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{{Short description|Overview of the relationship between Haredim and Zionism}} | |||
'''Haredi anti-Zionism''' refers to the position of many ] ] movements in opposition to ]. | |||
{{pp-30-500|small=yes}} | |||
] on ] in ], Israel]] | |||
From the founding of political ] in the 1890s, ] leaders voiced objections to its secular orientation, and before the establishment of the ], the vast majority of Haredi Jews were opposed to Zionism, like early ], but with distinct reasoning.<ref name="Halpern">{{cite book |year=2004 |orig-year=1990 |surname=Halpern |given=Ben |chapter=The Rise and Reception of Zionism in the Nineteenth Century |title=Social Foundations of Judaism |editor-surname=Goldscheider |editor-given=Calvin |editor-surname2=Neusner |editor-given2=Jacob |editor-link2=Jacob Neusner |place=Eugene, Or |publisher=Wipf and Stock Publ. |edition=2nd |pages=94–113 |chapter-url={{Google books|id=2TxLAwAAQBAJ|plainurl=y|page=94|keywords=|text=}} |url={{Google books|id=2TxLAwAAQBAJ|plainurl=y}} |isbn=1-59244-943-3}}</ref> This was chiefly due to the concern that secular nationalism would redefine the Jewish nation from a religious community based in their alliance to God for whom adherence to religious laws were "the essence of the nation's task, purpose, and right to exists,"<ref>{{Cite journal|title=The Haredim as a Challenge for the Jewish State|url=https://www.swp-berlin.org/publikation/the-haredim-as-a-challenge-for-the-jewish-state|access-date=2022-01-20|journal=Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP)|year=2020 |language=de-DE|doi=10.18449/2020RP14|last1=Lintl |first1=Peter |author2=Stiftung Wissenschaft Und Politik }}</ref> to an ethnic group like any other as well as the view that it was forbidden for the ] to re-constitute Jewish rule in the ] before the arrival of the ]. Those ]s who did support Jewish resettlement in Palestine in the late 19th century had no intention to conquer Palestine and declare its independence from the rule of the ],<ref>ha-Peles; volume 3, issue 4. | |||
* Alexander Moshe Lapidus, a strong supporter of ] writes in Shivath Zion (volume 1 p. 35): | |||
:There were days – at the beginning of this movement (-Hovevei Zion) – that the settlement idea had many opposes, but now the opposition is almost gone. The people are already convinced that ''we are not here to take over the land from the Turks with weapon and '''we are not planning to establish a government over there'''. Our only goal is to organize farmers to work in field ... so there is nothing to be afraid about hurrying the exile-end...''</ref> and some preferred that only observant Jews be allowed to settle there.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tzemachdovid.org/Musar/ravlapidus.html |title= Rav Alexander Moshe Lapidus ZT"L|website=www.tzemachdovid.org |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130124062806/http://www.tzemachdovid.org/Musar/ravlapidus.html |archive-date=January 24, 2013}}</ref> | |||
During the 1930s, some European Haredi leaders encouraged their followers not to leave for Palestine, where the Zionists were gaining influence. When the dangers facing European Jewry became clear, the Haredi ] organization decided to co-operate with Zionist leaders to an extent, in order to allow religious Jews the possibility of seeking refuge in Palestine. Some Agudah members in Palestine preferred to form an alliance against the Zionist movement with ], but this never occurred. After the creation of the state of Israel, each individual movement within ] charted its own path in their approach to the State of Israel. | |||
The ] Jewish response to ] was overwhelmingly negative, with several Hasidic groups calling Zionists the personification of Satan, blaming Zionism for the Holocaust, accusing them of being the source of all evil in the world and defiling the entire world with their impurity. <ref>Sefer Vayoel Moshe, Rabbi ] ()</ref> | |||
A study in late 2006 claimed that just over a third of Israelis considered Haredim to be the most hated group in Israel.<ref>{{cite news| title = In brief: Hate for Chareidim| publisher = ], ]| page =9| date = 2006-11-02}}</ref> According to a 2016 Pew survey, 33% of Israeli Haredim say that the term "Zionist" describes them accurately.<ref>{{cite web|title=8. Views of the Jewish state and the diaspora|url=http://www.pewforum.org/2016/03/08/views-of-the-jewish-state-and-the-diaspora/|website=Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project|publisher=]|access-date=4 December 2017|date=8 March 2016}}</ref> | |||
==Background== | |||
The ], in ] 111a, mentions that the Jewish people have been bound by three oaths: 1) not to ascend to ''Eretz Yisrael'' (the Land of Israel) as a group using force; 2) not to rebel against the nations of the world; and 3) not to delay the coming of ], the Jewish ], through their own sins. Zionism is perceived as a violation of all three, but primarily the first two oaths. | |||
==History== | |||
This passage of the Talmud is based on a mystical meaning of the verse "I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, by the gazelles or by the hinds of the field, that you neither awaken nor arouse the love while it is desirous." This verse is found thrice in ''Shir HaShirim'', (]), verses 2:7, 3:5, 8:4. | |||
===Early opposition to Zionism=== | |||
] (d. 1937) was the most outspoken voice of Haredi anti-Zionism]] | |||
In the hope of winning over the ] masses to the ], ] endeavoured to garner support from one of the most prominent rabbis in the ], David Moshe Friedman (d. 1903), the ]. He maintained contact with him for over three years,<ref name="ShimoniWistrich1999">{{cite book|first1=Gideon|last1=Shimoni|first2=Robert S.|last2=Wistrich|title=Theodor Herzl: visionary of the Jewish State|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6NMmAQAAMAAJ|access-date=8 May 2013|year=1999|publisher=Herzl Press|isbn=978-0-930832-08-7|page=303}}</ref> during which time he tried to convene a conference of rabbis in order to promote Zionism; however, nothing ever materialized.<ref name="Rabinowicz1996">{{cite book|first=Tzvi|last=Rabinowicz|title=The Encyclopedia of Hasidism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OprXAAAAMAAJ|access-date=8 May 2013|year=1996|publisher=Jason Aronson|isbn=978-1-56821-123-7|page=201}}</ref> Friedman had been a long-time supporter of efforts to settle Jews in Palestine on the strict condition that they adhere to ]. He had in fact been an early member of ''Ahavath Zion'', a Zionist organization that was established in 1897 with the specific purpose of informing religious ] about the plan to establish a Jewish national home. Although ''Ahavath Zion'' was successful in attracting thousands of members and numerous rabbis from smaller communities, it could not stem the rising anti-Zionist sentiment among the majority of Orthodox leaders. Besides Friedman, they simply could not persuade any of the other great Hasidic leaders to support the Zionist project.<ref>{{cite book|title=Diaspora Nationalism and Jewish Identity in Habsburg Galicia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rji2GtPYn50C |access-date=9 May 2013|date=31 August 2012|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-01424-4|pages=170–171}}</ref> The Hasidim were particularly vociferous in their opposition to Zionism and they often protested against the Zionists. They even went so far as to ban the ], originally a religious symbol which only appeared in synagogues, but it had now become "defiled" by the Zionists.<ref>{{cite book|title=Diaspora Nationalism and Jewish Identity in Habsburg Galicia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rji2GtPYn50C |access-date=9 May 2013|date=31 August 2012|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-01424-4|pages=172–173}}</ref> | |||
In 1889, Rabbi ] proclaimed that early Zionist initiatives resembled the 17th-century false messianic sect which was headed by ]. His son Rabbi ] further warned: "The people of Israel should take care not to join a venture that threatens their souls, to destroy religion, and is a stumbling block to the House of Israel."<ref name="Newton2001">{{cite book|first=Adam Z.|last=Newton|title=The fence and the neighbor: Emmanuel Levinas, Yeshayahu Leibowitz, and Israel among the nations|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zRJvszR4FiMC&pg=PA233|access-date=30 May 2013|year=2001|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0-7914-9144-7|page=233}}</ref> When the Zionists in ] claimed that Zionism would stem the tide of ], Soloveichik felt that what mattered most for Judaism was the quality, not the quantity of it.<ref name="Śalmôn2002">{{cite book|first=Yôsēf|last=Śalmôn|title=Religion and Zionism – first encounters|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=njmQAAAAMAAJ|access-date=30 May 2013|year=2002|publisher=Hebrew University Magnes Press|isbn=978-965-493-101-4|page=349|quote=There is no doubt that R. Hayyim expressed an extreme anti-Zionist position; when the Zionists in Brisk argued that Zionism constituted a barrier against the assimilation of western Jews, he replied that, for Judaism, the quality, not the quantity of it was essential. By limiting the concept of ''klal yisrael'' (the entire Jewish people) to the "God-fearing" alone, he was moving closer to the philosophers of German Orthodoxy.}}</ref> | |||
==Famous Haredi anti-Zionist movements== | |||
===Neturei Karta=== | |||
A famous group holding this ideology is ], which has only a few hundred followers, mainly in Jerusalem and New York, and has been condemned by other anti-Zionist Haredim for their alliance with the ] led by ] and their contacts with ] and ]. | |||
Powerful condemnations of political Zionism continued into the twentieth century. In 1903, Rabbi ] of ] published ''Kuntres Uma'ayan'', which contained a strong polemic against Zionism. He opposed the ], and was deeply concerned that secular nationalism would replace Judaism as the foundation of Jewish identity.<ref name="Goldman2009">{{cite book|first=Shalom|last=Goldman|title=Zeal for Zion: Christians, Jews, and the Idea of the Promised Land|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ibbL2ow7gYoC&pg=PA272|access-date=9 May 2013|year=2009|publisher=UNC Press Books|isbn=978-0-8078-3344-5|pages=272–73|quote=The most eminent Orthodox rabbis of the first decade of the twentieth century, among them the Lubavitcher rebbe Sholom Dov Ber Schneersohn, issued powerful condemnations of political Zionism. In 1903 Schneersohn warned that the Zionists "have made ] a substitute for the ] and the ]... After this assumption is accepted, anyone who enters the movement regards himself as no longer obliged to keep the commandments of the Torah, nor is there any hope consequently that at some time or another he will return, because, according to his own reckoning, he is a proper Jew in that he is a loyal nationalist.}}</ref> Rabbi Baruch Halberstam (d. 1906) took a leading role in opposing Zionism, in line with the position held by his father, ] of ].<ref name="HundertResearch2008">{{cite book|author1=Gershon David Hundert|author2=Yivo Institute for Jewish Research|title=The YIVO encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JL5tAAAAMAAJ|access-date=9 May 2013|date=28 May 2008|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=978-0-300-11903-9|page=1662}}</ref> | |||
===Satmar=== | |||
Slightly more moderate anti-Zionist Haredim, however, number in the hundreds of thousands. The ] Hassidic movement, whose previous ], ] ] wrote an extensive refutation of Zionism entitled ''Vayoel Moshe'', counts more than 100,000 members alone. Other extreme anti-Zionist Hassidic groups include ] and ], both having many thousands of adherents mainly in Jerusalem. | |||
In 1912, Haredi leaders in Europe founded the ] organisation which hoped to find a "solution to all the problems facing the Jewish people in the Spirit of the Torah." From the outset, the Agudah vehemently opposed the Zionist movement's replacement of the historic religious bond to the land of Israel with secular nationalism.<ref name="Eisen2004">{{cite book|first=Yosef|last=Eisen|title=Miraculous Journey: A Complete History of the Jewish People from Creation to the Present|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7lsVajEtaQ0C&pg=PA345|access-date=8 May 2013|year=2004|publisher=Targum Press|isbn=978-1-56871-323-6|page=345}}</ref> ] stated that the fate of the Jewish nation was to remain in exile until the arrival of the Messiah.<ref name="Sacks1992">{{cite book|first=Jonathan|last=Sacks|author-link=Jonathan Sacks|title=Crisis and Covenant: Jewish Thought After the Holocaust|year=1992|publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=978-0-7190-4203-4|page=|quote=The saintly Rabbi Israel Meir ha-Cohen invoked the talmudic passage of the three oaths to remind his followers that the Jewish fate was to remain in exile until redeemed by God.|url=https://archive.org/details/crisiscovenantje00sack/page/66}}</ref> But with the spread of anti-Semitism in Europe, some Orthodox leaders became more favourable towards the aims of Zionism. Rabbi ] implored Agudah members in 1934 "not to leave Jewish history to the Zionists", hoping that religious Jews would assist in establishing a Jewish homeland.<ref name="Efron2003">{{cite book|first=Noah J.|last=Efron|title=Real Jews: Secular Versus Ultra-Orthodox and the Struggle for Jewish Identity in Israel |url=https://archive.org/details/realjewssecularv00efro|url-access=registration|access-date=9 May 2013|year=2003|publisher=BasicBooks|isbn=978-0-465-01854-3|page=}}</ref> Others remained staunchly opposed, chief among them the rabbi of ], Chaim Elazar Spira (d. 1937), who was the fiercest opponent of Zionism among Hasidic rabbis.<ref name="Haumann2002">{{cite book |first=Heiko|last=Haumann|author-link=Heiko Haumann|title=A History of East European Jews|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ypcWuuGVvX8C&pg=PA178|access-date=9 May 2013|year=2002|publisher=Central European University Press|isbn=978-963-9241-26-8|page=178|quote=In the inter-war period, the rabbi of Munkács (Mukačevo), Chaim Elazar Spira (Shapira, 1872–1937)—at that time the most resolute opponent of Zionism among Hasidic rabbis—described the three gates of Hell: "The lack of faith of many elements of European Jewry, the absolute subjugation to money in America, and Zionism which was gaining ground in Jerusalem!}}</ref> Spira saw Zionism as a denial of the Divine Redemption and faith in the Messiah. He even objected to Agudath Israel because of its support for immigration to Palestine. In 1936, he initiated a publication against the Zionist enterprise which was endorsed by 150 rabbis.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/communities/munkacs/rabbi_shapira.asp |title=A Jewish Community in the Carpathian Mountains- The Story of Munkács |publisher=Yadvashem.org |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> During the wartime period, Rabbi ] (1875–1941) of ] wrote a pamphlet in which he blamed the Zionists for the persecution of Jews in Europe.<ref name="Willis1993">{{cite book|author=Aaron Phillip Willis|title=Sephardic Torah Guardians: Ritual and the Politics of Piety|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CaIvAQAAIAAJ|access-date=17 May 2013|year=1993|publisher=Princeton University|page=246|quote=Around this time, the Agudah translated into Hebrew and printed (and then reprinted several times, for interest was high), a pamphlet by Elchanan Wasserman, the headmaster of the Talmudic academy in Baranowicze, who was killed by the Nazis in 1941. It was Wasserman's view that, theologically, the Zionists were to blame for the Nazis, for they embraced "two idolatries" - ] and nationalism. The rest was inevitable, Wasserman wrote: "In Heaven, the two idolatries were fashioned into one—national-socialism. A terrible rod of fury was forged from them that strikes at Jews in every corner of the earth. The same abominations that we worshipped are now hammering us."}}</ref> He rejected the notion that a secular Jewish state could be considered the "advent of Redemption." The goal of Zionism was to uproot religion and Jewish tradition.<ref name="Ḳimerling1989">{{cite book|first=Barukh|last=Ḳimerling|title=The Israeli State and Society: Boundaries and Frontiers|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BphaWb-aug0C&pg=PA177|access-date=17 May 2013|year=1989|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-1-4384-0901-6|pages=176–178}}</ref><ref name="Rabkin2006">{{cite book|first=Yakov M.|last=Rabkin|title=A Threat from Within: A Century of Jewish Opposition to Zionism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fTx2AAAAMAAJ|access-date=17 May 2013|year=2006|publisher=Fernwood Pub.|isbn=978-1-55266-171-0|page=39|quote=Rabbi Elhanan Wasserman (1875–1941), a disciple of Hafetz Haim and a pillar of Lithuanian Judaism, compared Zionists to the members of the Yevsektzia, the Jewish section of the Soviet Communist Party. Wielding their own version of secularized messianism, the Jewish Communists attacked traditional Jewish life with extraordinary vehemence.}}</ref> At the 1937 Agudath Israel Great Assembly in ], most discussions were devoted to the question of the Jewish State and the Nazi rise to power in Germany, and increasing anti-Semitism in Poland and Lithuania. Palestine beaconed as a refuge for the religious European masses whose situation was gradually worsening. While the majority of attendees rejected the establishment of a secular Jewish State on principle as well as on practical grounds, a minority, which was influenced by the dire situation, was in favour of it.<ref name="Ḳimerling1989" /> | |||
Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum of Satmar, whose movement counts more than 100,000 followers, wrote in his book ''Vayoel Moshe'', written during the 1960s, that the Holocaust came to pass only because of the Zionists, that the Zionists made sure that fleeing Jews were refused entry to western nations, and that the Zionists have intentionally caused a huge rise in antisemitism around the world. He held that all of Israel's wars were against Jewish law, that Zionism is the greatest spiritual impurity in the entire world, and that it is the duty of every God-fearing Jew to oppose the Zionists as much as he can. | |||
===Concern in Palestine=== | |||
Satmar plays a major role in Jerusalem's ] rabbinical council. All movements affiliated with the Edah accept Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum's ''Vayoel Moshe'' as binding. | |||
{{Yishuv haYashan}} | |||
Within Palestine itself, the local ] Haredi community of the ] was opposed to Zionism.<ref>Zohar, Zion: ''Sephardic and Mizrahi Jewry: From the Golden Age of Spain to Modern Times'', p. 184</ref> As Zionist settlement was underway during the 19th and 20th centuries, they were alarmed by the influx of predominantly non-religious Jews who wished to establish a secular state in the Holy Land<ref name="BergerAhimeir2002c">{{cite book|first1=Marshall J.|last1=Berger|first2=Ora|last2=Ahimeir|title=Jerusalem: a city and its future|url=https://archive.org/details/jerusalemcityits00berg|url-access=registration|access-date=13 May 2013|year=2002|publisher=Syracuse University Press|isbn=978-0-8156-2913-9|page=}}</ref> and threatened the peaceful relations the Orthodox community had enjoyed with their Arab neighbors until this point.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Rabkin|first=Yakov M.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61127883|title=A Threat from Within : a Century of Jewish Opposition to Zionism|date=2006|publisher=Fernwood Pub.|isbn=1-55266-171-7|location=Black Point, N.S.|pages=136|oclc=61127883}}</ref> The chief rabbi of the Ashkenazi community in Jerusalem, Rabbi ], often referred to the Zionists as "evil men and ruffians" and claimed that "Hell had entered the Land of Israel with Herzl."<ref name="Laqueur2003"/> Sonnenfeld did not want the Orthodox Jewish community to become subject to secular Zionist authority.<ref name="Gilbert1996">{{cite book|first=Martin|last=Gilbert|title=Jerusalem in the twentieth century|url=https://archive.org/details/jerusalemintwent00gilb|url-access=registration|access-date=13 May 2013|year=1996|publisher=John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated|isbn=978-0-471-16308-4|page=}}</ref> The spokesman for the anti-Zionist Ashkenazi community in Jerusalem, Dr ], endeavoured to form an alliance with the Arab nationalist leadership and hoped to reach an agreement that would allow unrestricted Jewish settlement in Arab lands in return for the relinquishment of Jewish political aspirations. In June 1924, de Haan was assassinated by the ] after having conveyed his proposals to ] and his sons, ] and ].<ref name="BergerAhimeir2002a">{{cite book|first1=Marshall J.|last1=Berger|first2=Ora|last2=Ahimeir|title=Jerusalem: a city and its future|url=https://archive.org/details/jerusalemcityits00berg|url-access=registration|access-date=13 May 2013|year=2002|publisher=Syracuse University Press|isbn=978-0-8156-2913-9|page=}}</ref> | |||
The ] and the Nazi rise to power led to a crisis within the anti-Zionist Agudah camp. Some still hoped for a Jewish-Arab alliance against the Zionists, while others, such as ] and ] faced a difficult dilemma. They felt that such an alliance would not be accepted by the masses of Haredi European Jews, yet they did not wish to cooperate with the Zionists.<ref name="Laqueur2003">{{cite book|first=Walter|last=Laqueur|title=A History of Zionism: From the French Revolution to the Establishment of the State of Israel|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TLIqAAAAYAAJ|access-date=13 May 2013|date=20 May 2003|publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-8052-1149-8|page=410|quote=Rosenheim, the political head of central European Orthodoxy, who was accustomed to using far more moderate language, nevertheless warned the religious Zionists against the 'mortal danger' they risked by collaborating with those who did not accept the divine law.}}</ref> ], another Agudah member, contended that, "No matter how much the Haredi hates the non-religious, heretical, apostate Zionists, he hates the despicable Arab a hundred times over." The brutal murder by Arabs of dozens of Haredi Jews in ] and ] damaged the already difficult relationships between the communities.<ref name="BergerAhimeir2002b">{{cite book|first1=Marshall J.|last1=Berger|first2=Ora|last2=Ahimeir|title=Jerusalem: a city and its future|url=https://archive.org/details/jerusalemcityits00berg|url-access=registration|access-date=13 May 2013|year=2002|publisher=Syracuse University Press|isbn=978-0-8156-2913-9|page=|quote=In another letter to one of the harsh anti-Zionists, Blau gave an excellent description of how he conceived this tragic situation: "Your Honor is mistaken in thinking that peace with the Arabs is possible. The Arabs hate us bitterly. We do not want to cut off the shackles of the Diaspora, but neither do we want to be killed and slaughtered, to be like dung in the field."}}</ref> In 1937, the Central Committee of Agudath Israel in the Land of Israel issued a declaration claiming that secular Jewish rule would pose a danger to Orthodox Jewry, while indicating potential acceptance of a Jewish state if it were a ]. It stated: | |||
Satmar and Neturei Karta are often confused by people not aware of the difference between these movements. While certain elements of Neturei Karta actively cooperate with Arab and Islamic movements calling for the destruction of Israel, Satmar Hassidim have never and will never do this, as they have been instructed by their leaders. | |||
<blockquote>Agudath Israel in the Land of Israel rejects outright any attempt at despoiling the Land of Israel of its sanctity and considers the proposal to establish a secular Jewish state in Palestine as a hazard to the lofty role of the Jewish People as a holy nation. Agudath Israel in the Land of Israel declares that Orthodox Jewry could only agree to a Jewish state in all the Land of Israel if it were possible for the basic constitution of this state to guarantee Torah rule in the overall public and national life.<ref name="Ḳimerling1989"/></blockquote> | |||
The Agudah in Europe grudgingly began to cooperate with the Jewish Agency and other Zionist bodies in an effort to alleviate the situation facing European Jews.<ref name="Mainuddin2002">{{cite book|first=Rolin G.|last=Mainuddin|title=Religion and politics in the developing world: explosive interactions|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B9AnAAAAYAAJ|access-date=9 May 2013|year=2002|publisher=Ashgate|isbn=978-0-7546-1507-1|page=70}}</ref> In response to this, ] and Aharon Katzenellenbogen of Jerusalem broke away from Agudah in 1938 to form ] who refused to have any dealing with the Zionists.<ref name="BergerAhimeir2002c"/> During the 1940s the Neturei Karta became increasingly critical of the Agudah's position and in 1945 they succeeded in expelling Agudah members from the ].<ref name="Stump2000">{{cite book|first=Roger W.|last=Stump|title=Boundaries of faith: geographical perspectives on religious fundamentalism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-c8nAAAAYAAJ|access-date=9 May 2013|year=2000|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield Publishers|isbn=978-0-8476-9319-1|page=47}}</ref> In 1947, Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem ] petitioned the UN on behalf of his 60,000 strong community that Jerusalem not be included in the Jewish state and pleaded that the city be placed under international control.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.truetorahjews.org/dushinsky1 |title=Rabbi Yosef Tzvi Dushinsky, Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem (1867-1948) |publisher=True Torah Jews |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> | |||
===Dushinsky=== | |||
In July 1947, less than a year before the actual founding of the state, the ] Haredi Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem and of the ] rabbinical council, went to New York to deliver a personal statement to the United Nations, declaring his "definite opposition to a Jewish state in any part of Palestine." | |||
===Lithuanian ('Litvish') Haredi Judaism=== | |||
The Litvish Haredi world, led in recent years by the ] (1878-1953), ] (1898-2001), and Rabbi ], is also strongly opposed to Zionism. Examples of this are found in lectures and letters of Rav Shach. | |||
=== |
===Aftermath of the Holocaust=== | ||
Before and during the Second World War, Haredi opposition to the Zionists persisted. But after the war, the devastating consequences of the Holocaust softened the position of many towards Zionism. The ultra-orthodox in Eastern Europe had been murdered in vast numbers; whole communities had been wiped out.<ref name="Shindler2013">{{cite book|first=Colin|last=Shindler|title=A History of Modern Israel|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U_ukZhiBzykC&pg=PA73|access-date=24 May 2013|date=25 March 2013|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-02862-3|page=73|quote=Before 1939, there had been great bitterness in the ultra-orthodox community against the Zionists. Families were divided and dissidents expelled. Even during the war, such feelings persisted. For a year, Lithuania was sandwiched in between the two revolutionary goliaths of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia; yet, the majority of the heads of the great learning academies, the ''yeshivot'', advocated staying put rather than attempting to leave for Palestine. Instead, they and their followers marched into the gas chambers singing ''nigunim''. The Shoah destroyed the community of the faithful in Eastern Europe, and the ultra-orthodox perished in vast numbers. Such a tragedy softened the position of the survivors towards Zionism. It moved many from and anti-Zionist position to a non-Zionist one.}}</ref> One rabbi, ], hiding in Budapest in 1942 and witnessing the persecution of the Jews, renounced his previous hostility to the Zionist movement, and instead strongly criticized the Orthodox establishment for not taking the lead in re-establishing the Jewish homeland. | |||
The ] and ] Hasidic movements have adopted a pragmatically supportive stance towards the state of Israel, Ger slightly more so than Belz. While both movements have a history of anti-Zionism just like that of all other Hassidic movements, in modern times their positions have changed. Like all other Haredim, they do not say prayers for the State of Israel nor do they serve in the Israeli military. However, they do vote, and passively oppose withdrawals from the occupied territories. | |||
After World War II, many Jewish refugees found themselves in ]s. The Zionists controlled a camp for Jewish refugee children near Haifa, Israel where, according to the Haredi-affiliated newspaper ], they operated an anti-religious policy in an effort to cut off Haredi children from their spiritual roots. To a large extent they were successful, and many children from Haredi homes were "poisoned against religion".<ref name = "YaldeiTehran">{{cite news |last1=Lichtenstein |first1=Ruth |date= December 31, 2013 |title=The History of the 'Status Quo' Agreement |url=http://hamodia.com/2013/12/31/history-status-quo-agreement/ |newspaper=] (English edition) |access-date=August 31, 2015 |quote=One of the main struggles between the Jewish groups was over education, the future of Jewry. In 1943, a group of about 700 orphaned children, Holocaust refugees who had escaped from Poland to the Soviet Union, were collected by the Jewish Agency's emissaries and brought to Israel. They were put in a camp organized by the Tehran Jewish Agency, where they were poisoned against religion.}}</ref> | |||
==The book Vayoel Moshe== | |||
''Vayoel Moshe'' was written by the ] Rebbe ] (1887-1979). It consists of three parts: ''Maamar Shalosh Shevuos'' (three oaths), ''Maamar Yishuv Eretz Yisroel'' (settling the Land of Israel), and ''Maamar Loshon HaKodesh'' (the holy tongue). The first part, which is the main part of the book, discusses the three oaths mentioned in Ketubot 111a - that the Jewish people is not allowed to ascend to ''Eretz Yisrael'' by force, that the Jewish people is not allowed to rebel against the nations of the world, and that the Jewish people may not by their sins delay the coming of Moshiach, the Jewish messiah. | |||
==Post-1948== | |||
The book is held in high regard by many Haredim, especially Hassidim. It has been accepted as binding by all movements affiliated with the ]. | |||
The relationship between Haredim and Zionism became more complex after the founding of the ] in 1948. Some Haredi groups "with great reluctance permitted"<ref>{{Cite news|last=Elyashiv|first=R. Yosef Shalom|date=2010-01-22|title=Nevalah Ne'esta B'Yisroel|work=Yated Neeman}}</ref> being involved in the political process of the state by voting in elections and accepting state funding. They maintained that since the government is not an ideological Zionist organization (as is the WZO, for example), and also they are not voluntarily choosing to join the Zionists, but rather it is like a partnership that already exists - "and if one wouldn’t participate, the other partner would take over his rights as well.''"''<ref>Grozovsky, R. Refoel Reuven, Ba’ayos Hazman,''“B’inyan Hishtatfus Chevrei Agudah B’memsheles E”Y”,'' p. 31 – 32.</ref> Others have maintained a more hardline rejectionist position, refusing all funding from the Israeli state and abstaining from taking part in the political process. The positions of specific Haredi groups are discussed in greater detail in the remainder of the article. | |||
There is also a growing group of ] known as ]im. They are ] who moved in their religious observances towards Haredi Judaism. Philosophically, however, they form a part of the Religious Zionist world, and not of the Haredi world. | |||
==Involvement with the State== | |||
Among Haredi anti-Zionist movements, opinions differ on the attitude to take now that the state exists. Some movements remained actively anti-Zionist, others lowered their voice; some refuse to vote, while others do vote; some accept money from the government, while others do it. | |||
] and ], which advocate for a ] state, are the only two Haredi parties in the Israeli ]. In addition, even the anti-Zionist ] do take part in municipal elections in some places, such as the Haredi stronghold of ]. | |||
The most extreme example of refusal to acknowledge the state is found in Neturei Karta, which not only organizes active demonstrations calling on others not to vote on election days, some of whose members even refrain from using Israeli government-subsidized buses, since bus tickets are partially subsidized by the government as in most western countries. They also prefer not to touch Israeli money, and do not acknowledge the authority of the Israeli police in any matter, including criminal affairs. Some of those who affiliate with Neturei Karta are so extreme as to physically attack those rabbis who hold that it is permissable to vote. | |||
Haredim who do not consider themselves Zionists fall into two camps: Non-Zionists and Anti-Zionists. Non-Zionists do not object to the existence of the State of Israel but see no religious significance in it and do not believe that it has anything to do with the messianic redemption. In their eyes, the redemption cannot be brought about through human hands. Anti-Zionists are opposed to the existence of any Jewish state prior to the coming of the Messiah. According to Aharon E. Wexler and Moshe Krakowski, Non-Zionists constitute a majority of the Haredi world.<ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
A slightly less extreme example is found in the communities associated with the ] rabbinical council of Jerusalem. These communities, including ], ], ] and ], do not vote and do not accept government money. Around election days, posters by the Edah HaChareidis are posted throughout Haredi neighborhoods of Jerusalem proclaiming that it is forbidden to vote in the elections, and that doing so is a grave sin. Nevertheless, the Edah HaChareidis and its affiliated movements do recognize the authority of the Israeli police in criminal matters. | |||
Anti-Zionist Haredim believe that the existence of a Jewish state prior to the Messianic era is a violation of the ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Kanievsky|first=Yaakov Yisrael|title=Karyana D'igarta|pages=205|language=He}}</ref> They believe that voting in Israeli elections causes one to become a “partner” in all the sins committed by the government, which includes enabling it to violate the Three Oaths.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Teitelbaum|first=Yoel|title=Vayoel Moshe, vol. 1|pages=141|language=He}}</ref> | |||
The main Litvish community does vote, as per the instructions of the Brisker Rov and the ]. It votes for the ] list only, as one massive bloc. | |||
==Ideological reasons== | |||
] | |||
{{See also|The Three Oaths}} | |||
There are many different ideological reasons for religious opposition to Zionism; however, the main two are most widely expressed by Hasidim and Lithuanian Haredim.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}}{{dubious|date=May 2017}} | |||
The overarching motive behind many Haredim's opposition to Zionism stems from a traditional and religious view of Jewish identity and peoplehood which runs counter to Zionism's nationalist ideology.<ref>{{Citation|title=Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro: Is Judaism a Nationality?|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-I9O9RWqdgk|language=en|access-date=2022-01-05}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Wasserman|first=Rabbi Elchonon Bunim|title=Kovetz Maamrim, Ikvesa D'Meshicha|pages=306|language=Hebrew}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Grozovsky|first=Rabbi Reuven|title=B'ayos Hazman בעות הזמן}}</ref> Haredim often cite the 10th century rabbinic sage ] as spelling out their national identity in terms irreconcilable with modern nationalism; as he wrote in his seminal work Emunah v’Deos (אמונה ודעות), "Our nation, the B’nei Yisrael, is a nation only by virture of its Torah (collective religious teachings)."<ref>{{Cite book|last=Goan|first=Rav Saadia|title=Emunah v'Deos אמונה ודעות|pages=3:7|language=Hebrew}}</ref> The opposition extends to ancillary parts of Zionist ideology, such as militarism<ref>{{Cite book|author=הירש, שמשון רפאל|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/782238231|title=The Hirsch Chumash : the Five Books of the Torah|date=2010|publisher=Feldheim Pub|isbn=978-1-59826-260-5|pages=Shemos 17:9, 17:14|oclc=782238231}}</ref> and ], which they hold are incongruous with Jewish religious teachings.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Shapiro|first=Rabbi Yaakov|title=The Empty Wagon|year=2018|isbn=978-1647647926|language=English}}</ref> | |||
However, there is also an ] standpoint which makes the case against Zionism even if Israel would - hypothetically - have been a theocracy, where Israel would have been governed under strict Jewish laws. | |||
Historically, many dynasties in Hasidism have expressed anti-Zionist opinions because of the "Three Oaths". The ], in ] 111a, mentions that the Jewish people have been bound by three oaths: 1) not to ] to ''Eretz Yisrael'' (the ]) as a group using force; 2) not to rebel against the nations of the world; and 3) that the nations of the world would not persecute the nation of Israel excessively.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/zionism/b4.html |title=The Jewish Agency |publisher=Jafi.org.il |date=2014-03-02 |access-date=2015-11-21 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041024064226/http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/zionism/b4.html |archive-date=2004-10-24 }}</ref>{{Failed verification|date=August 2015}} Some consider the establishment of the State of Israel to be a violation of these oaths. The first Haredi anti-Zionist movement was ], established in ] in 1912.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://epyc.yivo.org/content/8_2.php |title=EPYC | Places | Shtetl |publisher=Epyc.yivo.org |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> Haredi groups and people actively and publicly opposing Zionism are ],<ref name="myjewish">{{cite web|url=http://www.myjewishlearning.com/ideas_belief/LandIsrael/modern_landisrael/QuestioningZionism/Neturei_Karta.htm |access-date=February 19, 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081117043405/http://www.myjewishlearning.com/ideas_belief/LandIsrael/modern_landisrael/QuestioningZionism/Neturei_Karta.htm |archive-date=November 17, 2008 |title=My Jewish Learning: Neturei Karta }}</ref> ],<ref>''Sefer Shomer Emunim by R' Aharon Roth'', ''Sefer Asifas Michtovim, by R' ]'' foundational books of the Toldos Avrohom movement, ''passim.''</ref> ].<ref name="myjewish"/> | |||
Lithuanian Haredim, sometimes called ], take a different approach to their beliefs from their Hassidic counterparts.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} Lithuanian religious Jews oppose the state not because of the three oaths midrash but because they feel that Zionism epitomizes secularity and Jewish desire to be void of Torah. Many Lithuanian religious Jews, such as Rabbi ], have been involved with Zionist politics{{clarify|date=May 2017}} as Israel progressively becomes more Jewish-oriented.{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}}{{dubious|date=May 2017}} | |||
Amongst the Ashkenazi Orthodox rabbinical leadership, religious Zionists form a minority.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hagshama.org.il/en/resources/view.asp?id=1439 |title= Torah and Religious Zionism|website=www.hagshama.org.il |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070219053012/http://www.hagshama.org.il/en/resources/view.asp?id=1439 |archive-date=February 19, 2007}}</ref> Generally speaking, most Sephardi Haredi authorities have never shared the anti-Zionism of their Ashkenazi counterparts, and some (such as the late Rabbi ]) are strongly affiliated with Religious Zionism, taking a similar stance to the Hardal movements.{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} However, there are anti-Zionist elements in the Sephardi communities as well. It is known that the late ] supported and celebrated the anti-Zionist views of the ].<ref>Yoel Elchanan, ''Das Hatziyonis'', vol. 2, pg. 98-99. Free translation:''"...when a protest against the forced secularization of Moroccan children was held, the Baba Sali was the first to send a letter of support, writing "... Woe to us that this has befallen us in the end of days... I call out to all parents... guard your precious children... that they should not be caught in the traps of these trappers of souls... the ''Sochnut'', and ''Aliat hanoar'', who lie in ambush for the souls of our children... to kill them eternally..."(''Hasaba Kadisha'', vol. 2) "When the Baba Sali received the book '' Vayoel Moshe'', he closeted himself in his room and studied it in depth... Upon finishing, he emerged from his room and said to his son in law "There is no one in this generation greater in depth and logic, and skilled in answering questions, like Rabbi Yoel (Teitelbaum), he has provided clear proofs against all those who heaped words upon words, he did not leave a single crevice, which he did not clarify..."''</ref> | |||
==Current positions of Haredi groups== | |||
===Groups which do not recognize Israel=== | |||
] holding Palestinian flags and placards saying that "Judaism condemns the state of Israel and its atrocities" in London, 2022]] | |||
] which declares: "No entry to Zionists!"]] | |||
There are a number of Haredi groups which not only oppose Zionism, but also do not recognize the State of Israel. Among them are the Hasidic sects of ] (and its offshoots, ], and ]), ], and ]. In July 1947, Rabbi ], Chief Rabbi of the Jerusalem-based ], declared to the ] his "definite opposition to a Jewish state in any part of Palestine". The largest anti-Zionist Hasidic group is ], which has around 100,000 adherents worldwide. The group's position was crystallized by their charismatic leader, Rabbi ], who authored comprehensive and polemic tracts detailing his opposition to Zionism. He encouraged his followers who live in the "Holy Land" to form self-sufficient communities, rejecting social state benefits, and not to vote in general elections. Anxious not to be viewed as supportive of the actions of the Israeli government, which he viewed as an abomination, he instructed his people not to visit the Western Wall and other holy sites which had been captured by Israel in the 1967 war. | |||
One of the most extreme sects is the ]. Formed in 1938 as a breakaway from Agudath Israel, its 5,000 members are based mainly in ] and ]. Despite their shared opposition to Zionism, Satmar and other anti-Zionist Haredi groups are frequently critical of the activities of Neturei Karta and publicly distance themselves from them.<ref>{{cite news|url = https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3340592,00.html |title = Satmar court slams Neturei Karta |newspaper = ynetnews|date = 15 December 2006 |last1 = Sela |first1 = Neta }}</ref> | |||
===Groups which oppose secular Zionism, but recognize Israel=== | |||
The ] is an international organization (with an Israeli association) of various Haredi groups, mainly from the Lithuanian yeshiva communities and Hasidic groups such as ] and ]. The Agudah was initially created as an umbrella organization of Orthodox Jews who were united to fight against the Zionist movement.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/884646266|title=The Cambridge dictionary of Judaism and Jewish culture|date=2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|others=Judith Reesa Baskin|isbn=978-1-316-15386-4|location=Cambridge|oclc=884646266}}</ref> Out of necessity and "to save from the mouth of the lion" they permitted participating in national elections and sending their representatives to the Israeli Knesset, "''to actively protect what is holy to us."''<ref>Yated Ne’eman, Parshas Bo, 5770</ref> They did not take full part in it by not serving in its military, and do not celebrate any of the State's official holidays. They are adamantly opposed to serving in the military, because of the gilui arayos, shfichus damim and avodah zarah that exists.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Editor|first=Y. W.|date=2014-02-25|title=Rav Shteinman Shlita Speaks of the Chilul Hashem|url=https://www.theyeshivaworld.com/news/headlines-breaking-stories/215153/rav-shteinman-shlita-speaks-of-the-chilul-hashem.html|access-date=2022-01-11|website=The Yeshiva World|language=en-US}}</ref> The Agudat Israel party in the Knesset is represented as ], a collective party of Agudat Israel and Degel HaTorah. It tries to influence the Knesset with a pro-Judaism outlook, by mainly focusing on funding for Jewish education (]s), exemption from military service for Haredi yeshiva students, and trying to safeguard basic rights such as freedom to practice their religion.<ref>Kisvei R. Mendel (Zaks) p. 293</ref> In general, the Agudath Israel position is supportive of Israel.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.jewishchronicle.org/2008/03/31/agudath-israel-may-be-non-zionist-but-it-supports-israel-and-its-people |title=Agudath Israel may be non-Zionist, but it supports Israel and its people}}</ref> | |||
====Lithuanian stream==== | |||
A number of Lithuanian (non-Hasidic) leaders, like the ] (1878–1953), ] (1898–2001), and ] (1910-2012), have expressed strongly anti-Zionist views. Examples of this are found in lectures and letters of Rav Shach.<ref name="DvD-HoravShach">{{cite web | |||
|url = http://chareidi.org/EKV66features.htm | |||
|title = Chapter Twenty-Seven: I Gave My Blood and Soul | |||
|access-date = 2007-09-10 | |||
|last = Lorincz | |||
|first = Shlomo | |||
|date = August 9, 2006 | |||
|work = Memories of HaRav Shach, zt"l | |||
|publisher = ] | |||
}}{{dead link|date=December 2017|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} | |||
</ref> One of the newspapers of the Litvish world, the ], regularly publishes articles strongly criticizing Zionism, naming it a "heretical movement". The main Litvish community does vote, as per what many say were the instructions of the Chazon Ish.<ref name="DvD-CI">{{cite web | |||
|url = http://chareidi.org/archives5760/kiseitze/features.htm | |||
|title = What Does The Steipler Say? -- Some Highlights of the Years of His Communal Leadership | |||
|access-date = 2007-09-10 | |||
|date = September 6, 2000 | |||
|work = We Knew The Steipler Gaon, zt'l -- 23rd Av 5760, His Fifteenth Yahrtzeit | |||
|publisher = ] | |||
}} | |||
</ref> However, some of the Chazon Ish's disciples dispute this claim.<ref>See''Mikatawoitz Ad Hei Be'iyar'' at length</ref> Rabbi Elyashiv would urge his followers to vote for the ] list. Rabbi ], quoted in the book of his speeches about ], explains that in each generation, the '']'' (evil inclination) appears in different forms. Examples he gives are the ] and ]. He goes on to explain that nowadays, Zionism is a form of the ''Yetzer Hara''. | |||
Rabbi ] (1895–1986), one of the American leaders of the Lithuanian Jewish world, writes in a ] to a question whether it is permissible to pray in a synagogue which displays an Israeli flag: "Even though it is improper to bring the flags into shul, and all the more so not to keep them there permanently, and all the more so, not near the Aron Kodesh, and one should try to remove it peacefully. However, to make a fight over this is forbidden."<ref>Igros Moshe, Orech Chaim vol I, chap 46</ref> | |||
Anti-Zionism does not translate to personal antagonism, and Rabbi ], the ] rosh yeshiva, openly displayed thanks to soldiers of the Israeli army.{{Citation needed|date=June 2007}} | |||
The ] of Lithuanian Haredi Judaism is known as one of the most elite scholastic dynasties in all of Orthodox Judaism. The dynasty split into two groups in the 20th century, as parts of the Soloveitchik Rabbinical family veered away from their anti-Zionist tradition set by Rabbi ] of Brisk, and adopted views aligned with ] and ]. Ironically, the Zionist faction of the Brisker dynasty is centered in the United States, and the anti-Zionist faction was, and continues to be, centered in Israel. Rabbi Meir Soloveitchik and Rabbi ], who lead two of the Brisker yeshivas in Jerusalem, continue to be outspoken opponents of Zionism. | |||
====Hasidic groups==== | |||
While ideologically opposed to Zionism, the moderate Hasidic groups of ], ], ], ], and ] do vote in the Israeli elections, and accept Israeli government funding. Ger and Belz are two of the most influential movements behind the Israeli political party ], which, together with the Lithuanian ], forms the ] party. Prominent Gerrer rabbi, ], was a signatory to the Israeli Declaration of Independence. He also served as Minister of Welfare, though today, members of Agudat Israel prefer to serve as Deputy Ministers, or in Knesset Committees. These groups do not observe any days associated with the state, and neither do they recite the ]. | |||
Agudat's position evolved into one generally co-operative with the State of Israel, with an emphasis on supporting religious activities within its borders and the maintenance of Haredi institutions. Some rebbes affiliated with Agudat Yisrael, such as the ] rebbe ], took more hard-line stances on security, settlements, and disengagement.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/hasidic-leader-yaakov-friedman-the-admor-of-sadigura-dies-at-84-1.491294 |title=Hasidic Leader Yaakov Friedman, the Admor of Sadigura, Dies at 84 - Israel News - Haaretz Israeli News Source |publisher=Haaretz.com |date=2013-01-01 |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> | |||
====Chabad-Lubavitch==== | |||
{{Main|Chabad}} | |||
The fifth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi ] (1860–1920), also known as the RaShaB, published ''Kuntres Uma'ayan'', the beginning of which contains a strong polemic against secular Zionism. He was deeply concerned that secular nationalism would replace Judaism as the foundation of Jewish identity. The seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi ], as wells as his predecessor, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson, nonetheless insisted on trying to increase the observance of the Torah in Israel, both among individuals as well as to make the state's policies more in line with Jewish law and tradition.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://otzar770.com/personalize_general/bookmark_list.asp?NewBookmark=true&nFolderId_in=152 |title=Public Bookmarks |publisher=Otzar770.com |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> He also expressed overwhelming support for the State's military endeavors, and vehemently condemned any transfers of land as against Jewish law. His reasoning was based on the code of Jewish law, the ],<ref>Shulchan Aruch, Orech Chaim chap 329</ref> which states that the ] must be violated (carrying weapons) by the residents of a Jewish community (in any country) that borders a hostile Gentile settlement, even if they are threatened in the most subtle manner. He viewed the whole of Israel as such a community, and that was the impetus for his support. He argued that the safety of the Jewish people was paramount, and the physical presence of so many Jews in the land meant that its borders had to be protected as a matter of course. At the same time, he also drew support for his statements from the notion in the ] that the land of Israel was given to the Jewish people, and that inherent Jewish ownership of the land could not be superseded by mere political interests. Nevertheless, he refused to call the state by name, pointing out that the Holy Land exists independent of any authority that sees itself as sovereign over the land. | |||
Many Chabadniks in the world live in Israel, and there are a great deal of ]s there. Their young men serve in the Israeli military. In line with the late Rebbe's instructions to vote for a party that refuses to support giving away parts of the Land of Israel as part of any peace negotiations, Chabad does not endorse any particular party in the election process. | |||
====Chabad Zionism==== | |||
Chabad Yeshiva students have been joining the IDF in record numbers.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://mizrachi.org/chabad-yeshiva-students-joining-idf-record-number/ |title=Chabad Yeshiva Students Joining the IDF in Record Number | World Mizrachi |publisher=Mizrachi.org |date=2013-07-18 |access-date=2015-11-21 |archive-date=2023-02-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230225031839/https://mizrachi.org/chabad-yeshiva-students-joining-idf-record-number/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> There are Chabad synagogues that celebrate ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chabadcv.com/templates/photogallery_cdo/aid/2927758 |title=Yom Haatzmaut BBQ |publisher=Chabadcv.com |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.shmais.com/chabad-news/latest/item/yom-ha-atzmaut-with-chabad-of-ofakim |title=Yom Ha'atzmaut With Chabad of Ofakim |publisher=Shmais.com |date=2014-05-08 |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://scontent-lhr3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/13220988_10153088677839364_1042945308998175173_n.jpg?oh=f91e55d898024369c08c7f6db6f7956b&oe=579F0CDA |title=Archived copy |website=scontent-lhr3-1.xx.fbcdn.net |access-date=22 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160617112438/https://scontent-lhr3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/13220988_10153088677839364_1042945308998175173_n.jpg?oh=f91e55d898024369c08c7f6db6f7956b&oe=579F0CDA |archive-date=17 June 2016 |url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
Chabad Rabbi Shimon Rosenberg spoke at ] Ceremony in Jerusalem in 2011.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://shturem.org/index.php?section=news&id=35597 |title=Rabbi Shimon Rosenberg to Speak - Shturem.org Taking The World By Storm |publisher=Shturem.org |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> He also lit one of the torches at the Zionist state ceremony commemorating Israel Independence Day on behalf of his grandson, Chabad Rabbi Moshe Hotzberg.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vosizneias.com/83374/2011/05/10/jerusalem-moshele-hotzberg-chosen-to-light-independence-day-torch/print/ |title=Print an Article |publisher=VosIzNeias.com |date=2011-05-10 |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> | |||
Chabad Rabbi Sholom Lipskar celebrated ] at Yeshiva ] in Jerusalem, the most prominent yeshiva in the Religious Zionist world.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.collive.com/show_news.rtx?id=14823 |title=Lipskar Attends Jerusalem Day |publisher=Collive.com |date= 2011-06-02|access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> | |||
In 2011, Rabbi Menachem Brod of Kfar Chabad, who is a spokesman for Chabad, says the group is Zionist in its support for Israel.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Controls/SendFriend.ashx?print=1&type=0&item=145899 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160118024807/http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Controls/SendFriend.ashx?print=1&type=0&item=145899 |url-status=dead |archive-date=2016-01-18 |title=Chabad is Zionist, Rabbi Says |publisher=Israelm=nationalnews.com |access-date=2015-11-21 }}</ref> He stated: "When the average Israeli citizen says 'Zionism', he is referring to love of the land, strengthening the state, and being close to the nation and the land, to military service. If all this is Zionism, then Chabad is super Zionist!"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.shmais.com/chabad-news/latest/item/radio-clash-chabad-vs-reform |title=Radio Clash: Chabad Vs. Reform |publisher=Shmais.com |date=2011-05-14 |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> | |||
====Sephardim==== | |||
] are generally more supportive of Zionism and the State of Israel than their Ashkenazi counterparts, and the number of Sephardic organisations and rabbis who remain opposed to the state constitute a small minority of the Sephardi Haredi leadership. These include the ] and Rabbi ], who draw their ideology from the writings of Iraqi sage ].{{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} The ] praised ''VaYoel Moshe'', the polemic against Zionism written by Rabbi ] of Satmar.<ref name="ČejkaKořan2015">{{cite book|last1=Čejka|first1=Marek|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GeK9CgAAQBAJ&pg=PA155|title=Rabbis of our Time: Authorities of Judaism in the Religious and Political Ferment of Modern Times|last2=Kořan|first2=Roman|date=16 October 2015|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-60544-7|page=155|quote=It is interesting to recall here the attitude of the famous Sephardic Rabbi Baba Sali towards ''Va-Yoel Moshe'': "This book is a great and important treatise for our generation, and Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum is a pillar of light whose radiance will lead us to the coming of the Messiah." Rabbi Baba Sali studied the book itself over the course of a few days... and said that this book answered all his questions about Zionism "truly and uncompromisingly".}}</ref> | |||
In 2010, ], the political party which represents the vast majority of Sephardi Haredim in Israel, joined the ], becoming the first Zionist Haredi party in the ]. Shas MK ] claimed that "there's nothing earth-shaking about saying Shas is a Zionist party. We operate as such, we join governments and are partners in the Zionist experience, (our members) serve in the army. There's nothing new here."<ref name="haaretz.com">{{cite web|date=2010-01-19|title=Shas Becomes First ultra-Orthodox Party to Join WZO - Israel News - Haaretz Israeli News Source|url=https://www.haaretz.com/1.5086989|access-date=2015-11-21|publisher=Haaretz.com}}</ref> The party's former spiritual leader, the late Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel ], forbade the flying of the Israeli flag in synagogues, calling it "a reminder of the acts of the evil-doers".<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rji2GtPYn50C|title=Diaspora Nationalism and Jewish Identity in Habsburg Galicia|date=31 August 2012|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-01424-4|pages=172–173|quote=Perhaps, the most prominent Sephardic legal authority, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef of Jerusalem, upholds Rabbi Feinstein's verdict and, in his comment, specifies that "those who chose this flag as a symbol of the State were evil-doers". Emphasizing that removing the flag, "a vain and useless object", from the synagogue should be done in harmony and peace, he recommends "uprooting all related to the flag so that it should not constitute a reminder of the acts of the evil-doers".|access-date=9 May 2013}}</ref> While serving as Chief Rabbi, he allowed the recitation of psalms of praise after prayers without a blessing on ]; he did not permit saying Hallel either as a part of the prayer service (where it is normally recited on holidays) nor with the customary blessings before and after that are only said on holidays.<ref>{{Cite web|title=דעת הרב עובדיה על יום העצמאות ועל המדינה|url=http://www.hidabroot.org/CommunityDetail.asp?FaqID=25695|url-status=bot: unknown|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100622035335/http://www.hidabroot.org/CommunityDetail.asp?FaqID=25695|archive-date=2010-06-22|access-date=2009-06-13}}</ref> | |||
===Groups generally supportive of Zionism=== | |||
====Chardal==== | |||
] Jews usually refers to the portion of the ] Jewish community in Israel which inclines significantly toward Charedi ideology (whether in terms of outlook on the secular world, or is their stringent (machmir) approach to Halacha); however, it is sometimes used to refer to the portion of the Charedi Jewish community in Israel which inclines significantly toward Religious Zionist (Dati-Leumi) ideology. Chardal is an initialism of the words Charedi and Dati-Leumi. | |||
==Haredi newspapers in Israel== | |||
The main Haredi newspapers, '']'', '']'', and '']'', occasionally publish articles strongly criticizing Zionism, naming it a "heretical movement".{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} They sometimes refer to the country as "Israel", and at other times will only refer to the geographical entity as "]". The Israel news columns are almost exclusively right of centre, lambasting Arab terrorism. Articles about outreach movements in Israel and Israeli culture are very common, and are shown without ideological bias.{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} '']'', another Israeli Hareidi newspaper has campaigned extensively for Hareidim not to be drafted into the ]. When the offices were raided and computers confiscated in 2017 the newspaper claimed that the raid was political and intended as a reprisal for their anti-draft activities.<ref>{{Cite web|title=לאחר המעצרים: 'הפלס' במתקפה נגד סגן השר אלי בן דהן|url=https://mobile.kikar.co.il/article/229138|access-date=2022-01-09|website=mobile.kikar.co.il|date=20 April 2017 }}</ref> | |||
== Haredim outside of Israel == | |||
=== America === | |||
On June 9, 2013 a rally was held in ] in Manhattan, NY to protest the conscription of Orthodox Jews into the ]. Between 20,000 and 30,000 Haredim attended.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2013-06-10|title=Ultra-Orthodox Jews Rally Against Israeli Army Draft Policies|url=https://observer.com/2013/06/ultra-orthodox-jews-rally-against-israeli-army-draft-policies/|access-date=2022-01-11|website=Observer|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|title=Clearly explained why Orthodox Jews refuse to serve in IDF|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3SJYRkI2hM|language=en|access-date=2022-01-11}}</ref> Among the speakers was Rabbi Elya Ber Wachtfogel, the ] of ] in ], NY. | |||
On June 11, 2017 a similar rally was held in ] in ], NY. Close to 20,000 Haredim attended.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Protesters in New York stage massive anti-Zionist, anti-IDF draft rally|url=https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/tens-of-thousands-of-us-orthodox-jews-protest-idf-draft-law-496597|access-date=2022-01-10|newspaper=The Jerusalem Post | Jpost.com|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Anti-Zionist Hasidic Jews Shake the Room at Brooklyn's Barclays Center|language=en|work=Haaretz|url=https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-anti-zionist-hasidic-jews-shake-the-room-at-barclays-center-1.5483293|access-date=2022-01-10}}</ref> The speakers included Rabbi ], rosh yeshiva of ], Rabbi Leibish Leiser of ], known as The Pshevorsker Rebbe, one of the most prominent leaders of the Haredi community of Antwerp, Belgium, and Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro, author of ''The Empty Wagon: Zionism’s Journey from Identity Crisis to Identity Theft''. A letter was read from ], the rosh yeshiva of ] in Baltimore, MD, who wasn’t able to attend in person.<ref name="youtube.com">{{Citation|title=Tens of thousands of Orthodox Jews in New York protest IDF draft law - Part 1|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SQ7Zmk2-Zg|language=en|access-date=2022-01-10}}</ref> Rabbi Schechter lambasted the attempt to draft Orthodox Jews as an assault on the essential characteristics of religious Jews.<ref name="youtube.com"/> | |||
=== Europe === | |||
On June 27, 2013 Haredim protested in front of the EU headquarters in ], Belgium against Israel attempting to draft Orthodox '']'' students.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Haredim protest against IDF in Brussels|url=https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/haredim-protest-against-idf-in-brussels-318390|access-date=2022-01-17|newspaper=The Jerusalem Post | Jpost.com|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Yanover|first=Yori|title=AG Blocks Draft Bill as Haredim Rally Outside EU Headquarters|url=https://www.jewishpress.com/news/ag-blocks-draft-bill-as-haredim-rally-outside-eu-headquarters/2013/07/02/|access-date=2022-01-19|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|title=A powerful address of Torah Jews in Brussels against Israeli Draft|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIO5Ze0aw14|language=en|access-date=2022-01-19}}</ref> The protest was attended by Rabbi ], head of The ] in London, ], a prominent English '']'' and internationally recognized '']'' authority, and Rabbi Leibish Leiser of ] from Antwerp, Belgium.<ref>{{Cite web|title=European Rabbis Protest Israeli Persecution Against Orthodox Jews {{!}} Torah Jews|url=https://www.truetorahjews.org/issues/brusselsarmy2|access-date=2022-01-18|website=www.truetorahjews.org}}</ref> | |||
==Haredi books about Zionism== | |||
Several books on the issue of Zionism were written by different rabbis. | |||
===''Eim HaBanim Semeicha''=== | |||
'']'' was written by Rabbi ], and published in 1943. Teichtal grew up as a staunch anti-Zionist Hasid of the ] Rebbe. However, during the Holocaust, Rabbi Teichtal changed his position from the one he espoused in his youth. The physical product of that introspection is the book, ''Eim HaBanim Semeicha'', in which he specifically retracts his previous viewpoints, and argues that the true redemption can only come if the Jewish people unite and rebuild the land of Israel.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.urimpublications.com/Merchant2/merchant.mv?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=UP&Product_Code=eh |title=EIM HABANIM SEMEICHAH: On Eretz Yisrael, Redemption and Unity |publisher=Urim Publications |access-date=2015-11-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151122013134/http://www.urimpublications.com/Merchant2/merchant.mv?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=UP&Product_Code=eh |archive-date=2015-11-22 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Many of his co-religionists viewed the book with skepticism, some going so far as to ban Rabbi Teichtal from their synagogues.<ref>{{cite web |first=Ed |last=Hamway |url=http://www.ou.org/publications/ja/5761summer/BOOKS.PDF |title=Eim Habanim Semeichah: Em Habanim Semeha |publisher=www.ou.org |access-date=2015-11-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160118024807/http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache%3AKIoSfQ-buQgJ%3Awww.ou.org%2Fpublications%2Fja%2F5761summer%2FBOOKS.PDF+eim+habanim+semeichah&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=4 |archive-date=2016-01-18 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
In the book, Rabbi Teichtal strongly criticizes the Haredim for not supporting the Zionist movement. When it was written, it was a scathing criticism of the Jewish Orthodox establishment, and Agudat Israel in particular. He writes: "It is clear that he who prepares prior to the Sabbath will eat on the Sabbath (Avodah Zarah, 3a), and since the Haredim did not toil, they have absolutely no influence in the Land (of Israel). Those who toil and build have the influence, and they are the masters of the Land. It is, therefore, no wonder that they are in control... Now, what will the Haredim say? I do not know if they will ever be able to vindicate themselves before the heavenly court for not participating in the movement to rebuild the Land." <!-- (p. 23) --> | |||
===''Sefer Vayoel Moshe''=== | |||
{{Main|Vayoel Moshe}} | |||
''Vayoel Moshe'' was published by the ] Rebbe, Rabbi ] in 1961. It consists of three parts: ''Maamar Shalosh Shevuos'' (three oaths), ''Maamar Yishuv Eretz Yisroel'' (settling the Land of Israel), and ''Maamar Loshon HaKodesh'' (the holy language). The first part, discusses the three oaths mentioned in Ketubot 111a - that the Jewish people are not allowed to ascend to ''Eretz Yisrael'' by force, that the Jewish people are not allowed to rebel against the nations of the world, and that the Jewish people may not by their sins delay the coming of Moshiach, the Jewish messiah. It is primarily a book of Halacha (Jewish law). Rabbi Teitelbaum refers to ] as a major desecration of God's name, blames Zionism for the Holocaust, and refers to Zionist leaders such as ] as "heretics". | |||
===''Kuntres Al HaGeulah VeAl HaTemurah''=== | |||
Published in 1967 also by Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum, this small book consists of inspirational polemics against Zionism as a rebuttal to those who said that the ] was a divine miracle that showed God's support for the State of Israel. Teitelbaum wrote that he did not believe anything miraculous had occurred; small, but advanced, armies often defeat far larger ones.<ref>''Al Hageulah V'al Hatemura'', pg. 33, siman 6</ref> However, for those who insist that the Israeli victory was a supernatural event, it should be viewed as a test from God to see whether the Jewish people would follow the Torah or be led astray by miracles which seemed to support Zionism in the eyes of the masses. He compared this to the miracles that are often done by idolaters in support of their religions, inasmuch as Judaism is not based on miracles, but, rather, on the national revelation on Sinai. | |||
=== ''Ikvesa D’Meshicha'' === | |||
Written by ], regarded as one of the closest students of ], better known as the Chofetz Chaim. He was a prominent ] and leader in ]. It was first written in Yiddish and later translated by Rabbi Moshe Schoenfeld into Hebrew. It was printed most recently in Kovetz Mamarim v’Igeres, a collection of writings by Rabbi Wasserman on various topics published through ] founded by Rabbi Simcha Wasserman, the author’s son.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|last=Wasserman|first=Rabbi Elchonon Bunim|title=Kovetz Mamarim v'Igeres|publisher=מכון אור אלחנן|year=2006|location=Jerusalem, Israel|pages=259–260|language=Hebrew}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=ספר קובץ מאמרים ואגרות / מאת ... רבי אלחנן בונם וסרמן .. {{!}} וסרמן, אלחנן בונם בן נפתלי בינוש, 1875-1941 {{!}} The National Library of Israel|url=https://www.nli.org.il/en/books/NNL_ALEPH002157918/NLI|access-date=2022-01-09|website=www.nli.org.il|language=en}}</ref> In the book he refers to the Zionist movement as '']'': “Those who wage war against God, if they could they would fly to heaven to do it but since they can’t they have decided to fight against the Jewish People who are God’s servants and accept His kingship. Being so, their goal is not their own benefit, rather to spite God and disgrace His honor.”<ref name=":0" /> In the book Rabbi Wasserman details various facets of nationalism/Zionism that run counter to the fundamentals of Jewish '']h'' (religious philosophy). ] wrote Beis HaShoeivah Al Ikvesa D’Meshicha compiling and elucidating Rabbi Wasserman’s source material.<ref>{{Cite web|title=ספר בית השואבה : והוא קובץ מאמרים על עקבתא דמשיחא : כולל פסוקים, מדרשים ומאמרי חז"ל עם פרושים ... / מאת ... הרב שמעון שוואב ... ונלוה עליו מאמר צפית לישועה / ממרן ... החפץ חיים וקונטרס עקבתא דמשיחא / ממרן ... רבי אלחנן וואסערמאן {{!}} שוואב, שמעון בן יהודה ליב, 1908-1995 (כהן, ישראל מאיר, 1838-1933. {{!}} הספרייה הלאומית|url=https://www.nli.org.il/he/books/NNL_ALEPH990026027120205171/NLI|access-date=2022-01-09|website=www.nli.org.il|language=he}}</ref> | |||
=== ''B’ayos Hazman'' === | |||
Written by Rabbi ] the ] of Yeshiva Kamenetz in ] and later ] in ], NY as well as Yeshiva Bais Medarsh Elyon in ], NY. He was the son-in-law of the venerated rabbinic leader ] and an active member of the Agudas Yisroel organization in Europe and America. The book addresses the permissibility of voting in Israeli elections which Agudas Yisroel in Israel had recently permitted. Rabbi Grozovsky writes that participation in the Israeli government is clearly a sin in Jewish law rather he questions if such a sin could be permitted in the face of the grave situation of Orthodox community living in Israel at the time and if the participation is used as a tool to combat the influence of Zionists. Throughout this discussion Rabbi Grozovsky writes adamantly that justifying the participation in Israeli elections in not to be taken as justifying the ideology of Zionism and that Orthodox Jews voting in such elections should only be viewed as a tactic to disempower the Zionists.<ref>{{Cite web|title=HebrewBooks.org Sefer Detail: בעיות הזמן -- גרוזובסקי, רפאל ראובן|url=https://hebrewbooks.org/41396|access-date=2022-01-13|website=hebrewbooks.org}}</ref> | |||
===''I Will Await Him''=== | |||
''I Will Await Him'', published in 2018 by Yirmiyahu Cohen, argues that the establishment of the State of Israel violates Halakhah, claims it is illegitimate, and calls on religious Jews to disassociate from it.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://thelehrhaus.com/culture/a-controversial-halakhic-case-against-the-state-of-israel/ |title=A Controversial Halakhic Case Against the State of Israel|first=Shmuel|last=Silberman|date=January 3, 2019|work=The Lehrhaus}}</ref> | |||
=== ''The Empty Wagon: Zionism’s Journey from Identity Crisis to Identity Theft'' === | |||
Published in 2018 by Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Shapiro|first=Rabbi Yaakov|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1038020732|title=The Empty Wagon: Zionism's Journey from Identity Crisis to Identity Theft|date=2018|publisher=Bais Medrash Society |isbn=978-1-64255-554-7|oclc=1038020732}}</ref> The book details the incongruence of Judaism and Zionism, particularly the ideology of Zionism rather than just the practical establishment of a state in Jewish law. It received approbations from ], head of the ] in Jerusalem, and Rabbi Elya Ber Wachtfogel, ] of ] in South Fallsburg, NY and a prominent Haredi leader in America. | |||
==Involvement with the State of Israel== | |||
], symbol of secularism, crossed out on this traffic sign in Jerusalem.]] | |||
Among Haredi anti-Zionist movements, opinions differ on what attitude to take now that a state exists. Some movements remained actively anti-Zionist, while others lowered their voice; some refuse to vote, while others do vote; some accept money from the government, while others do not. | |||
Many Hasidic Rebbes with followers in the land of Israel, including the ], the ] Rebbe, the late ]er Rebbe, and others, have encouraged their followers to vote in Israeli elections.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=680578 |title=Deal Over Final Makeup of UTJ List to Go Down to the Wire - Israel News - Haaretz Israeli News Source |publisher=Haaretz.com |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Politics/aguddat.html |title=Aguddat Israel Political Party |encyclopedia=Jewish Virtual Library |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> Lubavitcher Hasidim are encouraged to join the Israeli Defense Forces,{{Citation needed|date=June 2007}} in order to ensure the state's security (inasmuch as the State's security is inextricably entwined with the safety of the Jewish people who live within its borders). Most other Haredi groups refuse to serve in the IDF under any circumstances including participating in National Service (Sherut L’umi).<ref>{{Citation|title=Clearly explained why Orthodox Jews refuse to serve in IDF|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3SJYRkI2hM|language=en|access-date=2022-01-05}}</ref> | |||
Meanwhile, the Edah HaChareidis Rabbinical Council of Jerusalem and its associated communities, including ], ], ], and ], do not vote, and do not accept government money. Around election days, posters by the Edah HaChareidis are posted throughout Haredi neighborhoods of Jerusalem, proclaiming that it is forbidden to vote in the elections, and that doing so is a grave sin. The Edah HaChareidis and its affiliated movements have permitted co-operating with the Israeli police under extenuating circumstances.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://chareidi.org/archives5764/vayechi/aviolnt.htm |title=Dei'ah veDibur - Information & Insight - NEWS |publisher=Chareidi.org |date=2004-01-07 |access-date=2015-11-21}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
*{{cite book |year=2004 |orig-year=1990 |surname=Aran |given=Gideon |chapter=From Religious Zionism to Zionist Religion |title=Social Foundations of Judaism |editor-surname=Goldscheider |editor-given=Calvin |editor-surname2=Neusner |editor-given2=Jacob |editor-link2=Jacob Neusner |place=Eugene, Or |publisher=Wipf and Stock Publ. |edition=Reprint |pages=259–282 |chapter-url= |url={{Google books|id=2TxLAwAAQBAJ|plainurl=y|page=|keywords=|text=}} |isbn=1-59244-943-3}} | |||
*{{cite book |surname=Neusner |given=Jacob |authorlink=Jacob Neusner |year=1991 |chapter=Heresies outside of Judaism: Zionism |title=An Introduction to Judaism: A Textbook and Reader |place=Louisville, Kentucky |publisher=Westminster/John Knox Press |chapter-url= |url={{Google books|id=6M8oxDql1KIC|plainurl=y|page=|keywords=|text=}} |pages=312–322 |isbn=0-664-25348-2}} | |||
*Salmon, Yosef. "Zionism and Anti-Zionism in Traditional Judaism in Eastern Europe", ''Zionism and Religion'', eds. Shmuel Almog, Jehuda Reinharz, and Anita Shapira (Hanover and London, 1998), 25–43. | |||
*Ravitzky, Aviezer. "Munkacs and Jerusalem: Ultra-Orthodox Opposition to Zionism and Agudaism", ''Zionism and Religion'', eds. Shmuel Almog, Jehuda Reinharz, and Anita Shapira (Hanover and London, 1998), 67–89. | |||
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Latest revision as of 02:10, 14 December 2024
Overview of the relationship between Haredim and Zionism
From the founding of political Zionism in the 1890s, Haredi Jewish leaders voiced objections to its secular orientation, and before the establishment of the State of Israel, the vast majority of Haredi Jews were opposed to Zionism, like early Reform Judaism, but with distinct reasoning. This was chiefly due to the concern that secular nationalism would redefine the Jewish nation from a religious community based in their alliance to God for whom adherence to religious laws were "the essence of the nation's task, purpose, and right to exists," to an ethnic group like any other as well as the view that it was forbidden for the Jews to re-constitute Jewish rule in the Land of Israel before the arrival of the Messiah. Those rabbis who did support Jewish resettlement in Palestine in the late 19th century had no intention to conquer Palestine and declare its independence from the rule of the Ottoman Turks, and some preferred that only observant Jews be allowed to settle there.
During the 1930s, some European Haredi leaders encouraged their followers not to leave for Palestine, where the Zionists were gaining influence. When the dangers facing European Jewry became clear, the Haredi Agudath Israel organization decided to co-operate with Zionist leaders to an extent, in order to allow religious Jews the possibility of seeking refuge in Palestine. Some Agudah members in Palestine preferred to form an alliance against the Zionist movement with Arab nationalists, but this never occurred. After the creation of the state of Israel, each individual movement within ultra-Orthodox Judaism charted its own path in their approach to the State of Israel.
A study in late 2006 claimed that just over a third of Israelis considered Haredim to be the most hated group in Israel. According to a 2016 Pew survey, 33% of Israeli Haredim say that the term "Zionist" describes them accurately.
History
Early opposition to Zionism
In the hope of winning over the Hasidic masses to the Zionist Organization, Theodor Herzl endeavoured to garner support from one of the most prominent rabbis in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, David Moshe Friedman (d. 1903), the Rebbe of Chortkov. He maintained contact with him for over three years, during which time he tried to convene a conference of rabbis in order to promote Zionism; however, nothing ever materialized. Friedman had been a long-time supporter of efforts to settle Jews in Palestine on the strict condition that they adhere to Jewish law. He had in fact been an early member of Ahavath Zion, a Zionist organization that was established in 1897 with the specific purpose of informing religious Galician Jews about the plan to establish a Jewish national home. Although Ahavath Zion was successful in attracting thousands of members and numerous rabbis from smaller communities, it could not stem the rising anti-Zionist sentiment among the majority of Orthodox leaders. Besides Friedman, they simply could not persuade any of the other great Hasidic leaders to support the Zionist project. The Hasidim were particularly vociferous in their opposition to Zionism and they often protested against the Zionists. They even went so far as to ban the Star of David, originally a religious symbol which only appeared in synagogues, but it had now become "defiled" by the Zionists.
In 1889, Rabbi Joseph Dov Soloveichik proclaimed that early Zionist initiatives resembled the 17th-century false messianic sect which was headed by Sabbatai Zevi. His son Rabbi Hayyim Soloveichik further warned: "The people of Israel should take care not to join a venture that threatens their souls, to destroy religion, and is a stumbling block to the House of Israel." When the Zionists in Brisk claimed that Zionism would stem the tide of Jewish assimilation, Soloveichik felt that what mattered most for Judaism was the quality, not the quantity of it.
Powerful condemnations of political Zionism continued into the twentieth century. In 1903, Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn of Lubavitch published Kuntres Uma'ayan, which contained a strong polemic against Zionism. He opposed the Religious Zionist movement, and was deeply concerned that secular nationalism would replace Judaism as the foundation of Jewish identity. Rabbi Baruch Halberstam (d. 1906) took a leading role in opposing Zionism, in line with the position held by his father, Hayyim Halberstam of Sanz.
In 1912, Haredi leaders in Europe founded the Agudath Israel organisation which hoped to find a "solution to all the problems facing the Jewish people in the Spirit of the Torah." From the outset, the Agudah vehemently opposed the Zionist movement's replacement of the historic religious bond to the land of Israel with secular nationalism. Israel Meir Kagan stated that the fate of the Jewish nation was to remain in exile until the arrival of the Messiah. But with the spread of anti-Semitism in Europe, some Orthodox leaders became more favourable towards the aims of Zionism. Rabbi Isaac Breuer implored Agudah members in 1934 "not to leave Jewish history to the Zionists", hoping that religious Jews would assist in establishing a Jewish homeland. Others remained staunchly opposed, chief among them the rabbi of Munkács, Chaim Elazar Spira (d. 1937), who was the fiercest opponent of Zionism among Hasidic rabbis. Spira saw Zionism as a denial of the Divine Redemption and faith in the Messiah. He even objected to Agudath Israel because of its support for immigration to Palestine. In 1936, he initiated a publication against the Zionist enterprise which was endorsed by 150 rabbis. During the wartime period, Rabbi Elchonon Wasserman (1875–1941) of Baranowicze wrote a pamphlet in which he blamed the Zionists for the persecution of Jews in Europe. He rejected the notion that a secular Jewish state could be considered the "advent of Redemption." The goal of Zionism was to uproot religion and Jewish tradition. At the 1937 Agudath Israel Great Assembly in Marienbad, most discussions were devoted to the question of the Jewish State and the Nazi rise to power in Germany, and increasing anti-Semitism in Poland and Lithuania. Palestine beaconed as a refuge for the religious European masses whose situation was gradually worsening. While the majority of attendees rejected the establishment of a secular Jewish State on principle as well as on practical grounds, a minority, which was influenced by the dire situation, was in favour of it.
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Within Palestine itself, the local Ashkenazi Haredi community of the Old Yishuv was opposed to Zionism. As Zionist settlement was underway during the 19th and 20th centuries, they were alarmed by the influx of predominantly non-religious Jews who wished to establish a secular state in the Holy Land and threatened the peaceful relations the Orthodox community had enjoyed with their Arab neighbors until this point. The chief rabbi of the Ashkenazi community in Jerusalem, Rabbi Joseph Hayyim Sonnenfeld, often referred to the Zionists as "evil men and ruffians" and claimed that "Hell had entered the Land of Israel with Herzl." Sonnenfeld did not want the Orthodox Jewish community to become subject to secular Zionist authority. The spokesman for the anti-Zionist Ashkenazi community in Jerusalem, Dr Jacob Israël de Haan, endeavoured to form an alliance with the Arab nationalist leadership and hoped to reach an agreement that would allow unrestricted Jewish settlement in Arab lands in return for the relinquishment of Jewish political aspirations. In June 1924, de Haan was assassinated by the Haganah after having conveyed his proposals to King Hussein and his sons, Faisal and Abdullah.
The 1929 Palestine riots and the Nazi rise to power led to a crisis within the anti-Zionist Agudah camp. Some still hoped for a Jewish-Arab alliance against the Zionists, while others, such as Yitzhak-Meir Levin and Jacob Rosenheim faced a difficult dilemma. They felt that such an alliance would not be accepted by the masses of Haredi European Jews, yet they did not wish to cooperate with the Zionists. Moshe Blau, another Agudah member, contended that, "No matter how much the Haredi hates the non-religious, heretical, apostate Zionists, he hates the despicable Arab a hundred times over." The brutal murder by Arabs of dozens of Haredi Jews in Hebron and Safed damaged the already difficult relationships between the communities. In 1937, the Central Committee of Agudath Israel in the Land of Israel issued a declaration claiming that secular Jewish rule would pose a danger to Orthodox Jewry, while indicating potential acceptance of a Jewish state if it were a Halachic state. It stated:
Agudath Israel in the Land of Israel rejects outright any attempt at despoiling the Land of Israel of its sanctity and considers the proposal to establish a secular Jewish state in Palestine as a hazard to the lofty role of the Jewish People as a holy nation. Agudath Israel in the Land of Israel declares that Orthodox Jewry could only agree to a Jewish state in all the Land of Israel if it were possible for the basic constitution of this state to guarantee Torah rule in the overall public and national life.
The Agudah in Europe grudgingly began to cooperate with the Jewish Agency and other Zionist bodies in an effort to alleviate the situation facing European Jews. In response to this, Amram Blau and Aharon Katzenellenbogen of Jerusalem broke away from Agudah in 1938 to form Neturei Karta who refused to have any dealing with the Zionists. During the 1940s the Neturei Karta became increasingly critical of the Agudah's position and in 1945 they succeeded in expelling Agudah members from the Edah HaChareidis. In 1947, Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem Yosef Tzvi Dushinsky petitioned the UN on behalf of his 60,000 strong community that Jerusalem not be included in the Jewish state and pleaded that the city be placed under international control.
Aftermath of the Holocaust
Before and during the Second World War, Haredi opposition to the Zionists persisted. But after the war, the devastating consequences of the Holocaust softened the position of many towards Zionism. The ultra-orthodox in Eastern Europe had been murdered in vast numbers; whole communities had been wiped out. One rabbi, Yisachar Shlomo Teichtal, hiding in Budapest in 1942 and witnessing the persecution of the Jews, renounced his previous hostility to the Zionist movement, and instead strongly criticized the Orthodox establishment for not taking the lead in re-establishing the Jewish homeland.
After World War II, many Jewish refugees found themselves in displaced person camps. The Zionists controlled a camp for Jewish refugee children near Haifa, Israel where, according to the Haredi-affiliated newspaper Hamodia, they operated an anti-religious policy in an effort to cut off Haredi children from their spiritual roots. To a large extent they were successful, and many children from Haredi homes were "poisoned against religion".
Post-1948
The relationship between Haredim and Zionism became more complex after the founding of the State of Israel in 1948. Some Haredi groups "with great reluctance permitted" being involved in the political process of the state by voting in elections and accepting state funding. They maintained that since the government is not an ideological Zionist organization (as is the WZO, for example), and also they are not voluntarily choosing to join the Zionists, but rather it is like a partnership that already exists - "and if one wouldn’t participate, the other partner would take over his rights as well." Others have maintained a more hardline rejectionist position, refusing all funding from the Israeli state and abstaining from taking part in the political process. The positions of specific Haredi groups are discussed in greater detail in the remainder of the article.
There is also a growing group of Orthodox Jews known as Hardalim. They are Religious Zionists who moved in their religious observances towards Haredi Judaism. Philosophically, however, they form a part of the Religious Zionist world, and not of the Haredi world.
United Torah Judaism and Shas, which advocate for a halachic state, are the only two Haredi parties in the Israeli Knesset. In addition, even the anti-Zionist Satmar Hasidim do take part in municipal elections in some places, such as the Haredi stronghold of Bnei Brak.
Haredim who do not consider themselves Zionists fall into two camps: Non-Zionists and Anti-Zionists. Non-Zionists do not object to the existence of the State of Israel but see no religious significance in it and do not believe that it has anything to do with the messianic redemption. In their eyes, the redemption cannot be brought about through human hands. Anti-Zionists are opposed to the existence of any Jewish state prior to the coming of the Messiah. According to Aharon E. Wexler and Moshe Krakowski, Non-Zionists constitute a majority of the Haredi world.
Anti-Zionist Haredim believe that the existence of a Jewish state prior to the Messianic era is a violation of the Three Oaths. They believe that voting in Israeli elections causes one to become a “partner” in all the sins committed by the government, which includes enabling it to violate the Three Oaths.
Ideological reasons
See also: The Three OathsThere are many different ideological reasons for religious opposition to Zionism; however, the main two are most widely expressed by Hasidim and Lithuanian Haredim.
The overarching motive behind many Haredim's opposition to Zionism stems from a traditional and religious view of Jewish identity and peoplehood which runs counter to Zionism's nationalist ideology. Haredim often cite the 10th century rabbinic sage Rav Saadia Goan as spelling out their national identity in terms irreconcilable with modern nationalism; as he wrote in his seminal work Emunah v’Deos (אמונה ודעות), "Our nation, the B’nei Yisrael, is a nation only by virture of its Torah (collective religious teachings)." The opposition extends to ancillary parts of Zionist ideology, such as militarism and organic nationalism, which they hold are incongruous with Jewish religious teachings.
However, there is also an Halachic standpoint which makes the case against Zionism even if Israel would - hypothetically - have been a theocracy, where Israel would have been governed under strict Jewish laws.
Historically, many dynasties in Hasidism have expressed anti-Zionist opinions because of the "Three Oaths". The Talmud, in Ketubot 111a, mentions that the Jewish people have been bound by three oaths: 1) not to ascend to Eretz Yisrael (the Land of Israel) as a group using force; 2) not to rebel against the nations of the world; and 3) that the nations of the world would not persecute the nation of Israel excessively. Some consider the establishment of the State of Israel to be a violation of these oaths. The first Haredi anti-Zionist movement was Agudath Israel, established in Poland in 1912. Haredi groups and people actively and publicly opposing Zionism are Satmar, Toldos Aharon, Neturei Karta.
Lithuanian Haredim, sometimes called mitnagdim, take a different approach to their beliefs from their Hassidic counterparts. Lithuanian religious Jews oppose the state not because of the three oaths midrash but because they feel that Zionism epitomizes secularity and Jewish desire to be void of Torah. Many Lithuanian religious Jews, such as Rabbi Yosef Shalom Elyashiv, have been involved with Zionist politics as Israel progressively becomes more Jewish-oriented.
Amongst the Ashkenazi Orthodox rabbinical leadership, religious Zionists form a minority. Generally speaking, most Sephardi Haredi authorities have never shared the anti-Zionism of their Ashkenazi counterparts, and some (such as the late Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu) are strongly affiliated with Religious Zionism, taking a similar stance to the Hardal movements. However, there are anti-Zionist elements in the Sephardi communities as well. It is known that the late Baba Sali supported and celebrated the anti-Zionist views of the Satmar Rebbe.
Current positions of Haredi groups
Groups which do not recognize Israel
There are a number of Haredi groups which not only oppose Zionism, but also do not recognize the State of Israel. Among them are the Hasidic sects of Shomer Emunim (and its offshoots, Toldos Aharon, and Toldos Avrohom Yitzchok), Mishkenos HoRoim, and Dushinsky. In July 1947, Rabbi Yosef Tzvi Dushinsky, Chief Rabbi of the Jerusalem-based Edah HaChareidis, declared to the United Nations his "definite opposition to a Jewish state in any part of Palestine". The largest anti-Zionist Hasidic group is Satmar, which has around 100,000 adherents worldwide. The group's position was crystallized by their charismatic leader, Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum, who authored comprehensive and polemic tracts detailing his opposition to Zionism. He encouraged his followers who live in the "Holy Land" to form self-sufficient communities, rejecting social state benefits, and not to vote in general elections. Anxious not to be viewed as supportive of the actions of the Israeli government, which he viewed as an abomination, he instructed his people not to visit the Western Wall and other holy sites which had been captured by Israel in the 1967 war.
One of the most extreme sects is the Neturei Karta. Formed in 1938 as a breakaway from Agudath Israel, its 5,000 members are based mainly in Jerusalem and Beit Shemesh. Despite their shared opposition to Zionism, Satmar and other anti-Zionist Haredi groups are frequently critical of the activities of Neturei Karta and publicly distance themselves from them.
Groups which oppose secular Zionism, but recognize Israel
The Agudat Israel is an international organization (with an Israeli association) of various Haredi groups, mainly from the Lithuanian yeshiva communities and Hasidic groups such as Ger and Belz. The Agudah was initially created as an umbrella organization of Orthodox Jews who were united to fight against the Zionist movement. Out of necessity and "to save from the mouth of the lion" they permitted participating in national elections and sending their representatives to the Israeli Knesset, "to actively protect what is holy to us." They did not take full part in it by not serving in its military, and do not celebrate any of the State's official holidays. They are adamantly opposed to serving in the military, because of the gilui arayos, shfichus damim and avodah zarah that exists. The Agudat Israel party in the Knesset is represented as United Torah Judaism, a collective party of Agudat Israel and Degel HaTorah. It tries to influence the Knesset with a pro-Judaism outlook, by mainly focusing on funding for Jewish education (yeshivas), exemption from military service for Haredi yeshiva students, and trying to safeguard basic rights such as freedom to practice their religion. In general, the Agudath Israel position is supportive of Israel.
Lithuanian stream
A number of Lithuanian (non-Hasidic) leaders, like the Chazon Ish (1878–1953), Rav Shach (1898–2001), and Rabbi Yosef Sholom Elyashiv (1910-2012), have expressed strongly anti-Zionist views. Examples of this are found in lectures and letters of Rav Shach. One of the newspapers of the Litvish world, the Yated Neeman, regularly publishes articles strongly criticizing Zionism, naming it a "heretical movement". The main Litvish community does vote, as per what many say were the instructions of the Chazon Ish. However, some of the Chazon Ish's disciples dispute this claim. Rabbi Elyashiv would urge his followers to vote for the Degel HaTorah list. Rabbi Shimshon Dovid Pincus, quoted in the book of his speeches about Purim, explains that in each generation, the Yetzer Hara (evil inclination) appears in different forms. Examples he gives are the Enlightenment and communism. He goes on to explain that nowadays, Zionism is a form of the Yetzer Hara.
Rabbi Moshe Feinstein (1895–1986), one of the American leaders of the Lithuanian Jewish world, writes in a responsum to a question whether it is permissible to pray in a synagogue which displays an Israeli flag: "Even though it is improper to bring the flags into shul, and all the more so not to keep them there permanently, and all the more so, not near the Aron Kodesh, and one should try to remove it peacefully. However, to make a fight over this is forbidden."
Anti-Zionism does not translate to personal antagonism, and Rabbi Chaim Shmuelevitz, the Mirrer rosh yeshiva, openly displayed thanks to soldiers of the Israeli army.
The Soloveitchik dynasty of Lithuanian Haredi Judaism is known as one of the most elite scholastic dynasties in all of Orthodox Judaism. The dynasty split into two groups in the 20th century, as parts of the Soloveitchik Rabbinical family veered away from their anti-Zionist tradition set by Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik of Brisk, and adopted views aligned with Modern Orthodox Judaism and Religious Zionism. Ironically, the Zionist faction of the Brisker dynasty is centered in the United States, and the anti-Zionist faction was, and continues to be, centered in Israel. Rabbi Meir Soloveitchik and Rabbi Dovid Soloveitchik, who lead two of the Brisker yeshivas in Jerusalem, continue to be outspoken opponents of Zionism.
Hasidic groups
While ideologically opposed to Zionism, the moderate Hasidic groups of Ger, Breslov, Vizhnitz, Belz, and Klausenberg do vote in the Israeli elections, and accept Israeli government funding. Ger and Belz are two of the most influential movements behind the Israeli political party Agudat Yisrael, which, together with the Lithuanian Degel HaTorah, forms the United Torah Judaism party. Prominent Gerrer rabbi, Yitzhak-Meir Levin, was a signatory to the Israeli Declaration of Independence. He also served as Minister of Welfare, though today, members of Agudat Israel prefer to serve as Deputy Ministers, or in Knesset Committees. These groups do not observe any days associated with the state, and neither do they recite the Prayer for the State of Israel.
Agudat's position evolved into one generally co-operative with the State of Israel, with an emphasis on supporting religious activities within its borders and the maintenance of Haredi institutions. Some rebbes affiliated with Agudat Yisrael, such as the Sadigura rebbe Avrohom Yaakov Friedman, took more hard-line stances on security, settlements, and disengagement.
Chabad-Lubavitch
Main article: ChabadThe fifth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn (1860–1920), also known as the RaShaB, published Kuntres Uma'ayan, the beginning of which contains a strong polemic against secular Zionism. He was deeply concerned that secular nationalism would replace Judaism as the foundation of Jewish identity. The seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, as wells as his predecessor, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson, nonetheless insisted on trying to increase the observance of the Torah in Israel, both among individuals as well as to make the state's policies more in line with Jewish law and tradition. He also expressed overwhelming support for the State's military endeavors, and vehemently condemned any transfers of land as against Jewish law. His reasoning was based on the code of Jewish law, the Shulchan Aruch, which states that the Sabbath must be violated (carrying weapons) by the residents of a Jewish community (in any country) that borders a hostile Gentile settlement, even if they are threatened in the most subtle manner. He viewed the whole of Israel as such a community, and that was the impetus for his support. He argued that the safety of the Jewish people was paramount, and the physical presence of so many Jews in the land meant that its borders had to be protected as a matter of course. At the same time, he also drew support for his statements from the notion in the Torah that the land of Israel was given to the Jewish people, and that inherent Jewish ownership of the land could not be superseded by mere political interests. Nevertheless, he refused to call the state by name, pointing out that the Holy Land exists independent of any authority that sees itself as sovereign over the land.
Many Chabadniks in the world live in Israel, and there are a great deal of Chabad houses there. Their young men serve in the Israeli military. In line with the late Rebbe's instructions to vote for a party that refuses to support giving away parts of the Land of Israel as part of any peace negotiations, Chabad does not endorse any particular party in the election process.
Chabad Zionism
Chabad Yeshiva students have been joining the IDF in record numbers. There are Chabad synagogues that celebrate Yom Ha'atzmaut.
Chabad Rabbi Shimon Rosenberg spoke at Yom Hazikaron Ceremony in Jerusalem in 2011. He also lit one of the torches at the Zionist state ceremony commemorating Israel Independence Day on behalf of his grandson, Chabad Rabbi Moshe Hotzberg.
Chabad Rabbi Sholom Lipskar celebrated Jerusalem Day at Yeshiva Mercaz HaRav in Jerusalem, the most prominent yeshiva in the Religious Zionist world.
In 2011, Rabbi Menachem Brod of Kfar Chabad, who is a spokesman for Chabad, says the group is Zionist in its support for Israel. He stated: "When the average Israeli citizen says 'Zionism', he is referring to love of the land, strengthening the state, and being close to the nation and the land, to military service. If all this is Zionism, then Chabad is super Zionist!"
Sephardim
Sephardic Haredim are generally more supportive of Zionism and the State of Israel than their Ashkenazi counterparts, and the number of Sephardic organisations and rabbis who remain opposed to the state constitute a small minority of the Sephardi Haredi leadership. These include the Edah HaCharedit HaSefaradit and Rabbi Yaakov Hillel, who draw their ideology from the writings of Iraqi sage Ben Ish Chai. The Baba Sali praised VaYoel Moshe, the polemic against Zionism written by Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum of Satmar.
In 2010, Shas, the political party which represents the vast majority of Sephardi Haredim in Israel, joined the World Zionist Organization, becoming the first Zionist Haredi party in the Knesset. Shas MK Yaakov Margi claimed that "there's nothing earth-shaking about saying Shas is a Zionist party. We operate as such, we join governments and are partners in the Zionist experience, (our members) serve in the army. There's nothing new here." The party's former spiritual leader, the late Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel Ovadia Yosef, forbade the flying of the Israeli flag in synagogues, calling it "a reminder of the acts of the evil-doers". While serving as Chief Rabbi, he allowed the recitation of psalms of praise after prayers without a blessing on Israel Independence Day; he did not permit saying Hallel either as a part of the prayer service (where it is normally recited on holidays) nor with the customary blessings before and after that are only said on holidays.
Groups generally supportive of Zionism
Chardal
Chardal Jews usually refers to the portion of the Religious Zionist Jewish community in Israel which inclines significantly toward Charedi ideology (whether in terms of outlook on the secular world, or is their stringent (machmir) approach to Halacha); however, it is sometimes used to refer to the portion of the Charedi Jewish community in Israel which inclines significantly toward Religious Zionist (Dati-Leumi) ideology. Chardal is an initialism of the words Charedi and Dati-Leumi.
Haredi newspapers in Israel
The main Haredi newspapers, Hamodia, HaMachane HaHaredi, and Yated Ne'eman, occasionally publish articles strongly criticizing Zionism, naming it a "heretical movement". They sometimes refer to the country as "Israel", and at other times will only refer to the geographical entity as "Eretz Yisroel". The Israel news columns are almost exclusively right of centre, lambasting Arab terrorism. Articles about outreach movements in Israel and Israeli culture are very common, and are shown without ideological bias. Hapeles, another Israeli Hareidi newspaper has campaigned extensively for Hareidim not to be drafted into the Israeli Defense Forces. When the offices were raided and computers confiscated in 2017 the newspaper claimed that the raid was political and intended as a reprisal for their anti-draft activities.
Haredim outside of Israel
America
On June 9, 2013 a rally was held in Foley Square in Manhattan, NY to protest the conscription of Orthodox Jews into the Israeli Defense Forces. Between 20,000 and 30,000 Haredim attended. Among the speakers was Rabbi Elya Ber Wachtfogel, the rosh yeshiva of Yeshiva Gedolah Zichron Moshe in South Fallsburg, NY.
On June 11, 2017 a similar rally was held in Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY. Close to 20,000 Haredim attended. The speakers included Rabbi Aaron Schechter, rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Chaim Berlin, Rabbi Leibish Leiser of Pshevorsk, known as The Pshevorsker Rebbe, one of the most prominent leaders of the Haredi community of Antwerp, Belgium, and Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro, author of The Empty Wagon: Zionism’s Journey from Identity Crisis to Identity Theft. A letter was read from Rabbi Aharon Feldman, the rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Ner Yisroel in Baltimore, MD, who wasn’t able to attend in person. Rabbi Schechter lambasted the attempt to draft Orthodox Jews as an assault on the essential characteristics of religious Jews.
Europe
On June 27, 2013 Haredim protested in front of the EU headquarters in Brussels, Belgium against Israel attempting to draft Orthodox yeshiva students. The protest was attended by Rabbi Ephraim Padwa, head of The Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations in London, Rabbi Elyakim Schlesinger, a prominent English rosh yeshiva and internationally recognized halachic authority, and Rabbi Leibish Leiser of Pshevorsk from Antwerp, Belgium.
Haredi books about Zionism
Several books on the issue of Zionism were written by different rabbis.
Eim HaBanim Semeicha
Eim HaBanim Semeicha was written by Rabbi Yisachar Shlomo Teichtal, and published in 1943. Teichtal grew up as a staunch anti-Zionist Hasid of the Munkatsher Rebbe. However, during the Holocaust, Rabbi Teichtal changed his position from the one he espoused in his youth. The physical product of that introspection is the book, Eim HaBanim Semeicha, in which he specifically retracts his previous viewpoints, and argues that the true redemption can only come if the Jewish people unite and rebuild the land of Israel. Many of his co-religionists viewed the book with skepticism, some going so far as to ban Rabbi Teichtal from their synagogues.
In the book, Rabbi Teichtal strongly criticizes the Haredim for not supporting the Zionist movement. When it was written, it was a scathing criticism of the Jewish Orthodox establishment, and Agudat Israel in particular. He writes: "It is clear that he who prepares prior to the Sabbath will eat on the Sabbath (Avodah Zarah, 3a), and since the Haredim did not toil, they have absolutely no influence in the Land (of Israel). Those who toil and build have the influence, and they are the masters of the Land. It is, therefore, no wonder that they are in control... Now, what will the Haredim say? I do not know if they will ever be able to vindicate themselves before the heavenly court for not participating in the movement to rebuild the Land."
Sefer Vayoel Moshe
Main article: Vayoel MosheVayoel Moshe was published by the Satmar Rebbe, Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum in 1961. It consists of three parts: Maamar Shalosh Shevuos (three oaths), Maamar Yishuv Eretz Yisroel (settling the Land of Israel), and Maamar Loshon HaKodesh (the holy language). The first part, discusses the three oaths mentioned in Ketubot 111a - that the Jewish people are not allowed to ascend to Eretz Yisrael by force, that the Jewish people are not allowed to rebel against the nations of the world, and that the Jewish people may not by their sins delay the coming of Moshiach, the Jewish messiah. It is primarily a book of Halacha (Jewish law). Rabbi Teitelbaum refers to Religious Zionism as a major desecration of God's name, blames Zionism for the Holocaust, and refers to Zionist leaders such as Theodor Herzl as "heretics".
Kuntres Al HaGeulah VeAl HaTemurah
Published in 1967 also by Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum, this small book consists of inspirational polemics against Zionism as a rebuttal to those who said that the Six-Day War was a divine miracle that showed God's support for the State of Israel. Teitelbaum wrote that he did not believe anything miraculous had occurred; small, but advanced, armies often defeat far larger ones. However, for those who insist that the Israeli victory was a supernatural event, it should be viewed as a test from God to see whether the Jewish people would follow the Torah or be led astray by miracles which seemed to support Zionism in the eyes of the masses. He compared this to the miracles that are often done by idolaters in support of their religions, inasmuch as Judaism is not based on miracles, but, rather, on the national revelation on Sinai.
Ikvesa D’Meshicha
Written by Rabbi Elchonon Bunim Wasserman, regarded as one of the closest students of Rabbi Yisroel Meir Kagan, better known as the Chofetz Chaim. He was a prominent rosh yeshiva and leader in Agudath Israel. It was first written in Yiddish and later translated by Rabbi Moshe Schoenfeld into Hebrew. It was printed most recently in Kovetz Mamarim v’Igeres, a collection of writings by Rabbi Wasserman on various topics published through Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon founded by Rabbi Simcha Wasserman, the author’s son. In the book he refers to the Zionist movement as Amalek: “Those who wage war against God, if they could they would fly to heaven to do it but since they can’t they have decided to fight against the Jewish People who are God’s servants and accept His kingship. Being so, their goal is not their own benefit, rather to spite God and disgrace His honor.” In the book Rabbi Wasserman details various facets of nationalism/Zionism that run counter to the fundamentals of Jewish Hashkafah (religious philosophy). Rabbi Shimon Schwab wrote Beis HaShoeivah Al Ikvesa D’Meshicha compiling and elucidating Rabbi Wasserman’s source material.
B’ayos Hazman
Written by Rabbi Refael Reuvain Grozovsky the rosh yeshiva of Yeshiva Kamenetz in Poland and later Mesivta Torah v’Daas in Brooklyn, NY as well as Yeshiva Bais Medarsh Elyon in Monsey, NY. He was the son-in-law of the venerated rabbinic leader Rabbi Boruch Ber Leibowitz and an active member of the Agudas Yisroel organization in Europe and America. The book addresses the permissibility of voting in Israeli elections which Agudas Yisroel in Israel had recently permitted. Rabbi Grozovsky writes that participation in the Israeli government is clearly a sin in Jewish law rather he questions if such a sin could be permitted in the face of the grave situation of Orthodox community living in Israel at the time and if the participation is used as a tool to combat the influence of Zionists. Throughout this discussion Rabbi Grozovsky writes adamantly that justifying the participation in Israeli elections in not to be taken as justifying the ideology of Zionism and that Orthodox Jews voting in such elections should only be viewed as a tactic to disempower the Zionists.
I Will Await Him
I Will Await Him, published in 2018 by Yirmiyahu Cohen, argues that the establishment of the State of Israel violates Halakhah, claims it is illegitimate, and calls on religious Jews to disassociate from it.
The Empty Wagon: Zionism’s Journey from Identity Crisis to Identity Theft
Published in 2018 by Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro. The book details the incongruence of Judaism and Zionism, particularly the ideology of Zionism rather than just the practical establishment of a state in Jewish law. It received approbations from Rabbi Moshe Sternbuch, head of the Edah HaChareidis in Jerusalem, and Rabbi Elya Ber Wachtfogel, rosh yeshiva of Yeshiva Gedolah Zichron Moshe in South Fallsburg, NY and a prominent Haredi leader in America.
Involvement with the State of Israel
Among Haredi anti-Zionist movements, opinions differ on what attitude to take now that a state exists. Some movements remained actively anti-Zionist, while others lowered their voice; some refuse to vote, while others do vote; some accept money from the government, while others do not.
Many Hasidic Rebbes with followers in the land of Israel, including the Gerrer Rebbe, the Belzer Rebbe, the late Lubavitcher Rebbe, and others, have encouraged their followers to vote in Israeli elections. Lubavitcher Hasidim are encouraged to join the Israeli Defense Forces, in order to ensure the state's security (inasmuch as the State's security is inextricably entwined with the safety of the Jewish people who live within its borders). Most other Haredi groups refuse to serve in the IDF under any circumstances including participating in National Service (Sherut L’umi).
Meanwhile, the Edah HaChareidis Rabbinical Council of Jerusalem and its associated communities, including Satmar, Dushinsky, Toldos Aharon, and Toldos Avrohom Yitzchok, do not vote, and do not accept government money. Around election days, posters by the Edah HaChareidis are posted throughout Haredi neighborhoods of Jerusalem, proclaiming that it is forbidden to vote in the elections, and that doing so is a grave sin. The Edah HaChareidis and its affiliated movements have permitted co-operating with the Israeli police under extenuating circumstances.
See also
- Secularism in Israel
- 2013 Haredi anti-draft protests in Israel
- Protest against conscription of yeshiva students
- Non-Zionism
- Haredi nationalism
References
- Halpern, Ben (2004) . "The Rise and Reception of Zionism in the Nineteenth Century". In Goldscheider, Calvin; Neusner, Jacob (eds.). Social Foundations of Judaism (2nd ed.). Eugene, Or: Wipf and Stock Publ. pp. 94–113. ISBN 1-59244-943-3.
- Lintl, Peter; Stiftung Wissenschaft Und Politik (2020). "The Haredim as a Challenge for the Jewish State". Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP) (in German). doi:10.18449/2020RP14. Retrieved 2022-01-20.
- ha-Peles; volume 3, issue 4.
- Alexander Moshe Lapidus, a strong supporter of Hovevei Zion writes in Shivath Zion (volume 1 p. 35):
- There were days – at the beginning of this movement (-Hovevei Zion) – that the settlement idea had many opposes, but now the opposition is almost gone. The people are already convinced that we are not here to take over the land from the Turks with weapon and we are not planning to establish a government over there. Our only goal is to organize farmers to work in field ... so there is nothing to be afraid about hurrying the exile-end...
- "Rav Alexander Moshe Lapidus ZT"L". www.tzemachdovid.org. Archived from the original on January 24, 2013.
- "In brief: Hate for Chareidim". Jewish Tribune, London. 2006-11-02. p. 9.
- "8. Views of the Jewish state and the diaspora". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. Pew Research Center. 8 March 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
- Shimoni, Gideon; Wistrich, Robert S. (1999). Theodor Herzl: visionary of the Jewish State. Herzl Press. p. 303. ISBN 978-0-930832-08-7. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- Rabinowicz, Tzvi (1996). The Encyclopedia of Hasidism. Jason Aronson. p. 201. ISBN 978-1-56821-123-7. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- Diaspora Nationalism and Jewish Identity in Habsburg Galicia. Cambridge University Press. 31 August 2012. pp. 170–171. ISBN 978-1-107-01424-4. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
- Diaspora Nationalism and Jewish Identity in Habsburg Galicia. Cambridge University Press. 31 August 2012. pp. 172–173. ISBN 978-1-107-01424-4. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
- Newton, Adam Z. (2001). The fence and the neighbor: Emmanuel Levinas, Yeshayahu Leibowitz, and Israel among the nations. SUNY Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-7914-9144-7. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
- Śalmôn, Yôsēf (2002). Religion and Zionism – first encounters. Hebrew University Magnes Press. p. 349. ISBN 978-965-493-101-4. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
There is no doubt that R. Hayyim expressed an extreme anti-Zionist position; when the Zionists in Brisk argued that Zionism constituted a barrier against the assimilation of western Jews, he replied that, for Judaism, the quality, not the quantity of it was essential. By limiting the concept of klal yisrael (the entire Jewish people) to the "God-fearing" alone, he was moving closer to the philosophers of German Orthodoxy.
- Goldman, Shalom (2009). Zeal for Zion: Christians, Jews, and the Idea of the Promised Land. UNC Press Books. pp. 272–73. ISBN 978-0-8078-3344-5. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
The most eminent Orthodox rabbis of the first decade of the twentieth century, among them the Lubavitcher rebbe Sholom Dov Ber Schneersohn, issued powerful condemnations of political Zionism. In 1903 Schneersohn warned that the Zionists "have made nationalism a substitute for the Torah and the commandments... After this assumption is accepted, anyone who enters the movement regards himself as no longer obliged to keep the commandments of the Torah, nor is there any hope consequently that at some time or another he will return, because, according to his own reckoning, he is a proper Jew in that he is a loyal nationalist.
- Gershon David Hundert; Yivo Institute for Jewish Research (28 May 2008). The YIVO encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. Yale University Press. p. 1662. ISBN 978-0-300-11903-9. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
- Eisen, Yosef (2004). Miraculous Journey: A Complete History of the Jewish People from Creation to the Present. Targum Press. p. 345. ISBN 978-1-56871-323-6. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- Sacks, Jonathan (1992). Crisis and Covenant: Jewish Thought After the Holocaust. Manchester University Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-7190-4203-4.
The saintly Rabbi Israel Meir ha-Cohen invoked the talmudic passage of the three oaths to remind his followers that the Jewish fate was to remain in exile until redeemed by God.
- Efron, Noah J. (2003). Real Jews: Secular Versus Ultra-Orthodox and the Struggle for Jewish Identity in Israel. BasicBooks. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-465-01854-3. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
- Haumann, Heiko (2002). A History of East European Jews. Central European University Press. p. 178. ISBN 978-963-9241-26-8. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
In the inter-war period, the rabbi of Munkács (Mukačevo), Chaim Elazar Spira (Shapira, 1872–1937)—at that time the most resolute opponent of Zionism among Hasidic rabbis—described the three gates of Hell: "The lack of faith of many elements of European Jewry, the absolute subjugation to money in America, and Zionism which was gaining ground in Jerusalem!
- "A Jewish Community in the Carpathian Mountains- The Story of Munkács". Yadvashem.org. Retrieved 2015-11-21.
- Aaron Phillip Willis (1993). Sephardic Torah Guardians: Ritual and the Politics of Piety. Princeton University. p. 246. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
Around this time, the Agudah translated into Hebrew and printed (and then reprinted several times, for interest was high), a pamphlet by Elchanan Wasserman, the headmaster of the Talmudic academy in Baranowicze, who was killed by the Nazis in 1941. It was Wasserman's view that, theologically, the Zionists were to blame for the Nazis, for they embraced "two idolatries" - socialism and nationalism. The rest was inevitable, Wasserman wrote: "In Heaven, the two idolatries were fashioned into one—national-socialism. A terrible rod of fury was forged from them that strikes at Jews in every corner of the earth. The same abominations that we worshipped are now hammering us."
- ^ Ḳimerling, Barukh (1989). The Israeli State and Society: Boundaries and Frontiers. SUNY Press. pp. 176–178. ISBN 978-1-4384-0901-6. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
- Rabkin, Yakov M. (2006). A Threat from Within: A Century of Jewish Opposition to Zionism. Fernwood Pub. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-55266-171-0. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
Rabbi Elhanan Wasserman (1875–1941), a disciple of Hafetz Haim and a pillar of Lithuanian Judaism, compared Zionists to the members of the Yevsektzia, the Jewish section of the Soviet Communist Party. Wielding their own version of secularized messianism, the Jewish Communists attacked traditional Jewish life with extraordinary vehemence.
- Zohar, Zion: Sephardic and Mizrahi Jewry: From the Golden Age of Spain to Modern Times, p. 184
- ^ Berger, Marshall J.; Ahimeir, Ora (2002). Jerusalem: a city and its future. Syracuse University Press. p. 236. ISBN 978-0-8156-2913-9. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
- Rabkin, Yakov M. (2006). A Threat from Within : a Century of Jewish Opposition to Zionism. Black Point, N.S.: Fernwood Pub. p. 136. ISBN 1-55266-171-7. OCLC 61127883.
- ^ Laqueur, Walter (20 May 2003). A History of Zionism: From the French Revolution to the Establishment of the State of Israel. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 410. ISBN 978-0-8052-1149-8. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
Rosenheim, the political head of central European Orthodoxy, who was accustomed to using far more moderate language, nevertheless warned the religious Zionists against the 'mortal danger' they risked by collaborating with those who did not accept the divine law.
- Gilbert, Martin (1996). Jerusalem in the twentieth century. John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-471-16308-4. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
- Berger, Marshall J.; Ahimeir, Ora (2002). Jerusalem: a city and its future. Syracuse University Press. p. 238. ISBN 978-0-8156-2913-9. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
- Berger, Marshall J.; Ahimeir, Ora (2002). Jerusalem: a city and its future. Syracuse University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-8156-2913-9. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
In another letter to one of the harsh anti-Zionists, Blau gave an excellent description of how he conceived this tragic situation: "Your Honor is mistaken in thinking that peace with the Arabs is possible. The Arabs hate us bitterly. We do not want to cut off the shackles of the Diaspora, but neither do we want to be killed and slaughtered, to be like dung in the field."
- Mainuddin, Rolin G. (2002). Religion and politics in the developing world: explosive interactions. Ashgate. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-7546-1507-1. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
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- "Rabbi Yosef Tzvi Dushinsky, Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem (1867-1948)". True Torah Jews. Retrieved 2015-11-21.
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Before 1939, there had been great bitterness in the ultra-orthodox community against the Zionists. Families were divided and dissidents expelled. Even during the war, such feelings persisted. For a year, Lithuania was sandwiched in between the two revolutionary goliaths of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia; yet, the majority of the heads of the great learning academies, the yeshivot, advocated staying put rather than attempting to leave for Palestine. Instead, they and their followers marched into the gas chambers singing nigunim. The Shoah destroyed the community of the faithful in Eastern Europe, and the ultra-orthodox perished in vast numbers. Such a tragedy softened the position of the survivors towards Zionism. It moved many from and anti-Zionist position to a non-Zionist one.
- Lichtenstein, Ruth (December 31, 2013). "The History of the 'Status Quo' Agreement". Hamodia (English edition). Retrieved August 31, 2015.
One of the main struggles between the Jewish groups was over education, the future of Jewry. In 1943, a group of about 700 orphaned children, Holocaust refugees who had escaped from Poland to the Soviet Union, were collected by the Jewish Agency's emissaries and brought to Israel. They were put in a camp organized by the Tehran Jewish Agency, where they were poisoned against religion.
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- Yoel Elchanan, Das Hatziyonis, vol. 2, pg. 98-99. Free translation:"...when a protest against the forced secularization of Moroccan children was held, the Baba Sali was the first to send a letter of support, writing "... Woe to us that this has befallen us in the end of days... I call out to all parents... guard your precious children... that they should not be caught in the traps of these trappers of souls... the Sochnut, and Aliat hanoar, who lie in ambush for the souls of our children... to kill them eternally..."(Hasaba Kadisha, vol. 2) "When the Baba Sali received the book Vayoel Moshe, he closeted himself in his room and studied it in depth... Upon finishing, he emerged from his room and said to his son in law "There is no one in this generation greater in depth and logic, and skilled in answering questions, like Rabbi Yoel (Teitelbaum), he has provided clear proofs against all those who heaped words upon words, he did not leave a single crevice, which he did not clarify..."
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It is interesting to recall here the attitude of the famous Sephardic Rabbi Baba Sali towards Va-Yoel Moshe: "This book is a great and important treatise for our generation, and Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum is a pillar of light whose radiance will lead us to the coming of the Messiah." Rabbi Baba Sali studied the book itself over the course of a few days... and said that this book answered all his questions about Zionism "truly and uncompromisingly".
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Perhaps, the most prominent Sephardic legal authority, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef of Jerusalem, upholds Rabbi Feinstein's verdict and, in his comment, specifies that "those who chose this flag as a symbol of the State were evil-doers". Emphasizing that removing the flag, "a vain and useless object", from the synagogue should be done in harmony and peace, he recommends "uprooting all related to the flag so that it should not constitute a reminder of the acts of the evil-doers".
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Further reading
- Aran, Gideon (2004) . "From Religious Zionism to Zionist Religion". In Goldscheider, Calvin; Neusner, Jacob (eds.). Social Foundations of Judaism (Reprint ed.). Eugene, Or: Wipf and Stock Publ. pp. 259–282. ISBN 1-59244-943-3.
- Neusner, Jacob (1991). "Heresies outside of Judaism: Zionism". An Introduction to Judaism: A Textbook and Reader. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster/John Knox Press. pp. 312–322. ISBN 0-664-25348-2.
- Salmon, Yosef. "Zionism and Anti-Zionism in Traditional Judaism in Eastern Europe", Zionism and Religion, eds. Shmuel Almog, Jehuda Reinharz, and Anita Shapira (Hanover and London, 1998), 25–43.
- Ravitzky, Aviezer. "Munkacs and Jerusalem: Ultra-Orthodox Opposition to Zionism and Agudaism", Zionism and Religion, eds. Shmuel Almog, Jehuda Reinharz, and Anita Shapira (Hanover and London, 1998), 67–89.