by Rabbi Y. Y. Jacobson
Why Israel must reclaim its soul now
 
 
Israel is once again reeling from a savage quadruple terror attack near Eilat, which claimed the lives of eight Jews and wounded dozens more. The twenty terrorists involved in the attack came from Gaza and smuggled themselves into Israel via Egypt.
Next  month, the Arabs are reportedly preparing to present their bid for  United Nations membership, with Palestinian Authority president Mahmud  Abbas personally presenting the request to UN Secretary General Ban  Ki-moon on the first day of the annual opening gathering at UN  headquarters in New York, September 20, 2011.
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| The second Israeli bus attacked this Thursday near Eilat.  | 
If  150 states recognize the Palestinian state, a moment after the  declaration Mahmoud Abbas and his comrades will be telling us: Now that  we are an independent state entitled to do whatever it wishes, we shall  import missiles, rockets, cannons and whatever else we want.
Today's attack -- on the eighty-third anniversary of the Hebron Massacre in August 1929 (on the 18th  day of AV) which claimed the lives of 67 Jews -- took place in the  Negev desert, far from Israeli heavy population centers. Now think about  the reality of a Palestinian State only 10 miles from Tel Aviv,  governing around 350,000 Israelis living in the territory of this new  State?
How  should Israel preempt this potential crisis? What should be the  position of the Jewish people? How should Prime Minister Netanyahu  confront this situation?
Let  us attempt to gain perspective, as we embark on a journey through  biblical thought, Talmudic wisdom, Zionist doctrine and the facts on the  ground.
Grace after Meals
In  Deuteronomy, in this week's Torah portion (Eikev), the Bible instructs  us to bless G-d after eating a satiating meal. "You will eat and you  will be satisfied and you will bless your G-d for the wonderful land  that He gave you (1)."
Thus  was invented the ritual of "benching" (Yiddish for blessing), or "grace  after meals," recited after every meal of bread, and consisting of a  number of sections, or blessings. In the first blessing we express  gratitude for the resources G-d created in the world to nourish His  creatures. The second blessing is a thank you for the beautiful land  that He gave the Jewish people. In the third, we give thanks and pray  for Jerusalem. These three blessings were fashioned to echo the biblical  injunction "You will eat and you will be satisfied and you will bless  your G-d for the wonderful land that He gave you," linking gratitude for  a meal with gratitude for the soil which produced the meal (2).
Yet  there is a strange law associated with this ritual. The Talmud states  (3) that the second blessing, in which we express our gratefulness for  the land, must include a few words about the Covenant G-d made with the  first Jew, Abraham. In this Covenant, recorded in Genesis, G-d promised  Abraham that He would give the land of Canaan as an inheritance to his  descendants (the circumcision of every Jewish male baby represents this  Covenant). What is more, in this blessing we must also make mention of  the Torah, the divine constitution for the Jewish people, which promises  -- scores of times -- the land of Canaan to the Jews.
In  other words, the sages are suggesting, it is necessary not only to  thank G-d for the beautiful land itself, but we also must articulate the  source for our rights for this land: the Abrahamic Covenant and the  Torah. Hence, the standard version of the grace after meals: "We offer  thanks to You, Lord our G-d, for having given us as a heritage to our  ancestors a precious, good and spacious land... for your Covenant which  you have sealed in our flesh, and for Your Torah which You have taught  us."
Benching vs. Hatikvah
The  Talmud is so emphatic about the inclusion of these two concepts-the  Covenant and the Torah-that it states (4): "Whoever did not mention the  Covenant and the Torah in the blessing for the land (the second blessing  in the grace after meals) did not fulfill his obligation." This person  must repeat his grace after meals.
This  seems strange. The Bible merely states, "You will eat and you will be  satisfied and you will bless your G-d for the wonderful land that He  gave you." The Torah just wants us to express appreciation for the land.  Period. Why the absolute necessity to mention the Abrahamic Covenant  and the Torah? What is wrong with a simple offering of thanks for a  beautiful national homeland?
In  fact, the Israeli national anthem, adorning countless Jewish functions  over the past 63 years, does just that. It speaks of "the 2,000 year old  Jewish hope to be a free people in its land, the land of Zion and  Jerusalem." It makes no mention of G-d's Covenant with Abraham or the  Torah as the moral grounds for establishing the modern State of Israel.
Similarly,  the signers of the Israeli Declaration of Independence, drawn up in May  1948, made no mention of G-d or Torah. After much debate, it was agreed  upon to insert the ambiguous phrase "The Rock of Israel (Tzur  Yisrael)," to be interpreted as one desired. "Placing our trust in the  Rock of Israel, we set our hand and testimony to this Declaration, here  on the soil of the Homeland, in the city of Tel Aviv, on this day, the  eve of the Sabbath, 5 Iyar 5708, 14 May 1948."
This  seems like a rational approach. Why mix religion and statehood? For a  democracy to flourish, liberal pluralism must be maintained. Church and  state need to be separated. Introducing biblical notions into the  Zionist endeavor would only undermine Israel's success as a liberal  democracy.
Nachman  Syrkin, the preeminent theorist of Zionist socialism, once remarked:  "Religion is the major impediment confronting the Jewish nation on the  road to culture, science and freedom."  
Torah vs. the UN
Yet  the Talmudic rabbis, 1,700 years ago, apparently understood something  about the Jewish psyche, and Middle Eastern politics, which may have  eluded the founders of modern Israel.
The  contemporary political conversation has many of us convinced that if  Israel would withdraw to its pre-1967 borders, Palestinians will at last  make peace with the Jewish state. All the Palestinians really want is  independent nationhood. Hence, the praise in the world and Israeli media  for the Gaza evacuation in August 2005: It is a step in the right  direction, the beginning of the end of Israeli occupation, the first  mile in a road toward reconciliation and co-existence.
Yet  these hopes totally insult Palestinians by making mockery of their  explicitly stated dreams and beliefs. Their words, repeated by their  leaders time and time again, leave no room for doubt. "All of Palestine  belongs to us," is the Palestinian message. Palestinian leader Abbas  said that the Gaza departure was the beginning of a process that would  result in all of the Arab refugees returning to their homes of pre-1948.
That  is why there was no peace before the 1967 war, a time of no Jewish  settlements and no settlers. Gaza belonged to Egypt, the West Bank and  East Jerusalem to Jordan, and the Golan Heights to Syria. Why did six  Arab countries decide to invade and exterminate Israel? Because, in  their belief, the entire Zionist entity is illegal. All of Israel rests  on occupied Arab land. According to the Koran, Jews have no right to  establish a self-governed homeland on Islamic soil.
This  is why following the Gaza evacuation exactly six years ago, Israel did  not enjoy a day of serenity from the new residents of Gaza. Instead of  showing the slightest appreciation for Israel ceding all of Gaza,  thousands of rockets have been launched with the intent to murder as  many Jewish civilians as possible.
The  terrorists today infiltrated Sinai from Gaza. There has not been a  single Jew in Gaza nor any Israeli occupation in Gaza for six years. Why  the drive to murder as many Jews as possible?
Have  you heard any Muslim leader suggest that Jews are not, by their very  existence on Middle Eastern soil, occupying land that does not belong to  them?
Only  when Israel ceases to exist will the occupation cease. Which is why  ceding Gaza and even all of the West Bank and Eastern Jerusalem to  Palestinians will not bring about peace. Peace will not come about by  Israel giving away territory. Peace will arrive when responsible Arab  leaders will reform Palestinian culture so as to not see the Jew as the  "devil" and Israel as the "enemy of Allah." Peace will come when the  world, instead of pressuring Israel to cede territory, pressures  Palestinian educators and parents to teach tolerance, respect and civil  morality. Till that day comes, Israel's giving away of land will only  intoxicate Palestinians with the hope that their agenda of freeing all  of Palestine from the Zionist enemy is doable.
The  Obama administration is apparently not daunted by the "minor" detail  that half of the eventual "Palestine" is controlled by the terrorist  group Hamas, which clearly states its objective to exterminate all of  Israel. Is this the State the UN will embrace next September?
Whose Home Is It?
Yet  here is what makes this apparently straightforward idea so complicated.  If Muslims in Detroit would begin blowing up busses or pizza shops and  demanding a Palestinian State in Michigan, no one would question  America's right to eliminate the terrorists and not cede even an inch of  land to them. When an enemy is driven to destroy you, you must  eliminate it. The reason Israel is treated so differently is because  many see Israel as "partners in crime:" Some Palestinians may be  terrorists but Israel, too, shares in the guilt. It is an occupying  state.
No  one doubts that Michigan belongs to the United States. Hence, their  right to fight for it and squelch any attempt to seize it. However in  the case of Israel, the question persists, does Israel have a right to  defend itself while dwelling on stolen property?
Where  exactly does Israel draw the line and declare, "From here on we are  legal?" And based on which moral grounds can these lines be drawn?
The  distinction between post-1967 Israel and pre-1967 Israel is popular but  mythical. The Arabs say that all of Israel is occupied. We must  confront the painful truth: If the Jews living in Gaza, West Bank and  Eastern Jerusalem are occupiers, then the Jews living in Tel-Aviv,  Yaffa, Haifa and Rosh Pinah are the same occupiers. Many a city in  pre-1967 Israel used to be Arab settlements, now occupied by Israel.
According  to Arab doctrine, Jews, especially European Jews, are a foreign  implant, outsiders who have colonized and occupied native Arab land  since 1948. All the reasonable arguments in the world and all the UN  resolutions combined will not change the belief that Jews are thieves,  occupying the land of millions of displaced Arabs. Is it fair that  because the Europeans were guilt-ridden after the Holocaust and were  kind enough to give the Jews a slice of the Middle East, the Arabs have  to pay the price and suffer?
The Moral Foundation
Here  lies one of the greatest failures of secular Zionism. Its philosophy  did not possess the tools to instill within its children the moral  foundations for calling Israel a Jewish homeland.
If  the Jewish people's connection to the soil between Jordan and the  Mediterranean stems merely from Theodore Herzl's Zionist dream to give  displaced and exiled Jews a national identity, endorsed by the 1917  Balfour Declaration and the 1947 United Nations' partition plan, their  connection to the land remains fragile and ambiguous. When Palestinians  scream "You are stealing our land," and the international community  thunders, "Stop the occupation," we have lost the argument. Israel can  scream all day, "we have the right to defend ourselves," but in the mind  of the world we are defending ourselves while sitting on stolen land.
Yet  the critical point is missing. For 3300 years Jews breathed and lived  with the conviction that the Creator of the world designated one piece  of earth for them. Even in the most hellish moments of Jewish exile, the  people of the Book clung to their faith that one day they would return  to their divinely promised land. The only reason Jews returned from  Odessa, Vilna and Warsaw to Israel was because of their passion and  belief that the Creator of the heaven and earth chose to give his Holy  Land to the children of Abraham Isaac and Jacob, as stated hundreds of  times in the Bible. There are three billion people in the world who  believe in the Bible, who live with the Bible and who quote the Bible.  Secular Zionist should not have been afraid to bequeath this tradition  and faith to their children, for this, and only this, is the moral  justification for a Jewish presence in the Holy Land-in Jerusalem,  Hebron, Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Gaza all the same.
Paradoxically,  it seems the world is waiting for this. Not only the Christian and  Islamic world, who view the Bible as the definition of truth. Even the  secular world, seems to respect Jews who respect themselves and their  faith. The world is waiting for Israel to treat the Land the way Israel  should be treated, as G-d's personal gift to the Jewish people.
Blessing or Curse?
That  is why the sages said that "Whoever did not mention the Covenant and  the Torah in the blessing for the land did not fulfill his obligation."  If our sense of gratitude and connection to the land is based on the  divine Covenant with Abraham and the Torah, it will remain passionate,  morally inspired and eternal. If not, our loyalty to our homeland hangs  on a thread.
The  Talmudic sages keenly grasped that if the thankfulness of the Jew for  the Land of Israel is not based on the covenant G-d crafted with Abraham  some 3,700 years ago, and on the Torah, the 3,300-year-old blueprint  for Jewish existence, we might one day feel unappreciative -- rather  than grateful - for the homeland flowing with milk and honey. We might  feel compelled to rid ourselves from it.
The Sun and the Moon
The  Talmud states (5), "Moses is the face of the sun; Joshua is the face of  the moon." What is the symbolism behind this poetic statement?
One explanation might be this:
Moses represents Torah; Joshua embodies the Land of Israel. Moses gave us the Torah; Joshua gave us Israel.
The  light of the moon is beautiful, soothing, and romantic. Moonlight has  inspired many an imagination and a heart. Yet the glow of the moon is  merely a reflection of the sun. As long as the moon reflects the sun's  glow, it casts upon the earth its own unique poetic luminescence; if the  moon is separated from its source of light-as is the case in a lunar  eclipse-it becomes a large chunk of dark and rocky matter.
The  relationship between Moses, the face of Torah, and Joshua, the face of  Jewish statehood, is that of the sun and the moon. As long as Israel  reflects Torah-its faith, its dreams and its passions-it is hard to find  something more beautiful and inspiring. When Israel, however, ceases to  see itself as a reflection of Torah, but rather as a secular national  homeland for Jews, a member of the United Nations, it loses much of its  inner glow and beauty. Its very identity and future is put into  question.
Every  human needs a soul; every nation needs a soul. Even Israel. And the  soul of the Jewish people for 4,000 years has been the Torah.
We cannot afford to lose our soul now. Obama and the United Nations will get it - if we forget it.
Footnotes:  1) Deuteronomy 7:10.  2)  Thus, the first three blessings are biblically required. In the city of  Yabneh, around 100 CE, the sages added a fourth blessing, thanking G-d  for His kindness during the times of exile following the Roman  destruction of Jerusalem (Talmud Berachos 48b).  3) Talmud ibid.  4) Talmud ibid. 49a.  5) Bava Basra 75b.