Who knows what course histroy would have taken had the Israelite
kingdom not split
The Man Who Saved Olmert
What Destroyed Solomon's Temple?
Moshe Ya'alon As a National Metaphor
Next week, as mourners converge on Jerusalem the way they have been
doing every Ninth of Av since 71 AD, Jews the world over will recall
matter-of-factly that the temples were destroyed "for unwarranted
hatred." Who can disagree? In this case, faith and research concur.
Yet this pertains to the Second Temple, the one that was built by Herod
and torched by Titus after its defenders, while braving Roman arrows,
found time to betray, starve and knife each other. Less thought is paid
to the circumstances of the First Temple's destruction some five
centuries earlier.
True, biblical Judah's catastrophe is the focus of the graphically
morbid Lamentations ("Alas, women eat their own fruit, Their new-born
babes! Alas, priest and prophet are slain, In the sanctuary of the
Lord!") whose public reading launches the fast, yet that tragedy is
more distant, and less documented, than the one we were handed by Rome.
The Second Temple is a vivid memory. We have accurate descriptions of
its architecture, we know its remaining wall intimately, we have
surveyed its model thoroughly, we are deeply aware of its reputation as
one of the ancient world's most inspiring wonders, and even Gentile
chroniclers attest that our forebears flocked there in the hundreds of
thousands to celebrate the Jewish holidays.
Moreover, the Second Temple could have been saved, had the Judeans been
less fanatic. Maybe we are influenced by historian Josephus Flavius's
pro-Roman inclination, and maybe by the Talmud's anti-rebel bias, but
the fact is that unless it felt provoked Rome tolerated other
religions.
Not so the First Temple.
SOLOMON'S TEMPLE was stormed by a stampeding empire that tore apart
whatever stood in its way. Faced with such imperial ferocity, what
could tiny Judah have done?
Well, by the times of Jeremiah and Nebuchadnezzar there really was
little that could be done, but back when the Israelites arrived in the
Promised Land there was plenty that could have been done, had the
Israelites possessed political vision.
Even before setting foot in the Promised Land some one fifth of the
Israelites told Moses plainly: "Do not move us across the Jordan."
Moses's reply, "Are your brothers to go to war while you stay here?"
reminds some of today's ultra-Orthodox, and others of the Wandering
Jew, hedonistic Tel Aviv, or Gush Emunim's settlers, and at any rate
exudes fear of secession. Yet the ancient Israelites' political tragedy
lay less in that episode's origins and more in its aftermath.
Moses, whose upbringing in an imperial court made him loathe
governmental arbitrariness, treated the eastbound tribes' request
morally rather than politically. Once they promised to fight with their
brethren – a promise they later fulfilled to the letter – he was fine.
Thus, haphazardly, the tribes who until then were passive objects of
history were allowed to become active subjects of history, shapers of
their own destiny, actual political actors.
Suspicions emerged already upon the eastern tribes' arrival at the
Jordan's west bank, where they built an altar through which they hoped
to cement ties among the tribes, only to be so badly misunderstood that
they were nearly attacked by the western tribes for ostensibly courting
idolatry. Within several generations the tribe of Ephraim actually
provoked a clash east of the Jordan only to be mass-slaughtered there,
and the river was painted red with the blood of 42,000 Israelites –
roughly twice the fatalities the modern State of Israel has suffered in
all its wars.
Now one wonders: to what extent did those warring tribes share a
heritage? How much of what Moses had bequeathed them did they observe,
or at least recall? If they were so pious that they were prepared to
kill and die over a rumored attempt by the eastern tribes to build an
idolatrous altar, chances are they also observed a Sabbath of some sort
or held a Passover meal, as their forebears had been commanded to do
while standing shoulder to shoulder at Mt. Sinai.
Can it be that while driving swords spears and daggers through each
other those Israelites all wore, say, the ritual four fringes? Clearly,
they spoke the same language, the only difference being that these said
shibboleth and those sibbolet. Even more clearly, the Bible is filled
with tales of such intra-Israelite wars. Did they really have to happen?
In acquiescing with a semi-secessionist initiative, Moses – whose
disdain for strong government made him avoid recommending the
establishment of a monarchy –paved the way for the Israelite equivalent
of what is known in American history as "states' rights."
Some, from Medieval commentator Don Isaac Abravanel, who was
traumatized by his failure to avert the Spanish Expulsion, to modern
philosopher Martin Buber, who was traumatized by the Nazi rise to power
which he witnessed, romanticized the Israelite tribes' loose federation
of peaceful peasants who heroically fended off invaders from without,
and when necessary gathered to punish criminals from within, as they
did to Benjamin following a gang-rape and murder that the little tribe
would not punish itself.
The problem was only that the tribal instinct was legitimized, in fact
nurtured, in a way that proved fatal.
FEDERATIONS always have the same dilemma: how much local power. Often
the debate is decided violently, but even then, to survive in the long
term, the federation must address the tribal instinct, whether by
suppression, appeasement or both.
The Israelite federation failed at this, as not even David's might and
Solomon's vision could properly cement it once both men died. During
the 500 years between the crossing of the Jordan and the destruction of
Samaria there were hardly five generations of Israelite unity. With
Solomon's death, the united Israelite kingdom unraveled much the way
the Yugoslav federation did following Tito's death.
Had the Israelite federation remained intact, it may have stood up to
the Assyrians who destroyed Israel and the Babylonians who destroyed
Judah. Tragically, their unresolved conflict made Judah and Israel face
each other for centuries the way the Confederacy and Union would have
done, had neither prevailed over the other, thus making it impossible
for either to produce the superpower we now all take as a given.
Who knows what course history would have taken had the Israelite
kingdom not split? Perhaps we could have been spared the centuries of
wandering, fearing, apologizing, hiding, bickering, bleeding, fasting
and lamenting to which our ancestors were condemned because their
ancestors never bothered bridging the rivers that ran between them? And
since we can't answer this hypothetical question, can we at least agree
this Ninth of Av that we modern Israelis had better learn to compromise
each his own sectarian convictions or we'll end up where Solomon's
temple did?
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