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November 2009
Article published in the Los Angeles Jewish Journal
October 28, 2009 Edition
In most instances, families relocate due to a measure of dissatisfaction
with where they live currently and a degree of hope for where they might
arrive. The Torah portion of Lech-Lecha presents the beginning of the
epic Israel-bound family journey of the Jewish people. It is distinct in
various respects from all other family relocations recorded in the Book
of Genesis or elsewhere in the Torah. A journey that continues still
today, it retains central purposes that date back to Abraham's formative
travels even as its unfolding, historic itinerary inspires travelogue
entries and reflective commentary with each passing day of the Jewish
present.
A comparison of all other family relocations in the Book of Genesis to
Abraham's formative journey to Israel reveals its uniqueness. The
departure of Adam and Eve from Eden was at least as much about leaving
Eden as arriving elsewhere. The builders of the Tower of Babel were
scattered from the Babylonian region of Shinar rather than being sent
anywhere else in particular. Noah fled the flood. Abraham's, Jacob's,
Joseph's and Jacob's other sons' journeys beyond what would come to be
known as the land of Israel were initiated due to mortal dangers they
faced living in Canaan.
However, Abraham's journey to Canaan is not presented in the Torah as an
escape from anywhere, for any reason. Its purpose is identified solely
with the merits and blessings associated with its commanded destination.
To ensure that Abraham, his descendants and all who would later read
this story understood the unique purpose of Abraham's relocation-journey
and its enduring implications, God pronounced to Abraham that his
descendants' destiny would be bound inextricably and forever to the
special land to which God would guide him and that great blessing would
accompany this bond. To ensure that the precise territory constituting
the Israel that would exist was just as unambiguous, God articulated the
territory's borders and had Abraham walk the entire land.
Ever since, the Jewish people have been bound to the land of Israel as
heirs to God's promises and blessings to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and
their families. Jews have lived in Israel, with a continuous presence,
for at least 2,500 years, possibly dating back as far as the time of
Joshua. And, the Israel in which Jews have resided throughout most of
this period - the same Israel promised biblically to our forbears -
includes Jerusalem, Hebron, Bethlehem, Jericho, Nablus and Ramallah,
areas assumed by many to constitute the heart of a future Palestinian
state.
Any honest broker of peace between the State of Israel and her Arab
neighbors must acknowledge publicly a fundamental historical truth and
require Arab and Muslim leaders to do the same, for most Israelis to
feel that their claim to Israel is affirmed and that their security is
an overriding concern. This fact and its implications derive from
Abraham's formative journey and were ignored by President Obama in his
Cairo speech and since then:
The land of Israel promised biblically to the Jews and inhabited by Jews
more so than anyone else since then includes Jerusalem, Judea and
Samaria every bit as much as Tel Aviv, Haifa and Eilat. Consequently,
the Holocaust and violence prior to it may have been why many Jews fled
Europe, and it might have been why most nations voted in 1947 to allow
for a Jewish state, but it constitutes neither the reason nor the
purpose underlying the historic Jewish return to Israel. Jews didn't
happen upon Israel in 1948, settling for a location that seemed easy and
safe. Rather, those who returned home to Israel, before or after the
Holocaust, did so despite the significant challenges they knew awaited
them.
Public recognition of the historic and continual Jewish claim to the
entire land of Israel by President Obama and, following his lead, by
Arab and Muslim leaders genuinely seeking peace with Israel is a
prerequisite, both theoretically and practically, to any final agreement
in which Arab and Muslim leaders would accept a permanent and Jewish
State of Israel, regardless of its final borders. It would acknowledge
that what constitutes "occupied territories" for Israel's enemies are
"disputed territories" to most Israelis. In truth, given that Israel
"occupied" Judea and Samaria in the defensive 1967 war aimed at
destroying the Jewish state, referring to these territories as
"disputed" rather than simply annexing them is more than generous on
Israel's part.
Arab and Muslim leaders could join with Israel's leaders in a mutual
recognition of historical claims rather than denying Israel's right to
exist. Israel would be encouraged to forgo land that is rightfully its
own rather than return it, as though anyone lay greater claim to it and
as if those who lost any of it to Israel (Jordan and Egypt - not a
Palestinian entity) want it back, in exchange for an enduring and
durable peace.
An honest accounting of history may be the key to determining whether
there exist today authentic voices of compromise among Arab and Muslim
leaders and whether Israel should see fit to forgo its historic and
legitimate claim to any portion of its land, at this juncture, in
pursuit of peace. It could likely be key to clarifying, as well, for our
own country, who our friends and allies in spirit and purpose in the
Middle East are and who they aren't. President Obama can turn this key.
Rabbi Isaac Jeret
Spiritual Leader |