The pop queen, Madonna, who practices Kabbalah and is famous for exhibiting her apparently perpetual body in ever more stimulating costumes onstage, showed her Material Girl part for that of another (much heavenlier and loved) character from the most admired HBO TV show “Game Of Thrones”. She dressed as Daenerys Targaryen (Mother of Dragons) to celebrate Jewish tradition Purim on Sunday, and shared her picture dressed as Daenerys on Social Media sites Twitter and Facebook.
“Happy Purim!!!!! All Hail All Queens! ##certainty,” She wrote on Facebook with the picture of her with lengthy curly white-blond hair, trying to be like the banished crowned head of the Targaryen tribe. She put on a leather clasped corset and lacy top as she put on her locks in tangles over her upper body. Showing off brass bracelets on her wrists, the 55-year-old pop singer attained her ‘Game of Thrones’ character with 2 dragons statuettes on her shoulders.
From the Biblical Book of Esther, Purim honors the liberation of the Jewish natives in the prehistoric Persian realm where they were intrigued to be killed. So, to celebrate this day, Jewish people wear different costumes. It seems like Jewish version of Halloween. This even is perhaps particularly important for Madonna, as her Hebrew name is Esther. By her costume selection, it appears that Esther's judicious biblical book cross our mind.
The story describes how a beautiful Jewish deprived girl named Esther was selected to be the queen of the Persian realm. According to the Book of Esther, Mordecai and his cousin and espoused daughter Esther prevented the disaster. Purim is the yearly event to commemorate the victory.
Madonna - who like Esther, has created unique music and songs in the middle of various hindrances - has been fairly open regarding her devotion in the Jewish religion, typically her usual practice of Kabbalah - a type of Jewish spirituality. Even though she was raised Christian, she changed the religion to the spiritual Jewish faith system Kabbalah in 1997. She was attracted by the subsidiary of Judaism in the 1990s, and she had said that it was a means for her to manage her universal reputation.
In relation to her studies, she no longer performs on Friday night, owing to the fact that it is the start of Shabbat, and puts on a red string around her left wrist for safety and to fend off the 'Evil Eye.'
“Happy Purim!!!!! All Hail All Queens! ##certainty,” She wrote on Facebook with the picture of her with lengthy curly white-blond hair, trying to be like the banished crowned head of the Targaryen tribe. She put on a leather clasped corset and lacy top as she put on her locks in tangles over her upper body. Showing off brass bracelets on her wrists, the 55-year-old pop singer attained her ‘Game of Thrones’ character with 2 dragons statuettes on her shoulders.
From the Biblical Book of Esther, Purim honors the liberation of the Jewish natives in the prehistoric Persian realm where they were intrigued to be killed. So, to celebrate this day, Jewish people wear different costumes. It seems like Jewish version of Halloween. This even is perhaps particularly important for Madonna, as her Hebrew name is Esther. By her costume selection, it appears that Esther's judicious biblical book cross our mind.
The story describes how a beautiful Jewish deprived girl named Esther was selected to be the queen of the Persian realm. According to the Book of Esther, Mordecai and his cousin and espoused daughter Esther prevented the disaster. Purim is the yearly event to commemorate the victory.
Madonna - who like Esther, has created unique music and songs in the middle of various hindrances - has been fairly open regarding her devotion in the Jewish religion, typically her usual practice of Kabbalah - a type of Jewish spirituality. Even though she was raised Christian, she changed the religion to the spiritual Jewish faith system Kabbalah in 1997. She was attracted by the subsidiary of Judaism in the 1990s, and she had said that it was a means for her to manage her universal reputation.
In relation to her studies, she no longer performs on Friday night, owing to the fact that it is the start of Shabbat, and puts on a red string around her left wrist for safety and to fend off the 'Evil Eye.'
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