By MATTHEW WAGNER
Rabbi Ya'acov Shapira, head of the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva in Jerusalem,
made a decidedly militant speech on Sunday evening calling to replace
the government and to continue building in all parts of the Land of
Israel. "The blood of our brothers shouts to us from this land,"
Shapira said at a press conference in the library where many of the
yeshiva students were wounded or killed on Thursday. The pockmarked
floors evidenced where terrorist Ala Abu Dhaim "confirmed his kills" by
shooting already-wounded victims in the head, and the bullet holes in
the walls and bookshelves were clearly visible.
"Here in this holy place, on the Land of Israel, our students' blood
was spilled. May God take vengeance," Shapira quoted from The Kuzari by
Rabbi Yehuda Halevi, who wrote that the first murder in human history,
Cain's killing of Abel, was over the Land of Israel. Shapira - the son
of Rabbi Avraham Shapira, the previous yeshiva head and former chief
rabbi of Israel, who passed away in September - pointed out that his
yeshiva served as a training base for rabbis and students who went out
to settle all parts of the Land of Israel.
The yeshiva head then related a story that has become legend among
students at Mercaz Harav. Weeks before the Six-Day War, Rabbi Tzvi
Yehuda Kook, the spiritual father of the settlement movement,
prophesied the conquest of Judea and Samaria. "Yes, where is our
Hebron? Have we forgotten it?" Kook asked of hundreds of students who
had gathered at Mercaz Harav on the eve of Independence Day, 1967. "And
where is our Shechem [Nablus]? And our Jericho? Will we forget them?
And the far side of the Jordan, it is ours, every clod of soil, every
region and bit of earth belonging to the Lord's land. Is it in our
hands to give up even one millimeter?"
Shapira said Kook's call to settle the Land echoed to this day.
Shapira was accompanied by Rabbi Haim Steiner, a senior educator at
the yeshiva, and Rabbi Yerachmiel Weiss, head of Mercaz Harav's high
school yeshiva. Behind the three men was a huge copy of a declaration
written by Kook detailing the various prohibitions against ceding any
part of the Land of Israel to non-Jews. Yehoshua Mor-Yosef, who served
as official spokesman for the yeshiva, said that Kook's declaration was
"the basis of all that we believe in."
Shapira also called to replace the country's political leadership with
one inspired by the Torah and Jewish thought, which he called "our
people's road map." "When there is no faith in the justness of our way,
there is no spiritual strength, and our physical strength also is
weakened," he said. "The entire nation is hoping for a change in
perspectives, thought and approaches and systems, and this is the time.
I believe a majority of the people in Israel are united in these
aspirations."
Earlier Sunday, dozens of students and some educators verbally
assaulted Education Minister Yuli Tamir as she left Mercaz Harav after
visiting the high school. The yeshiva men shouted "murderer" and
"traitor" and pushed police and security guards who surrounded Tamir.
Tamir was quoted by Ynet as saying that the incident reminded her of
the days leading up to the assassination of prime minister Yitzhak
Rabin in 1995. Weiss called the men's behavior "stupid," but added that
Tamir's left-wing political views made it difficult for the students to
accommodate her.
In contrast, a visit by Public Security Minister Avi Dichter went
smoothly. Mor-Yosef said that though both ministers were members of the
same government, Dichter's right-wing views and rich security
establishment past - he was head of the Shin Bet (Israel Security
Agency) from 2000-2005 - made him more acceptable than Tamir, a member
of Peace Now.
Yeshiva heads turned down a request by Olmert on Sunday to make a
condolence visit, Israel Radio reported.
Until Tamir's departure, the atmosphere was generally quiet, with
students talking quietly in the corridors and the courtyard of the
yeshiva. Many revisited the terrorist attack in small groups,
reconstructing precisely what had happened.
The rabbis of the yeshiva ordered all students, except for a
designated few, to refrain from talking to the press.
Natanel Burman - the first to see Dhaim, who entered the yeshiva
carrying a large carton containing a Kalashnikov rifle - recounted how
he had thought the terrorist was Jewish because he had "a light
complexion."
Burman recalled how he and some other students had even joked, "Who
ordered a TV?”
Original
Source
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