teeth have been discovered in Israel. These Neolithic masks
do not depict specific human figures, and it is difficult to ascertain what use
they had or even whether they were intended for women or just men.
One use of masks was to perpetuate the image of the
deceased. Today, we use photographs to perpetuate our image. In ancient times,
memorial masks were used and they indicate a desire on the part of an
individual, family, or community to preserve his image and endow him with a
form of eternal life.
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In ancient Egypt, the use of masks was part of the belief in
an afterlife and the ritual of the dead. Masks were placed on the face of
mummified bodies in order to preserve its appearance. Masks found in Egypt date
back as early as the Fourth Dynasty and they depict both male and female
images. The masks are frozen images and primarily highlight the eyes and lips
and have hair affixed to the head. The quality of the mask was contingent on
the deceased's status…
Masks were very commonly used in religious rites in Greece,
and from this practice theatrical masks evolved, starting with the feasts
celebrating the god of wine, Dionysus, in which an actor played several roles
by switching masks between each role. Women were active and important
participants in these ecstatic religious rites and theatrical events,
particularly when they went out to the forests in search of the god in the
wilds of nature. As Greek theater further developed, women were barred from dressing
up, and men played the roles of women.
At the same time that the formal theater was developing, a
street theater was also developing where women were prohibited from wearing
costumes. During the Middle Ages, the practice of using masks on theater stages
disappeared, and then a form of mass celebration began with the participation
of masked individuals. This practice later spread all over Europe and women
took part and wore masks with male features.
Masks & the Carnival
These masks mark the beginning of the carnival whose ancient
roots date as far back as ancient Egypt. These processions initially
highlighted the change of seasons, until the festivities become something out
of the ordinary routine, marked by chaos and upending of the usual order with
poor people dressed masqueraded as rich people, rich people masqueraded as
laborers, and the like. A sober outlook replaced the drunkenness that had been
common, and it became a time were overturning norms was sanctioned.
At the end of the 16th century, a new kind of street theater
surfaced in Italy, a kind of standup comedy known as Comedia dell'arte.
This repertoire produced masked characters that have endured to this day. Women
played important roles in these comedies, wearing for example, the mask of
Colombina, the character of the merry servant maid.
Masks were also a common feature of Asian theater. They were
already present in Japanese and Korean theater as early as the eighth century.
In the 14th century, the very aristocratic Noh theater began and it permitted
women to wear costumes and act. Men played female roles, as they had in Greek
or Shakespearean theater.
In contrast, women were the founders of Kabuki theater, but
very quickly the Shogun government barred women from performing. Kabuki actors
do not wear masks. Their faces wear heavy makeup that is like a mask. A similar
practice was common in the south Indian theater form known as Kathakali, where
women were also barred from performing…
The Masquerade Motif in the Bible
The masquerade motif appears in the Bible on two different
levels: an attempt to fool people and an attempt to fool God. Although the
Bible was written by men, it does not indicate any differences between male and
female masks, as is the case in other cultures.
Twice women are described as masquerading, as in the wife of
Jerobam who masquerades before the prophet in a failed effort, because a person
looks at the outward appearance and God looks at what is in the heart. When
Tamar masquerades and changes her identity in order to fool Judah, she is
successful.
In addition to references in Scriptural texts, the authors
of the Mishnah, Tosefta, Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmuds, and the Midrashim
discussed changes of clothing and facial coverings at great length. Women are a
major component of these discussions as they masqueraded for different reasons
relating to marital relations, an attempt to seduce a man, etc.
The Purim Masquerade
Masquerading on the festival of Purim has become a norm in
the Jewish community.
The Book of Esther, which describes the origin of the
festival, is written in a roundabout style that is a comedy of errors involving
one masquerade after another and was therefore performed over the generations
until it became one of the symbols of the festival. The Book of Esther features
disguises and masquerades portrayed by changes in clothing and statuses. It has
three pairs of protagonists, Vashti and Xerxes, Zeresh and Haman, and Mordecai
and Esther.
A reading of the book reveals that all the characters depict
men and women at the same time. Xerxes masquerades as a tough ruler but turns
out to be ruled by his ministers. Haman, who seeks power and respect, is
revealed in all his misery, and his disgrace is apparent to all when he is
hanged in public. Mordecai sits wearing a sack and ashes outside the palace
gate and is presented with royal garments and brought into the palace.
The Book of Esther is named after the heroine, who hides her
identity until she puts on "the garments of royalty."
These garments actually help her to reveal the truth and
drop her obedience and submission. She is transformed from a passive and
sheltered girl into an active woman with a royal status. Vashti, who is
depicted as a successful queen, throws a banquet for women and is assertive and
experienced in the ways of the world, actually is revealed in her failure--she
starts out as someone with status and is sent away with none left. Zeresh, the
wife of Haman, who does not think too highly of her, turns out to be quite wise
behind her mask, in comparison to Haman. who is obtuse and stupid.
The Book of Esther, whose characters are all masked,
promoted the custom of wearing different facial masks.
This practice is documented in 15th-century German sources,
which discuss women wearing men's clothing, drunkenness, and other issues.
Today it is commonly thought that the Italian carnival influenced the custom of
dressing up on Purim, as indicated by illustrated miniatures of the Book of
Esther and other Jewish manuscripts, although it should be noted that in Muslim
countries the practice of masquerading on Purim was unknown.
The matter of women masquerading and the prohibition against
them appearing wearing masks is today a subject whose economic, social, halakhic
[Jewish law], and feminist aspects are being extensively researched.
Dr. Pnina Galpaz Feller, teaches Bible and Ancient
Studies at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies. She
is the author of Exodus: Reality or Illusion, and most recently, Women
Be Upon Thee, Samson.