Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Four Conditions for Appeasement With the Arabs

 by Rav Shmuel Eliyahu, Chief Rabbi of Tzfat, translated by Hillel Fendel

Cars burned during riots in Lod

Many people have suggested that I meet with Sheikhs and Muslim clerics to make a sulha [traditional Muslim method of reconciliation] and straighten out matters so that we can live in peace. For after all, who does not want peace?

But if we truly love life, then given all that's happened over the past few weeks, we simply cannot allow ourselves to come to any kind of superficial resolution with them. Nearly the entire Arab sector in the State of Israel took part in the anti-Jewish violence. Some of them were quite proactive, while others merely participated passively or by showing their happiness and approval. The decisive majority of their leadership – Knesset Members, congregational leaders, religious clerics – expressed no disapproval of the indiscriminate anti-Jewish looting, burning of synagogues, and even murderous lynchings.

How is it possible to live in peaceful coexistence with a neighbor who directs his friends to throw a Molotov cocktail through your window while you relax at home with your little children? How is it conceivable to live in peace with a neighbor whose sons set fire to your fellow Jews' car, or take part in setting fire to synagogues and Jewish businesses? 

Even if your neighbor himself was not physically involved, is it conceivable to trust him when he is part of a nation that wants to banish, if not destroy, you?

We must remember that when they chant, "With blood and fire we will redeem Palestine," they are not referring only to Judea and Samaria, but also to Tel Aviv, Ramle, Lod, Haifa, and of course, Jerusalem.

It could be that we could come to an agreement with them on a loveless coexistence. But even before that, we must remember how Muhammad made "peace" with the Jews of Khaybar, who were stronger than he was – but the moment the Jews laid down their arms, Muhammad slaughtered them and their sons, and violated their wives and daughters. 

This was the prototype of behavior for Yasser Arafat and other Arab Muslim leaders who made deals with Israel and then violated them even before the ink had dried. Arafat was not ashamed to say publicly – in Arabic only, of course – that his model was the Khaybar deal, for deceiving and cheating Jews is a great honor for them. 

We must learn from past experience. They love to sit and be photographed with Jewish leaders as they say (in Hebrew) how much they condemn violence "on both sides" – as if there is any comparison between our desire for peace and theirs, and their propensity to murder and ours.

Then, when the meeting ends, the Muslim spiritual leaders return to their mosques and sermonize that the Jews are sons of monkeys and pigs and how admirable and holy it is to kill them. No one will point out the contradiction between that and what they said the day before in Hebrew – because, following Muhammad, they all believe it is a great deed to lie and take advantage of Jews.

We must remember what happened just in the past two weeks: Israeli Arabs burned down ten synagogues in Lod alone, as well as dozens of Jewish-owned cars, trucks, buses, and police vehicles. They also torched schools and yeshivot, looted and burned hundreds of Jewish apartments and businesses, and threw firebombs at Jewish families in their homes. They lynched any Jew who fell into their hands, and danced in joy at every rocket that landed on an Israeli home. 

In every aspect, they are as far from the Jews who defended themselves from their violence as is east from west. Who amongst us does not know that if a bully attacks a citizen and steals from him, the victim is allowed and even obligated to hit back with full force and restore the stolen property? Whoever tries to equate between the disgraceful violence of the attacker and the violence with which the victim defends himself thereby destroys the very foundations of Torah and justice.

It is critical to remember that before Arabs ever make a sulha amongst themselves, they avenge whatever blood was spilt beforehand. Only after the revenge comes the sulha. For they know themselves well: if one side was not made to pay in blood, it will kill again. 

We won't lower ourselves to their level, and we won't avenge our spilt blood. Instead, we will set four unyielding conditions before we sit down to even talk with them about a sulha, as follows:

1. They must categorically and unequivocally condemn all the riots and violence perpetrated by the Arabs throughout Israel. They may not say, "We condemn all the violence on both sides," but rather, "We condemn and do not accept the Arab violence perpetrated against Jews." We will not accept any equation between one Arab who was beaten up in Bat Yam to hundreds of Jews mercilessly assaulted and even killed in other cities.

2. The Arab sector must collect money from its people in the different cities to completely cover all the damage of the recent violence. This includes the full value of burnt synagogues, cars, trucks, buildings and more. The money must be given to the Israeli authorities in cash, and not in the form of worthless promises.

3. The Arabs must turn over all the weapons they have. They may not hold guns and bullets in their homes while claiming to reach out in peace. The two do not go together.

4. They must surrender the criminals responsible for the lynching of a Jew, as well as anyone who shot live fire, threw concrete blocks on Jews, and hurled firebombs into Jewish homes. 

Without the fulfillment of these four conditions, the rioters and attackers have no place in the State of Israel, and must be deported. 

Only if these conditions are completely accepted and carried out, will we be willing to sit down and talk to them. Photo-ops without these preconditions will simply not happen. We have no time, nor can we afford our citizens' lives, for games.

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Q&A: But doesn't G-d also cause the harm in the first place?


Wrist being fitted for brace (Credit: Tom Claes/Unsplash)

QWhy must we thank G-d for performing miracles to save us, such as curing us from sickness or saving us from attacks, when it was He Himself Who also brought the sickness or near-attack upon us in the first place?

Q&A: Is G-d being "kind" if He's working toward a specific end goal?

  

Man in silhouette of sunrise spreading arms in gratitude (Credit: Zac Durant/Unsplash)

QWhy do we think of the State of Israel as a kindness that G-d performed for us, when actually He did it for Himself, for the purpose of the Redemption process? The same is true for all kindnesses that He does – after all, He created the world for an ultimate purpose, and everything that happens leads to that goal. If a person is healthy and has a happy family, this is because G-d determined that this was best for that person and for the world. So where is the kindness here? If all things are done for a reason, why do we refer to them as kindnesses?

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Quick Update from Israel at War

By Baruch Gordon, Director of Development, Bet El Institutions

My wife and I were in Tel Aviv on Tuesday evening dining outdoors when the sirens went off. Along with our food, we quickly digested the fact that our lives were in danger, and we ran for shelter inside the restaurant. This time it wasn’t a WhatsApp video, it was real life. 

Rockets falling in Israel

Then, walking to catch a train back to Jerusalem where we had parked, we had to run five times into bomb shelters of the nearest residential building. In each shelter, we met agitated Tel Aviv residents making calls to loved ones to verify they’re OK. 

Hearing the loud – sometimes distant, sometimes close – explosions and the subsequent sirens of ambulances drove home the point for me: Hamas has sent millions of Israelis into hiding. Hamas has the upper hand and the initiative in this engagement. Hamas has replaced my Jewish pride with utter degradation: I’m fleeing from a band of pathetic terrorists like my ancestors fled from Cossacks.

That’s what makes this war different. 

Shavuot: 6th of Sivan or 50th Day of the Omer?

by Rav Aharon Harel, yeshiva.co, translated by Hillel Fendel

Gift [Credit: Jess Bailey/Unsplash]

Some of the most profound thoughts of the Sfat Emet - the Gerrer Rebbe, Rav Yehuda Aryeh Leib - are found in his shortest essays. For instance:

We commemorate the Shavuot holiday as the day on which we received the Torah at Mt. Sinai, as we say in our prayers: "the time of the giving of our Torah." However, this is not precisely accurate. For the Talmud concludes (Tr. Shabbat 88) that the Torah was actually given on the 6th day of Sivan, whereas we celebrate Shavuot on the day following the 49 days of the Omer counting. Though nowadays these two dates always coincide, this is only because of the way our calendar has been fixed. When the months were determined by the Great Court based on the testimony of those who saw the full moon, the 50th day of the Omer did not always fall out on the 6th day of Sivan.

The Sfat Emet wishes to understand: Why did the Torah not designate the commemoration of the Giving of the Torah on the actual day that the Torah was given? And why did Israel change the Torah's designation? 

Shavuot: Time To Stop and Think!

by Rav Netanel Yosifun, yeshiva.co, translated by Hillel Fendel

Jewish wedding

Ilana looked yet again at the long list in her hand, already wrinkled from being handled and consulted so much. Preparing for her oldest daughter's wedding that night was no small manner. The list included many different jobs that she still had to do, or make sure that others did, before the first guests would arrive. It was very important to her that everything go smoothly, so that the wedding would be truly joyous, and the entire experience would be perfect. It was already two months that she had been running around for these preparations for the big night, and here, with only minutes, she still had to ---

Suddenly, a small, inner voice whispered to her: Calm down! If you want to truly experience the wedding within your heart, you have to stop for a moment and leave the small details behind. Better that some details get forgotten, as long as you can really "be there" for the happy occasion!

Thursday, May 6, 2021

Jerusalem Day: Some Stones Are Hearts

by Rabbi Azriel Ariel, translated by Hillel Fendel

Western Wall with Israeli flag in foreground (Credit: Benjamin Rascoe/Unsplash)

A famous and moving song written shortly after the Six Day War by Yozzi Gimzo focuses on the profound significance of the Western Wall from several angles. Its refrain is this: 

Behukotai: Betraying Israel's Mission

 by Rav Yehuda HaKohen, visionmag.org

Israel's deep spiritual connection to our homeland – like the connection of the soul to the body – transcends all rational human understandings.

Bar Kokhba


Parshat BeḼukotai describes the consequences that result when Israel betrays our mission.