By:Caroline B. Glick Wednesday,
Israel’s 2005 withdrawal from Gaza was presented to the world
as a strategic bid to enhance prospects for peace between the
Palestinians and Israel. Proponents of the move argued that removing
all Israeli civilians and military personnel from Gaza would take away
the source of Palestinian grievances. Once fully appeased, the
Palestinians would be forced to behave responsibly, abjure terrorism
and build their state – first in Gaza, and then in Judea and Samaria
and Jerusalem as well.
This was the pretext of Israel’s withdrawal. But it wasn’t the
subtext. The subtext of the withdrawal – telegraphed to both Israelis
and the international community – was that the withdrawal was cause the
demise of Religious Zionism at the hands of the leftist progeny of
Labor Zionists. That is, the operation wasn’t about peace with the
Arabs. It was about cultural supremacy within Israel.
In the countdown to the withdrawal, the Palestinians did
everything they could to make clear the move would not enhance the
chances for peace. They triumphantly declared that then-prime minister
Ariel Sharon’s decision to expel Gaza’s Jews was an admission that
Israel had been defeated by the Palestinians. Hamas was ascendant and
both Hamas and Fatah declared repeatedly that they would continue their
terror war until all of Israel was destroyed. And as the pretext
crumbled, the subtext became more prominent.
Haaretz editorialized six weeks before the expulsion of Gaza’s
8,000 Jews, “The disengagement of Israeli policy from its religious
fuel is the real disengagement currently on the agenda. On the day
after the disengagement, religious Zionism’s status will be different.
The real question is not how many mortar shells will fall, or who will
guard the Philadelphi route [connecting Gaza with Egypt], or whether
the Palestinians will dance of the roofs of Ganei Tal. The real
question is who sets the national agenda.”
Religious Zionist leaders were in a horrible bind. If they
responded to the demands of their own people and fought fire with fire,
they knew – given the Left’s control of the media – they would be
demonized for years to come. And they knew that if the Left succeeded
in destroying their reputation among rank and file Israelis, they would
be powerless to defend Judea and Samaria.
So in the end, Religious Zionist leaders disappointed their
followers, making do with mass protests in the countdown to the
expulsions and then allowing the IDF to carry out the expulsions
largely unchallenged. While they failed to save Gaza’s Jews from
internal exile, they at least succeeded in preventing the demise of
Religious Zionism as a political and social force in Israel.
Their success was acknowledged by Haaretz. In the weeks that
followed the expulsions, Haaretz columnist Orit Shochat bemoaned the
fact that the campaign against Religious Zionism had not succeeded. As
she put it, “Soldiers who experienced the evacuation won’t travel to an
ashram in India because they discovered that there is an ashram next
door. The same Jewish religion that they hadn’t seen up close for a
long time embraces them into its fold with a song and a tear for a
common fate. They have now sat arm-in-arm at the synagogues in Gush
Katif, they have now felt the holiness mixed in sweat, they have now
moved rhythmically and sung songs. They have stood in line to kiss the
Torah scrolls. They are now half-inside.”
Zionism’s revolutionary message to Jewry was that after 2,000
years of powerlessness, Jews would again become actors on the global
stage. But Zionism has many movements and not all of them are equally
revolutionary. The two most significant Zionist movements today are
Labor Zionism and Religious Zionism.
The inherent weakness of Labor Zionism is that it was never
aimed specifically at enabling Jews to be Jews. Rather, its purpose was
to enable Jews to be socialists. Understanding that the anti-Semitic
climate in Europe in the early 20th century rendered Jewish
assimilation into a larger socialist sea impossible, Labor Zionists
argued that by establishing a Jewish state Jews would be “normalized”
and accepted as regular people and socialists by the nations of the
world. That is, Labor Zionism’s message was assimilation on a national
rather than on an individual one since conditions in Europe precluded
individual assimilation.
Labor Zionists have been confounded by the endurance of
anti-Semitism and its transformation of Israel, though anti-Zionism,
into the International Jew. The world’s refusal to accept Israel as an
equal has been shattering for them. It has caused Labor Zionists to
abandon Zionism in the hopes that by doing so they will finally be
accepted as equals by the nations of the world. At its core, Labor
Zionism is outward seeking rather than inward looking.
In contrast, Religious Zionism is inward looking. It seeks to
turn Jews into actors on the international stage as Jews. It also seeks
to make Judaism responsive to the imperatives of an empowered people as
it was responsive to the imperatives of Jews as a powerless people
during the generations of exile. Because of its specific message to
Jews as Jews, Religious Zionism is a pure revolutionary ideology.
Religious Zionists are a finger in the eye of the Labor
Zionists for their stubborn devotion to Judaism and their relative
indifference to whether Israel is accepted by the anti-Semites of the
world. And Labor Zionists are not alone in their angry rejection of
Religious Zionism’s message. They are joined by the non-Zionist
religious establishment.
The non-Zionist religious establishment feels threatened by
Religious Zionism’s attempts to reinvest Judaism with its nationalist
mission for the Jewish nation. And, unfortunately, the non-Zionist
religious establishment is joining forces with the Labor Zionist
establishment to attack Religious Zionism.
In early May, a panel of three non-Zionist rabbinic judges on
Jerusalem’s High Rabbinic Court published a ruling in a divorce case
declaring all the thousands of conversions carried out under the
auspices of Religious Zionist Rabbi Chaim Druckman, and the state’s
Conversion Authority he headed, null and void. The court argued that
Druckman did not investigate sufficiently whether the converts were
committed to observing all the mitzvot. Piling on to the non-Zionist
establishment’s act, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert last week removed
Druckman from his position as head of the Conversion Authority.
Both Rabbi Avraham Sherman, who wrote the rabbinical high
court’s decision, and Druckman’s fellow Religious Zionist rabbis agree
that the dispute is an attack on Religious Zionism’s view of the role
of religion in Israel rather than a strictly halachic disagreement. In
his ruling, Sherman wrote of Druckman and his Religious Zionist
colleagues in the Conversion Authority, “All these rabbis have one
thing in common. They all see in conversion a sacred commandment as
part of their national responsibility…. In other words, the conversion
is not primarily the spiritual and religious need of the individual
convert who wishes to join the Jewish people and accept upon himself
all the commandments. Rather, conversion is a means of improving the
spiritual situation of the entire Jewish nation living in Israel. It is
a way of bringing Jews closer to their Judaism.”
The Religious Zionist movement is up in arms over the ruling,
which its leaders are calling an act of aggression and halachic
malfeasance. Rabbi Yuval Cherlow, who heads the hesder yeshiva in
Petach Tikvah and is considered a leading rabbinic authority in
Religious Zionist circles, called Sherman’s ruling “a desecration of
God’s name” and said that if it is not overturned he would set up
independent conversion courts outside the aegis of the Chief Rabbinate.
Between the Labor Zionists’ attempts to destroy Religious
Zionism politically, and the non-Zionist rabbinic leadership’s attempts
to demonize it religiously, Religious Zionism has been under tremendous
pressure in recent years. One can only hope its leaders will have the
wisdom to persevere. Israel and the Jewish people need Religious
Zionism more than anyone will ever admit.
Original
Source
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The Two-Pronged Assault On Religious Zionism
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