Adar: The Month Everything Flips
Adar: The Month Everything Flips

Shalom from Yoel and Orly, founders
of Ulpan-Or, the International Center
for Hebrew and Israeli Culture Studies.
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This past Wednesday, we welcomed the month of Adar (אֲדָר — Adar)—a month unlike any other on the Jewish calendar. With its arrival, something subtle but powerful shifts in the spiritual atmosphere.
Our sages teach: “When Adar enters, we increase joy” (Mishenichnas Adar marbim b’simchah).
Why? Because embedded within Adar is the festival of Purim (פּוּרִים — Purim), the day when Jewish history experienced one of its most dramatic reversals—when a decree of destruction was transformed into deliverance, when fear turned into celebration, and when concealment gave way to revelation.

Adar is not merely the month in which Purim happens. It is the month that carries within it the spiritual energy of transformation—the power to turn things around.
Every year, when we arrive at the same dates on the Jewish calendar, we’re invited to do more than “remember.” We’re meant to upgrade our understanding—to return to familiar ideas and uncover new depth.
That’s especially true at the start of Adar (אֲדָר — Adar), the month that Judaism associates with a surprising spiritual law:
This is the secret hinted at in the Megillah itself: it keeps emphasizing not only the day of Purim, but the month—as if Adar contains a spiritual “setting” in creation.

The verse that names the secret
At the end of the story, the Megillah says:
Notice what “reversal” means here. It is not only that the decree was canceled.
Rather:
The same planned day of Jewish destruction became a day of Jewish victory. The same gallows prepared for Mordechai became the instrument of Haman’s downfall.
That’s not just “escape.” That’s a boomerang. The plot turns into its opposite.
Haman didn’t only choose a date—he chose a month
Earlier, when Haman is plotting, the Megillah again stresses the month:
Haman is not only gambling on a calendar day. He’s betting on an atmosphere. He believes there is a spiritual vulnerability in this season.
And in a way, he’s right—Adar is spiritually intense. But he misunderstands the intensity.
The deep root: a world that can turn back to its original language
The transcript you shared makes a bold claim: the “v’nahafoch hu” of Purim is a micro-story of a much larger macro-story—the arc of human history.
To see that, we go back to an early turning point: the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11).
At first glance, unity sounds beautiful. But the story reveals something frightening:
When human beings unite around ego—“Let us make a name for ourselves”—unity becomes a tool for rebellion, domination, and spiritual amnesia. So God “reverses” their project by disrupting their language and scattering them.

Here is the shock: the prophets describe a time when that confusion itself will be reversed.
Purim, then, is not a random rescue. It is a preview of a cosmic pattern:
The force that looks like it’s winning is quietly building the structure of its own collapse.
“Scattered and divided”: Haman’s diagnosis, Esther’s response
Haman’s most dangerous sentence is not his hatred. It is his diagnosis:
“One people”—but not living as one. Scattered and divided.
And Esther’s response is brilliant, because it is the precise reversal:
And then the story flips.
This becomes more than history—it becomes a yearly spiritual instruction:
When life feels “scattered,” the path to reversal begins with re-collecting: people, purpose, prayer, community, covenant.
The laughter of redemption: Adar as a taste of the future
Psalm 126 describes the emotional shape of ultimate reversal:
In Jewish tradition, we don’t treat laughter as cheap entertainment. Full laughter belongs to a world finally aligned—when what was crooked becomes straight.
That’s why we say:
Adar joy is not denial. It is prophetic practice—training the heart to believe that reversal is possible.
Purim’s four mitzvot: building unity in action
Purim is not only a story we read. It is a day we do.
- Megillah (מִקְרָא מְגִלָּה — mikra megillah) — reading the story twice (night and day)
- Seudah (סְעוּדָה — seudah) — a festive meal
- Mishloach Manot (מִשְׁלוֹחַ מָנוֹת — mishloach manot) — gifts of food to friends
- Matanot La’Evyonim (מַתָּנוֹת לָאֶבְיוֹנִים — matanot la’evyonim) — gifts to the poor

Look at the pattern: Purim doesn’t celebrate reversal by private gratitude. It forces us into relationship.
Friends become closer. The vulnerable are included. Joy becomes communal, not elitist.
That is Esther’s k’nos—translated into a yearly life-system.
A Ramchal lens: when evil becomes the instrument of its own defeat
The transcript brings a powerful idea from Ramchal (Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto) in Da’at Tevunot: history moves toward a revelation where even evil, in the end, will testify to God’s unity—because it will be overturned and repurposed.
Not that evil “becomes good,” but that it becomes the stage on which good is revealed more clearly.
That is “v’nahafoch hu” as a spiritual law:
The darker the confusion, the more dramatic the clarity when truth emerges.
Adar trains us to live with that faith—without becoming naïve, and without becoming cynical.
Contemporary thinkers: “reversal” in modern language
If you translate Adar’s message into contemporary terms, you’ll recognize it in a few big ideas:
Viktor Frankl (Man’s Search for Meaning): the power to transform suffering into purpose—turning the inner story from victimhood to mission.
Nassim Nicholas Taleb (Antifragile): some systems don’t merely survive shocks—they grow stronger because of them. That’s “v’nahafoch hu” in systems-thinking.
Adam Grant (Think Again): growth begins when we can reframe, rethink, and reverse the conclusions we were sure about.
And in the Jewish key, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks often returned to this theme: Jewish hope is not optimism (“things will work out”), but courage (“we will help make them better”), rooted in covenant.
A Chassidic story: the “hidden stitch”
A tailor once came to a Rebbe before Purim and said: “Rebbe, my life is a mess. Nothing is straight. Nothing is finished.”
The Rebbe asked him: “When you sew a fine garment, what do you do with the knots and rough stitches?”
The tailor smiled: “We hide them inside. The outside must look clean.”
The Rebbe said: “So it is with your life. You see the knots because you are looking from the inside. God is sewing from the outside. When the garment is finished, you will discover that the hidden stitches were holding everything together.”
That’s Adar faith: not that we understand the process, but that we refuse to declare the story “over” while God is still stitching.

In the spirit of Adar and וְנַהֲפוֹךְ הוּא (v’nahafoch hu — “and it was turned upside down”), let’s explore the powerful Hebrew root:
🔤 הפך — H-P-Ch
Core meaning: to turn, overturn, reverse, transform.
🔁 הֲפִיכָה — Hafichah
🌍 מַהְפֵּכָה — Mahapechah
Revolution
Purim is not just an event. It’s a mahapechah.
⚖️ מַהְפָּךְ — Mahapach
A dramatic turnaround
Often used in sports, politics, or history.
💬 הַהֶפֶךְ הוּא הַנָּכוֹן — Hahefech hu hanachon
“The opposite is true.”
🔄 מַהְפָּךְ לְהֵפֶךְ — Mahapach le’hefech
A complete 180-degree shift
A total reversal of position.
🪞 הוֹפְכִי — Hofchi
Inverse / opposite / reciprocal
🎭 הִיפּוּךְ יוֹצְרוֹת — Hipuch Yotzrot
A dramatic reversal of roles
☕ קָפֶה הָפוּךְ — Cafe Hafuch Cafe’ Latte
Literally: “upside-down coffee.”
Israeli cappuccino.
Milk dominates, espresso inside.
Even your coffee in Israel reflects reversal.

Ulpan-Or’s Hebrew Corner weekly by email.
A closing thought for this month
Adar is not telling us to ignore evil.
Purim looks evil in the face and says: it can be real, it can be organized, it can be terrifying—and still, it is not ultimate.

Chodesh Adar Sameach! (חֹדֶשׁ אֲדָר שָׂמֵחַ — Chodesh Adar Sameach — “A joyful month of Adar!”)
Shabbat Shalom,
Yoel & Orly
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