The Religious View of the Secular State of Israel - Part 5

This article has been written by Rav Ari Shvat (Chwat), Rosh Midreshet Tal Orot in Michlelet Orot, Elkana. He has graciously offered to share his wisdom with the readers of Tzipiyah.com, and given me a few, very powerful and all very relevant, articles to share with you. This is the fifth part of the second article. Enjoy!

6. Sovereignty in the Land of Israel is a Mitzva

Up to this point, we have seen that the State of Israel, even if secular, is important as a means to guarantee both our physical and spiritual existence. On a completely different plane, we learn that there is an obligation from the Torah that the Land of Israel be under Jewish rule. In other words, the State of Israel is an ideal in of itself, not just a necessary median to alleviate the difficulties of anti-Semitism and assimilation. As the Ramban says:

“We are commanded to inherit the Land that Hashem gave to our forefathers, to Avraham, Yitzchak and Ya’acov, and not to abandon it in the hands of the other nations or to desolation. And He said to them: ‘and you should inherit the Land and settle in it, because I have given you the Land to inherit.'[1]… This is what our rabbis call milchemet… chova (an obligatory war) as the war of Yehoshua to conquer (Israel)… understand, that this mitzvah is to conquer ...this is a positive mitzva for every generation”.[2]

There are two components to this mitzva:

1. “and you should inherit”- “and not to abandon it in the hands of the other nations”, "conquer".

2. “and settle in it” - “(not to abandon it…) to desolation”.

In other words, just settling the Land of Israel is not enough, it also needs to be under Jewish rule. Similarly, Rav Yisrael Yehoshua Trunk of Kutna wrote a century ago:

“The main part of the mitzva is the inheriting and settling, as one does in his own property, to conquer the land of Israel so that it will be under our sovereignty, not the pointless arrival of today (written in 1891/ תרנ"א, when the land was under Turkish rule, A.C.)”.[3]

“All of the poskim, rishonim and achronim” (in the words of the Pitchei Teshuva)[4] maintain this mitzva of living in Israel like the Ramban. Even Rashi, who explains in his commentary on the Torah that “and settle in it” is only a promise, holds that the conquering is a mitzva,[5] as is also explicit in his commentary to the g'mara, where he defines mitzvat "yishuv Eretz Yisrael, to chase out the gentiles and settle Jews there".[6]

Even Rav Yitzchak DeLeon, who is famous for his lone (and rejected)[7] opinion that during the exile there is no mitzvah to live in Israel, would admit that in our time, with the advent of the State of Israel, it is obligatory, once again. In his opinion the Rambam does not count this as one of the 613 mitzvot because it does not apply to all the generations, and will only apply “when we will not be enslaved/subject to the other nations”.[8] If so, today, when there is once again Jewish sovereignty, the mitzva applies as it did in the period of the Tanach, even according to R. Yitzchak DeLeon.[9]
7. Independence as a Kiddush Hashem

In addition to the "technical" problems of assimilation and anti-Semitism, being subservient to the gentiles poses a theological problem, as well. We find written regarding the period of exile, "And there you will serve gods made by hand (man)", is translated by Onkelus, "And there you will serve those who serve idols".[10] The idea is clearly that if we serve those who serve other gods, we indirectly are serving those idols, strengthening the belief in those religions to be thought superior to the G-d of Israel, chalila. As the representatives of the G-d of Israel in the world,[11] the international status of Israel is a reflection upon Him, for better or worse. Not only do our individual or national actions make a Kiddush Hashem (sanctification of G-d's Name) or Chilul (desecration) Hashem in the world, but our status as seen in the eyes of the gentiles reflects and influences how they view Judaism and the "Jewish" G-d.

We find throughout the Tanach, that when Israel loses a war, the refrain of the gentiles was: "Hey Jew! Where is your G-d?![12] When the Babylonians defeated us and send us to exile, it is referred to as a Chilul Hashem, for the gentiles taunt us. "ויחללו את שם קדשי באמור להם עם ה' אלה ומארצו יצאו!", "and they defiled My Name when they are told: 'This is G-d's nation? And they were exiled from their Land!'"[13] The commentaries[14] explain: "They (Israel) humiliated My Honor. How? When their enemies said about us: their G-d wasn't capable of saving neither His Nation nor His Land!" In other words, "Our god is stronger than the Jewish G-d, for we won the war!"

The same is true regarding more modern religions, as well. Before the founding of the State of Israel, Christians often "proved" their religion based upon the doctrine of the "wandering Jew", never to return to the Holy Land, as punishment, in their opinion, for our rejection of their god/messiah. Islam, as well, likes to see their successful military campaigns as proof that "god is Muslim". Contrarily, the formidable and independent State of Israel and Israeli army's trouncing our Islamic enemies, serve as theologically problematic, to say the least, for our "monotheistic competitors".

In a similar vein, the g'mara explains the reason we don't say hallel on Purim.[15] Despite the fact that Megilat Esther concludes with the Jews enjoying even superior status in Persia,[16] nevertheless, as long as we are under foreign rule, and “we are servants of Achashverosh”, we are unable praise Hashem as if we are “servants of Hashem” (the opening phrase of hallel). Only one who has no other master, no division of loyalty between his nation and his G-d (note the case of Jonathan Pollard), can serve Hashem wholeheartedly. “Whoever lives in Eretz Yisrael is as if he has a G-d, and whoever lives in chutz laAretz, is as if he has no G-d, as it is written '…to give you the Land of Israel, to be your G-d".[17]

In Israel, our loyalty to the nation of Israel, not only doesn't contradict our faithfulness to Hashem, but on the contrary, expresses it. For example, one who gives his life for the nation is considered as if he was killed על קידוש ה', in the sanctification of G-d's Name, for they are one and the same. "ישראל ואורייתא וקודשא בריך הוא, חדש הוא", "Israel, the Torah and G-d are one and the same".[18] This parallel is even found in the Tanach, "And you shall serve Hashem your G-d and Israel His nation…"[19] Although this may sound at first blasphemous, upon understanding that Jewish nationalism and Jewish religion are intertwined, it is logical.

As we have seen, even if not faced with the dilemma of dual loyalty, the ideal of serving G-d wholeheartedly, plus the ideal of Kiddush Hashem, the positive reflection upon the G-d of Israel, are other advantages of having a strong and internationally respected independent Jewish State, albeit a non-ideal one.

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[1] Bamidbar 33, 53-54.

[2] Ramban, Additions to Sefer HaMitzvot, Aseh 4.

[3] Resp. Yeshuat Malko, Y. D. 66.

[4] Pitchei T'shuva, E. H. 75, 6. This is also the summary of the Sdei Chemed , vol. 9, pp. 182-183, in the 1967/5727 edition.

[5] Rashi on Bamidbar 33, 53.

[6] Rashi on Gittin 8b, see also on Y'vamot 64a. From his commentary on these g'marot, which are a more reliable halachic source than his commentary on the Torah, it is explicit that Rashi holds there to be an obligation to live in the Land, and a sin to live in chutz LaAretz.

[7] See footnote 50.

[8] Megilat Esther, commentary on Sefer HaMitzvot of the Rambam, additions of the Ramban, Mitzvat Aseh 4.

[9] The Megilat Esther mentions three phrases describing the period when the mitzvah will apply again as follows: "this mitzvah does not apply until the arrival of mashiach"; "when we won't be enslaved to the other nations"; "particularly in the time when the temple exists". It is not clear whether the Megilat Esther means that we explicitly need all three stages – independence, mashiach and the building of the temple –or, more likely (as is more common), he simply uses all of these expressions interchangeably in describing ימות המשיח, "the messianic period", which is already here (see the article "Atchalta DeGe'ula- Not Just Another False Messiah"). It is also more logical that R. DeLeon does not continue to prohibit mass aliya before the fulfillment of all three phrases, because the building of the temple, according to the Rambam (whose opinion R. DeLeon is explaining), is an obligation upon man to build. Accordingly, if we have independence, this is already considered "the end of days" (as we cited in the Rambam's opinion above, see footnote 35) and consequently, the mitzva of living in and conquering Israel is once again obligatory. Even though the opinion of the Megilat Esther, who disagrees with the Ramban, is explicitly rejected by the poskim (Shulchan Aruch, E.H. 75, 3; O. Ch. 248, 4; see footnote 50, and Kol HaTor, p. 534, who was angered greatly by anyone who thought to exempt himself from aliya because of this lone and rejected opinion, even calling them "m'raglim"!), we brought his opinion because of the irony, that even he, who is usually cited as the source of the anti-Zionists, today would apparently obligate aliya en masse to Israel.

[10] Targum Onkelus, Dvarim 4, 28.

[11] For example: T'hillim 148, 13, "and He raised the horn for His Nation, for Bnei Yisrael, His intimate Nation"; Dvarim 14, 1, "You are sons to Hashem your G-d"; ibid, 7, 6, and 14, 2, "G-d chose you , from among all the nations, to be His treasured Nation", Y'shayahu 43, 21, "This Nation I created for Myself, they will tell of My praise".

[12] For example, T'hilim 42, 4, "My tears were (constant) like bread day and night, when they taunt me all day, "Where is your G-d?"; ibid 137, 3, "On the shores of Babylon… our captors asked us mockingly to sing, "Sing us some of your songs from Zion; ibid, 42, 11, "… my oppressors taunted me, "where is your G-d?!"

[13] Y'chezkel 36, 20.

[14] Ibid, Rashi, Radak, Metzudot, Malbim. See the article on "The Exile-Mentality and National Pride", where we expounded upon this cardinal point.



[15] Megila 14a.

[16] Esther 8, 17, "… and many of the people converted to Judaism, for the fear of the Jews fell upon them".

[17] K'tuvot 110b based upon Vayikra 25, 38.

[18] Zohar, cited below in footnote 81. T'hilim 79; Baba Batra 10b. Even one who was passive while murdered by gentiles is considered slain על קידוש ה', Resp. Chatam Sofer, Y.D. 333; R. A. Rakeffet-Rothkoff, The 'Kedoshim' Status of the Holocaust Victims", Gesher 9 (5745), pp. 99-108.

[19] Divrei HaYamim II, 35, 3.