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Rabbi John Rosove's Blog

Monthly Archives: March 2019

The Politicization of Israel by the Republican Party and AIPAC

10 Sunday Mar 2019

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in American Jewish Life, American Politics and Life, Israel and Palestine, Israel/Zionism, Jewish Identity

≈ 1 Comment

I understand that AIPAC’s purpose has been to support whatever position the government of the State of Israel advocates, but there comes a time when we American Jews must stand for our liberal Jewish values (the vast majority of American Jews support a two-state solution) because only through a two-state solution can Israel remain a majority Jewish state and a democracy in which all its citizens, Jewish and Palestinian-Arab, have equal rights. This is a foundational principle articulated in Israel’s own Declaration of Independence.

For my full statement go to my blog at the Times of Israel

https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/the-politicization-of-israel-by-the-republican-party-and-aipac/

A place of senseless hatred, rage, and violence instead of love and the unity of the Jewish people

08 Friday Mar 2019

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Ethics, Israel/Zionism, Jewish History, Jewish Identity, Social Justice, Women's Rights

≈ Leave a comment

Note: The following d’var Torah was written by my friend, Rabbi Joshua Weinberg, Vice-President of the Union for Reform Judaism on Israel and Reform Zionism and President of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA). This week marks the 30th anniversary of Women of the Wall and their peaceful prayer was interrupted by violence from the Ultra-Orthodox community in Jerusalem.

The unfolding drama this week takes us to the center focus point for all Jews from time immemorial. Reports of angry mobs showing up to kick, fight, spit at, and rip off the tallitot and kippot of those coming to pray and celebrate with the Women of the Wall on the occasion of their 30th anniversary, filled the air of the Western Wall plaza this morning. Rabbi Noa Sattath left bloodied but unbowed, and Yizhar Hess, head of the Israeli Conservative (Masorti) Movement wrote that in “ten years of praying at the Kotel each Rosh Hodesh, he had never seen such hatred, such violence, and such rage in their eyes.”

The drama has been at this place, and at this exact place on earth, for three-thousand years. In fact, it is this week that we read in the Haftarah of Parshat Pekudei (Kings I Chapters 7-8) about that moment when King Solomon built his Temple.

בָּנֹ֥ה בָנִ֛יתִי בֵּ֥ית זְבֻ֖ל לָ֑ךְ מָכ֥וֹן לְשִׁבְתְּךָ֖ עוֹלָמִֽים׃ (מלכים א’ ח:יג)

“I have now built for You a stately House, A place where You May dwell forever.” (Kings I 8:13)

This was the place that was meant to be for worship, for pilgrimage and as the single symbol meant to unify our people. The Temple Mount is the single most important symbol that we have as a people. It served as the focal point for all of Jewish society while it stood, and its memory served as the most important force in keeping us alive during our centuries of exile.

The term Zionism was coined (c. 1890) to connect directly to the memory of the Temple in Jerusalem as the last time we had sovereignty in our Land. It was also to say that the establishment of a Jewish sovereign political entity would, in fact, be the Third Commonwealth, the Third Temple.

After the 1967 Six-Day War, when the famous 3 words roused the entire Jewish world “הר הבית בידינו” “The Temple Mount is in Our Hands,” we then had sovereignty over the remnants of our ancient site. Soon after it again became a point of contention. The Israeli government and the antiquities authorities could have turned the area surrounding the Temple Mount into a historical/archeological preservation site, and place of pilgrimage, a ceremonial plaza, and tourist attraction like Massada, Tziporri, Gamla, and many more. But instead, it became an Orthodox synagogue. Yes, Jews have been praying there since we had access, and yes it was a mystical custom to place a note in the cracks of the wall, but no other site became an officially sanctioned prayer space like this one.

The significance of the Temple Mount is more than just a place of prayer. It in fact symbolizes the national struggle and for some is a symbol for national liberty.
Philosopher Tomer Persico wrote in 2014:

“Make no mistake – this is not about untrammeled longing for the burning of sacrifices. It is neither the observation of the biblical commandment nor the upholding of the Halakhic stricture that matter to these Knesset Members, even the religious ones among them. The Temple Mount serves Regev, Feiglin, Edelstein, and Elkin as a national flag around which to rally. The location of the Temple to them is nothing more than a capstone in the national struggle against the Palestinians, and the sovereignty over the mountain becomes a totem embodying the sovereignty over the entire country in its commanding figure”

And today, it became once again a place of senseless hatred, of rage, of violence, a place where Jews showed up to fight and to prevent their fellow Jews from welcoming this happiest of months.

Rabbi of the Western Wall, Shmuel Rabinowitz appealed to the groups saying, “that the Western Wall plaza is not a… demonstration area and asked [for attendees] to refrain from provocations, and to guard the Western Wall as a unified place, and not a place of division.”

“On Rosh Chodesh Adar II (Friday), I urge everyone to refrain from bringing their war to the Wall,” he said. “Please – the Western Wall is not a platform for ideas and not a platform for holding demonstrations.”

Oh, the irony. Not a platform for ideas??? Huh?

This is the exact spot where Hillel and Shammai argued, where our sages sat in the Sanhedrin, where Christians attribute some of the most important actions of Jesus, the place where Muhammad ascended to heaven (according to Islam). Not a place for ideas???

If you don’t want demonstrations Rabbi Rabinowitz then please call on the leaders of your movement, and movements such as Hazon (not the Jewish environmental organization) who placed a fake front page newspaper showing that “The Reform Jews Have Conquered the Kotel” and calling on everyone to show up this morning to rescue it. Call on those who spit, rip clothing and tallitot, and physically assault fellow Jews that this is not a platform for holding demonstrations.

Just imagine that today, on the beginning of the month of Adar II, the authorities of the Western Wall said “Today we are commanded to be happy, and we welcome you with open arms! Today, we realize that you are not a threat to our form of Judaism, and you are just trying to pray and exalt God’s name like we are! Please come, read the word of the living God, and rejoice in this most joyful of days.”

Just imagine what would happen if so many people were praying and dancing and singing and celebrating that they didn’t even notice a couple of hundred women coming to this holiest of spots.

Now, there is great debate among us, even in the Reform Movement about the place, significance, and efforts around the Kotel. Some say it’s insignificant, and some say it is.
Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, the Chief Rabbi of the Western Wall shared with us this pearl of wisdom in his drasha on this weeks’ Torah portion today: “But ongoing and persistent action has the power to create real change in someone’s life.”

Thank you, Rabbi, that is sound advice.

Current Debate in Congress over anti-Semitism and Criticism of Israel

06 Wednesday Mar 2019

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in American Jewish Life, American Politics and Life, Israel and Palestine, Israel/Zionism, Jewish-Islamic Relations, Social Justice

≈ Leave a comment

This J Street statement puts the current tumult over Congresswoman Omar’s statements concerning Antisemitism and Criticism of Israel into sharp focus. I urge you to read it.

https://jstreet.org/…/statement-on-the-current-debate-ove…/…

Young people remembering Holocaust Survivors

05 Tuesday Mar 2019

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in American Jewish Life, Jewish History, Jewish Identity, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

This week I received an email announcement of an 8-minute animated video created by a group of 12-year old students at a local middle school, one of whom is an upcoming bar mitzvah at my synagogue. The film is based on an interview of an Auschwitz survivor, Erika Jacoby, who tells her story. The students created the visuals.

The film is astounding in its own right, beautifully executed and moving to watch, and even more so given that it was created by very young Jewish and non-Jewish students.

Given the diminishing and aging community of Holocaust survivors, we in the Jewish world have worried how younger generations of Jews would come to understand and regard the Holocaust and its significance in Jewish history.

This film ends on a vision of hope and is worth seeing.

To read more and find the link to the vimeo go to my blog at the Times of Israel –

https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/young-people-remembering-holocaust-survivors/

The Rise in anti-Semitism in the US

05 Tuesday Mar 2019

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in American Jewish Life, American Politics and Life, Jewish History, Jewish Identity

≈ 1 Comment

Yes – there has been an increase in anti-Semitic comments on the far left and extreme right. But it’s important to acknowledge that there is no organized political movement of anti-Semitism in America today despite the rise in anti-Semitic incidents (e.g. Charlottesville and Pittsburgh and the comments, far less frightening, from Congresswoman Omar). This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t call it out when we see it, but America is not Europe and certainly not pre-WWII Germany. The state of American Jewry today also is nothing like it was in the 1920s-1940s in the US. Jews have successfully integrated into virtually every profession, business, academia, and social circle in America.
 
We Jews have long memories and often we respond to every slight out of those memories when the reality is quite different.
 
I sound only a cautionary note even as I believe we need to remain vigilant. But, let us not over-react!

The State of Israeli elections post-Bibi indictment – Report from Israel’s J Street Representative

01 Friday Mar 2019

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Israel and Palestine, Israel/Zionism

≈ Leave a comment

The following was sent to leaders of J Street by Yael Patir, its Jerusalem representative. J  Street is a the largest Jewish PAC in our nation’s capital. It is pro-Israel and pro-peace and its primary agenda is advocacy for a two-states for two peoples negotiated settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

This week I resumed my former position as a national co-chair of the J Street Rabbinic and Cantorial Cabinet that includes 900 clergy. I share this position with Rabbi Andrea London of Chicago and Rabbi David Deutsch of Philadelphia.

We were asked to distribute this report.

Dear J Street Leadership:
Shabbat is about to arrive in Israel and I am writing to you with some of my thoughts following yesterday’s big news.
Yesterday marked the third time in this election cycle in which we could legitimately say the “election has just begun”. The first was when Benny Gantz announced his entrance into politics aiming to challenge Netanyahu’s leadership. The second was the week before last when Gantz, Lapid, Yaalon and Ashkenazi announced that they are running together under the Kachol Lavan banner and saw a rise in the polls. And the third was yesterday, with Attorney General Mandelblit releasing a much anticipated letter of indictment of the prime minister, pending a hearing.
The reactions soon followed. Netanyahu delivered a well staged speech on prime time TV broadcast live, where he shared his now-familiar defense – it’s all a conspiracy of the left and the press, no other politician in Israeli history has been so badly treated, he will come out of all this clean.
The right wing parties and leaders did not move from their previously articulated positions. All are standing with Netanyahu and all will recommend him for the position of prime minister. He is innocent until proven guilty. There are some nuances between the leaders – Kahlon and Bennet/Shaked are taking a more cautious line – but all in all, no one on the right withdrew their support from Netanyahu.
On the center, Gantz and Lapid announced that they will not sit in a government with Netanyahu and called for his resignation. Left wing parties have already taken the position of not joining a Netanyahu-led government, so on that front nothing has changed.
What now? It’s hard to predict how this announcement will affect the election results. Some pollsters say that it might cost Likud 5-10 seats, while others say that Netanyahu’s popularity is stable and might even grow. Indeed, Netanyahu is doubling down and has the resources to launch a fierce campaign using the victim narrative which serves him well on the one hand, and vicious incitement against ‘the left’ and the Arabs on the other.
After the State Attorney submitted his recommendation comes a process of a hearing — which is not likely to end before the end of 2019 or beginning of 2020. By then we will have a new government in place. After the hearing the State Attorney will announce his final indictment charges and it will take a few months until trial will begin.
The story is not over yet. If Netanyahu manages to keep his power and forms the next coalition, he will then promote legislation known colloquially as the ‘French law’, which basically will redeem him from all past charges and make it impossible to prosecute him while his a sitting prime minister. Netanyahu has already received commitments on this from his natural coalition partners (like Habayit Hayehudi as part of the deal that brought in Otzma Yehudit). Netanyahu promised Israelis yesterday that he is here to stay as prime minister for many many more years.
We have six weeks to go and as of now it seems that anything could happen. The coming weeks will give us much more information about what is to come and how the Israeli public is reacting to all this.
Shabbat Shalom,
Yael
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