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hi everybody this is Eve Harrow on
rejuvenation for the land of Israel this
show is being pre-taped on May 10th 2019
hey BER 57 79 after a very interesting
as usual week in Israel very difficult
time at the beginning of the week with
things that are of course happening in
Gaza and then we have the we have
Yamazaki horn we had Memorial Day which
is wrenching and emotional for everybody
in the country and then moving right
into Independence Day which is also
wrenching and emotional for everybody in
the country and so just a very pendulum
wide swinging and up-and-down roller
coaster week but I have on the line and
I'm entry and I would like to speak
today to rabbi hyman of Vaughn who is a
columnist for my favorite newspaper
unfortunately for you guys only
published in Hebrew maybe one day
that'll change also an educator at
yeshiva pirates John and me dress at
Linden BAM and the author of 12 books
one of which is was translated into
English Genesis and Jewish thought a few
years ago so thank you so much rather
rough time for joining us today on the
Land of Israel Network it's just a few
hours before Shabbat but I really wanted
to take the opportunity to to have you
share some thoughts with my listeners
thank you for the invitation okay okay
so one of your columns and you're really
that the columns in my coalition are
pretty much the first or second thing
that I that I turn to and I open up the
newspaper very very thought-provoking
and one of them I believe the last one
you spoke about why the will we call the
school game or what we call the national
religious sector in Israeli society
those of us who really are trying to
combine both the traditions and the
metes votes and and the religious world
but with very deep involvement in
Israeli society the Army National
Service you know whatever that is why
why we are not success as successful
politically as people expect us
to be so can you I talked to my
listeners a little bit about where your
thinking went on this because I thought
you had some very interesting points to
make well first there is a myth in
Israel that the religious Zionist
community is very extremely influential
in Israel about the policy of the
government etc and actually I think it's
not true I think the religious Zionist
community the dirty Lumi community is
extremely unsuccessful politically
speaking and not very influential I
think the major you know major case for
examining is the disengagement from Gaza
Strip mm-hmm 10,000 settlers were
evacuated from the area from their homes
10,000 most of them were religious
Zionist I think no other community in
Israel would find itself in such a
situation with no effective political
resistance to this to this move to this
you know destructive movement and that's
what you said in your column that if it
was the ultra-orthodox
or you know it was a group of
ultra-orthodox living there they would
still be in Gush Katif which I thought
was a fascinating comment because um you
know it's but it wasn't about the
cherone government that it wasn't about
you know tremendous political pressure
or terrorism or the fact that a lot of
Israelis felt that the investment in the
army and the things that we were doing
in Gaza you know we had to leave of
course in retrospect everybody or most
people given what's going on now in the
South realized that it possibly was one
of the stupidest things that Israel did
but to say that you that you think that
the lack of power the lack of influence
of the people living there or of their
political representatives is one of the
reasons that that they were that they
went out it is absolutely fascinating to
me I think it's a very simple fact you
know you'll appear today is very major
politician in his
well in those days he was still you know
writing in the newspaper yeah and was a
journalist and he wrote honestly after
the disengagement we know it won't help
us him you know in to to bring peace it
won't help us to bring quiet but it was
worth it just to show you this settler
the religious settlers to show you that
you know you do not rule the world just
to I don't know you have some some
vengeance on this in this community I
think it's it was horrible but yeah it
was wrong to the the BDS to the boycott
movement that it's not so much about
helping the Arabs but it's about hurting
Israel and hurting the Jews yeah and in
Israel if we speak about the
disengagement if the police tries to
evacuate a Bedouin family which built a
house on government land it's just to
evacuate one family demands you know
like a hundred policemen and it's very
simple move and we were in the
disengagement 10,000 settlers were taken
out of their homes and you know the
government did it so I think the the
religious Zionist community is extremely
weak politically speaking we don't want
to be violent I mean part of the reason
that the Bedouins aren't gonna move is
because everybody knows that if they go
in their blood will be spilled and that
was one of the very good part of the
story I think the settlers of a Gaza
Strip were actually heroes heroes
because they were not violent and
they're not very appreciated they should
be appreciated I don't know any other
population who would react in such a
mature way you know in order
to avoid citizens warring Israel they
actually let the government evacuate him
but part of the story is the lack of
political strength for the religious
Zionist community I think it was also
very bold and uh we were blind to this
fact because of the day short reign a
short time success of Benetton shaked
and in the political system of Israel
but actually it was a it was the unusual
and it was very unusual and and right
now we see that the religious Zionist
political party is very weak very small
a lot of religious Zionist voted for a
parties they didn't get any
representative Indyk nesset and I think
we should ask why we don't see such a
phenomena in other communities they have
a deem knows very well how to manage in
the political arena the left wings in
Israel they EA they try to to get
together in a in big parties to make to
be rivals to Netanyahu just the feeling
my community lost aim people speak about
something like a hundred thousand votes
and that will last two parties that
don't have any representative in the
Knesset you know in America maybe it
sounds like a minor a number of votes
but in Israel it's huge
well part of and you mentioned it in
your column as well what what some
people will say is the very fact that we
are integrated into Israeli society that
we were not homogeneous we don't vote as
a sector you'll find the straw game as
we say the man right wearing the kipapa
the women also identified with this
national religious lifestyle in all
sectors of Israel
Society and we don't vote as sectarians
for necessarily a national religious
party that you will find that our sector
and the left on the right voting for the
Likud and therefore we don't have that
power at that sectoral powder power
because we're everywhere and and I think
maybe part of what also what happens in
Gush Katif is the fact that the army is
such a big value for for many of us and
defending the state something that Larry
Larry deem don't do but as a result when
the expulsion happened and it was the
army and it was soldiers that were sent
to take people out of their homes there
were no where there was no way that the
people living there we're gonna fight
against the army and these are our own
children and this is this is a well as
you say in your column perhaps we've put
some level of holiness if kedusha into a
realm where it doesn't belong at the
political realm and even the army are
not holy things they're it's about power
and it's about influence and we have
perhaps we perhaps care too much about
the institutions of the government and
that becomes our undoing
you mentioned two claims first you said
that maybe religious then is men and
women on day vote for all kinds of
parties not just for dear sectorial
party and of course you are right but
normally I would expect armed
representative of the Likud Party let's
player yet taking care of the interest
of the religious Zionist community they
have a lot of religious Zionist voters
in even happened in the disengagement um
we still don't see our religious Zionist
power within the Likud the other parties
don't have so many religious Zionist
voters some of the left-wing parties in
Israel have more religious and its
representatives than religious honest
voters mm-hmm but um we don't see any
our religious Zionist power within the
liquid with specific religious honest
ideas or interests
so we're not here and we know there are
a specific party is very weak maybe
because we also vote for other parties
but we don't see any organized lobby
groups within the liquid or any other
party about you second claim
I also agree I think it's part of this
problem that we do not think about the
political arena very in a very rational
way and it's because it's because we
could mire the State of Israel and you
know it deserves our admiration maybe we
we confuse the sanctity we we think of
within the people of Israel sometimes we
think the same way about the State of
Israel which is not holy as the people
of Israel each state and we aim with we
tend to to face the government of Israel
with the same holiness we think about
the State of Israel and this is a second
mistake mistake because the government
especially is not holy and we expect our
representatives to represent not only
our interests and not only our ideology
but to represent the perfection state we
we expect from the State of Israel we we
actually aim hope that our
representatives are members of the
Knesset would be perfect and if they are
not perfect and you know we both know
that no one is perfect especially not
politicians when they are not perfect we
are very disappointed
the are our expectations from the
political system are not realistic
we hope for too much so we get too
little we don't know we didn't figure it
out how to actually get a power and
actually influence the political system
so look we have precedents for this in
our history I think about let's say the
hush Mona em who were Kohanim they were
priests and they were supposed to just
do their holy job work in the temple but
then they become they also take on the
kingship and according of you know to
the Casal according to the rabbi's this
is where they go down because they are
mixing the two things and and Torah
talks about the fact that there should
be a separation between holy work that's
done and the let's call the political
leadership at the time it's a monarchy
now it's democracy we shouldn't expect
that if the message is very clear that
we haven't been able maybe to move
forward into the 21st century or were in
the time of the Omer right now where we
talk about Rabbi Akiva and Bar Kokhba
and the revolt in the second century
against Hadrian and the Romans were also
there's a may perhaps a confusion about
religious leadership versus military
leadership so you as a rabbi as an
educator do you see that we maybe maybe
there are messages here in our past
history that we're not applying
correctly to today this is a very
interesting juxtaposition you know we
just mentioned the Cushman name yes a
day they were a priest and they were
kings and it's a not a very good mixer
and I think you are right and I think we
should learn not only from the Jewish
history we should learn also from
American political wisdom because in
America religious people are afraid of
the government they hope the government
would not interfere and not intervene in
their religious life and in Israel
religious people especially religious
Zionist they are and they are admirers
of the government not the government of
government you know
in a general way they hope the
government will love religious stuff
they hope the government will they
finance their religious schools and the
government will finance religious
synagogues and I think aim here is the
Americans have something very important
to teach us the Israelis Israel is not
America now Israel is a nation state
America not so much not in the same way
Israel is a very specific nation with a
very specific history and very specific
memories of the Jewish people and the
Jewish tradition but we can learn
something from America and from American
conservatives especially religious
conservatives we should learn that
government doesn't know how manage
religious ideas and religious issues and
actually I'm not in favor of separation
of church and state I don't notice okay
well I don't think this slogan is
relevant to Israel you know when the
flag of the State of Israel is actually
Tully's no Jewish religious symbol how
can you actually make your a wall of
separation but I think we should know
that the government if a very limited
influence and a very limited
positive influence on spiritual issues
and we should not expect from the
government to achieve all our religious
dreams government needs to do what it
you know what it knows to do it it knows
how to build a erodes some roads and and
the government managed a pulley system
and the jail's and army and some other
very crucial stuff but the government
arm is not
the before a the full reality
realization of all our a of all our
dreams and if we have lower expectations
from the government and from the
political system I think we the
religious Zionist community would
achieve more from this system we just
hope for too much and we get too little
well look there's a practical element
that we do need political power for as
they say in cameroon TOA you know if we
want to have let's say the religious
institutions they you teach at so a lot
of them get budgets get a certain
stipend from the government and
something that you mentioned in that
column for example is that the
ultra-orthodox know how to do this very
well they have a lot of numbers now in
the Knesset and there's mainly two
things that they want they want to not
have to serve in the army
they want enough political power so that
they can be key and get that and they
also want funding for their Torah
institutions so if we want that as well
which of course we do
we still have to somehow have that
political power in order to be able to
get the budgets for our for our own
institutions i hear i do not agree with
the javed in our Orthodox I think most
of religious Zionist in Israel want more
political power and more political
influence not imported to get more
government budgets they don't think this
way arm we would like to have more
influence in order to actually change
things that we don't like in in the
state what I yell educate the Secretary
of Justice just did in the last four
years was extremely successful
actually a change in you know she she
initiated a change in Israel justice
system order it would be more
conservative more national and I think
most of religious
till you mean Israel admire this success
this is the kind of things we want to
actually influence with on one just to
get mind for our sect Oriole
institutions mm-hmm yet she herself
isn't she didn't grow up as you said in
bnei akiva me she herself while she's a
part of the religious I in this world
she was a part of the party she herself
that's not the lifestyle that she leads
which is fascinating and I think I'm
afraid to say that it might be one of
the terms for her success because she
had a more healthy approach to word
politics she was not expecting it you
know to be the arm realization of all
her dreams and she was very reactive and
she a joined forces with with some
people some of them nice and some of
them are not so nice in order to achieve
more influence and she was extremely
successful and no religious Zionist
political leader ever got it
I know not in the last 50 years mmm-hmm
maybe there was less animosity towards
her from other people also because of
that you know I think what happened
yesterday or we didn't have God she got
her share in hatred responses you know
it's not at the Liberals there left her
alone no no but I think it was because
of her politics and not because of the
way you know what she does on Shabbat or
what she puts in your plate but you know
you know I think for my listeners
there's something interesting that
happens on an Independence Day in Israel
there's a there's a blessing that we say
the Hallel which is a beautiful prayer
that we say on our festivals and when
you know when miracles have happened to
us and that it was applied by the
national religious world to Independence
Day to the fact that we won the war of
independence it is cast as a miracle and
therefore deserving of having this
special prayer sent and sometimes if you
want to and here I'm speaking to my
listeners
if you want to figure out where somebody
sits in terms of their view of the
modern-day State of Israel one of the
questions to ask is do you say Hallel do
you say this prayer on Independence Day
and on Jerusalem Day which of course is
the commemoration of the victory of the
six-day war and that's coming up and do
you say it with the blessing you know so
cuz some people say it but don't say
with the blessing so perhaps we have fed
into this idea of holiness of the modern
day state when it comes to this
particular Hallel prayer yeah we we
actually first you are you're right it's
a very crucial sign of religious Zionist
world of you once I was in London and uh
Haredi Russia Shiva came to collect
money for his institution and you can
you know you could see just looking at
his clothes
that is extremely ultra-orthodox and the
rabbi of the show who was religious
Zionist said please give money to this
man he followed me they are Zionists and
they say Hallel only and the
Independence Day and Israel's
independence day and a look at that
person I know I could swear he didn't do
it
didn't say Hallel if you're mad mode in
Israel it's very very clear and now I
think this is a huge challenge to the
religious and spiritual leadership
worship but we could shape and you
scientist world of world view that can
evaluate the spiritual value of Israel a
worldview that can say we believe in the
State of Israel we we share it's
spiritual value but it's only a state
you know it's not all our dreams it's
not all our hope it's not our God in a
state in one very important stage for
the people of Israel for religious views
but we right now we lack the terms we
will lock the terms of dealing with
Israel as a complicated reality which it
is it is is related people national
state and it is a very patriotic state
and it is in some way traditional state
but in some ways not it some days it's a
very progressive state in some ways it's
very secular state it's complicated we
still like the exact terms to interpret
this reality mm-hmm
so if you were a political adviser let's
say and you could give advice to this
sector so how would you say that we
could go about moving forward in order
to have more influence in this country
luckily I'm not a political I think this
you know these four years until next
election in Israel it might be less
right will will be a great challenge and
a test and I I want to see whether our
politicians religious Zionist politician
it can use wisely their political
strength in in order to achieve
realistic goals and not just dreams and
not not approaching political arena like
it's a shul it's not a sure it's not a
synagogue nice it's something else and
I'm really curious and and hopeful to
see whether they they learn some lessons
you know you you mentioned that we have
what to learn from the American
political system and I would say by
inference other Western democracies but
we are in the Middle East and and
sometimes I wonder if that's why we shy
away to some degree from power a I think
that 2,000 years of of
a lot of powerlessness hasn't yet been
taken out of us we we we don't know what
to do with power weren't comfortable
with power and and therefore perhaps we
don't use it wisely but when we look
around in the Middle East at our
immediate neighbors we see power being
used in awful ways and perhaps we move
away from it too much because we think
if you use your power then you'll become
like some of our neighbors who are just
awful people and and do things against
their own people did you have any
thoughts about that because you know
being here in the Middle East we are not
in Canada we are not in Europe we are
surrounded by some of the worst people
on the planet do you think that affects
us in how we see this state as the only
democracy in the Middle East but somehow
there's a little this little voice in
our heads that says be careful and
perhaps we're too careful I think these
are very wise comments I would just add
more more a comment one comment which is
the Jewish people for 2,000 years lacked
political power mm-hmm
but we did have one political minor
political organization which is the
Jewish Jewish community which is
actually wonder all around the world
Jews got together in arranged their
communities with no external power but
with a lot of internal power and aim I
wonder why we the Israelis do not pay
any attention to the political tradition
of Jewish communities you know it's
almost no research no historical
research about this community maybe I'm
exaggerating but not enough not enough
because this is the one example of
Jewish political organization we
actually had for the last 2,000 years
and who pays attention to how Jews
actually worked out their communities I
might add that people here in Israel
think
that we learned about democracy from
western states like Sweden and the
United States but almost none of the
Jews who were here in 1980 1948 when
when actually the State of Israel I was
born almost none of them was born in a
western state rights
Israeli democracy the origin of the
Israeli democracy was the tradition of
the Jewish community why are we blind to
this to this arm extremely important
tradition mm-hmm and there's your next
book actually the X elite might be no be
well look on the other hand the Jewish
communities in the Diaspora for all
those years didn't have to make the
decisions that a political entity has to
make let's say when do you go to war
when do you not you know that we had to
survive as Jewish communities make sure
that within the communities people had
whatever was we needed and also to
protect ourselves but when you when
you're playing at the table right when
you're sitting with the big boys it
becomes a totally different
decision-making capabilities and we have
to learn how to do that that's true
that's true and and when we talk about
these kind of decisions we are actually
pupils of the western part we can just
comfort with the knowledge that West
Western thought was the child of the
ancient biblical thought so we just you
know in length because we actually have
as I mentioned earlier we actually have
a lot we can learn from American
political tradition which is extremely
successful tradition today I see in
America some you know lack of confidence
yeah yeah actually actually it's a great
system
you know comparatively speaking what are
the alternatives look right and look
left
see the alternatives and America is
going on I think generally very well so
we have a lot to learn from the West
um and and just remember that a lot of a
lot of the good things that were
developed in the Western world are
actually from ancient Jewish urging
biblical origin we can see it in the
United States you know in the symbols in
the memories and in the writings of the
founding fathers of the United States so
maybe we actually have the answers
within our own tradition we need but we
need help you you're right you're right
because we we have the seeds in our own
tradition mmm ah they flourished and
grew and developed in in other soil and
we can watch and learn and and see you
know how other nations got along with a
with their political systems well what
would you see as the ideal kind of ruler
a benevolent monarch you see democracy
as being the best way of running things
to paraphrase Winston Churchill except
for any other words the word Julian it
didn't say the worst yes yeah I think I
think it's a very biblical a phrase that
that this is what I see in the Bible I
say that the Bible arm it does not like
very much any government but you know
you cannot live without a ruler right so
let it be as weak as you can and I think
it's a very logical way to describe
democracy mm-hmm I think that's what
that's what Churchill actually thought
about and he was it was very much into
the Bible you know he knew a lot about
the Bible and about the ancient
religious tradition mm-hmm mm-hmm all
right so it sounds like the Bible is
somewhat of a libertarian kind of
document maybe Arian it's not
libertarian
because the Bible does not care that
much about personal liberty it cares
about communal liberty about the freedom
to every tribe in every community to
practice its own traditions and so it's
not libertarian mm-hmm but buried
actually I I read the Bible the Bible
afraid our farm is afraid of too strong
a ruler and and I think democracy is a
great kind of government and you know we
can argue about it all night man they
know the bottom line is democracy works
this might be the most important crucial
conclusion mm-hmm okay
well thank you so much for for your
insights and we'll see if the religious
Zionist community can use these next few
years perhaps to regroup because looks
like we're not going to be in positions
of influence and do some soul-searching
literally and see where we go from here
rabbi hyman of own educator columnist
for McCrory Sean and author thank you so
much for joining me today on the Land of
Israel Network Thank You Shabbat you
know step by tell them and everyone I
want to thank as usual then and Tabitha
and everyone else at the network and you
can always write to me Eve at the Land
of Israel dot-com and if you're going to
be in Israel
I'm chef luck you just might get to see
me I'm going to be a part of the Land of
Israel weekend that we have at the Mount
Zion hotel the chef award of a lifetime
with some of my other co-hosts and it
should be a really great weekend so
please look into that okay Eve Harrow
rejuvenation on the Land of Israel
Network take care of me Betty goodbye
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