What Purim Parade Supports
Purim Parade is a teaching song designed to help groups move together while naming the characters and story of Purim.
You can use the recording exactly as written, or adapt the structure with your own character names, costumes, or classroom prompts. While I sing Purim characters in the recording, in practice you can celebrate whoever is in front of you — Esther, Mordechai, Spider-Man, or a classroom full of queens.
If you are building a full Purim music sequence, you may also explore my 10 Purim Songs for Kiddos roundup to expand your repertoire.
Purpose of this song
Purim Parade supports:
- Coordinated group movement
- Clear listening and response cues
- Developmentally appropriate call-and-response
- Jewish learning through embodied participation
It is especially effective during high-energy transitions, hallway parades, or multi-class celebrations.
Ideal settings for Purim Parade
- Preschool Purim costume parades
- Religious school Purim celebrations
- Synagogue family Purim programs
- JCC or community center events
- Hallway, gym, or outdoor parades
- Any Purim event where children are walking and need shared musical structure
Song structure and call-out design
Purim Parade uses a repeating two-part structure that supports both movement and focused listening.
Marching section
The opening section establishes a steady beat and predictable lyrics so the entire group can march together. As the parade stretches through a building or outdoor space, returning to this section helps participants re-orient and stay connected to the shared rhythm.
You can substitute the verb “march” with walk, dance, shimmy, or tiptoe to vary energy while keeping structure intact.
Call-out section
The second section invites listening and anticipation. Participants listen for their name, costume, or Purim character and respond together with a cheer or boo.
Call-and-response structures work because participants are motivated to listen when they might be named. This keeps engagement high without stopping the movement of the parade.
Lyrics
It’s a Purim parade, so come out to see
All the awesome people marching with me
It’s a Purim parade, so come march along
Merrily marching to this Purim song
If Esther is here, could they give out a cheer (Woo)
Wow, don’t they look great, c’mon, let’s celebrate
It’s a Purim parade, so come out to see
All the awesome people marching with me
It’s a Purim parade, so come march along
Merrily marching to this Purim song
If Vashti is here
If Mordechai is here
If Achashverosh is here
Haman is here, you know what to do
If Haman is here, can you give out a boo
How to teach the song before you start marching
Before beginning the parade, teach the response.
Practice the cheer and the boo together so everyone knows what to do when they hear a name called. Then clearly name the shared goal:
We are going to march together. Our job is to listen for the music and move together as one big group.
Framing the parade as a shared project increases cooperation and reduces overstimulation.
Teaching tips for leading a coordinated Purim parade
Keep the music audible throughout the group
If the parade includes more than about thirty participants or moves through multiple spaces, use amplification.
Options include:
- A microphone and sound system
- Bluetooth speakers placed along the route
- A portable speaker carried by an adult within the group
The goal is clarity, not volume. When everyone can hear the beat, everyone can move together.
Spotlight participants without stopping the parade
Use the call-out section to name:
- Purim characters
- Costumes children are wearing
- Individual children or classrooms
The structure remains steady while the content flexes to match the group.
Re-center the group after each cheer
After each cheer or boo, the returning marching lyric pulls everyone back into shared rhythm. This reset keeps energy high without losing cohesion.
Supporting different sensory needs during Purim parades
Not every child will want to participate in the same way.
Planning ahead to provide:
- Noise-canceling headphones
- A quieter observation space
- The option to watch rather than march
supports inclusion and communicates that participation can look different for different children.
Purim context and Jewish learning connection
Costume parades are a developmentally appropriate Purim practice in Jewish early childhood settings. Naming Purim characters during the parade connects dress-up to the Purim story rather than treating it as costume play alone.
The song reinforces communal joy, storytelling, and shared participation while maintaining structure.
Why structure matters in Purim costume parades
Parades are joyful and demanding at the same time. Movement, sound, excitement, and social awareness all happen at once.
Joy needs a container in order to feel safe and sustainable.
Purim Parade is designed to keep the beat present, the group connected, and the joy shared without losing structure.
Building your Purim repertoire
If you are planning a full Purim music program, explore my 10 Purim Songs for Kiddos to help you bring music and movement to your celebrations,