Question: Is there such a thing as a Jewish race memory?
I have what seems to be an overwhelming identity with Jewishness, yet I was not born a Jew in any sense. My father was the son of a Jewish mother who married out. He never put over Jewish identity within the home apart from his knowledge that he was Jewish. Yet I feel strongly that I ought to convert, and one of my strongest personal ambitions is to celebrate Passover. If you have any personal experience to add to this, I would be grateful. Am I mad to feel such a strong attachment where logically there is none?
regards
Dee
First, let me say you are NOT mad for feeling such a strong attachment where logic does not dictate it. In fact there are many things in our lives which we feel attached to things, people and ideas based on no logic at all but instead based on a very real and simple desire from our heart and soul. It sounds in your situation like there are several things at work. First, you have a familial history with Judaism so I imagine you have heard stories, been told about histories and perhaps, even seen photographs of Jewish events or Jews from your extended family. It is not surprising that this idea that your grandmother was Jewish might have planted a seed in your heart and mind, a sense of connection to something having to do with Jewish community and Judaism. Second, the desire to convert is a beautiful one if it speaks to your heart, mind and soul! This commitment takes a great effort, time focused on study and practice and connection to community and rabbi. It is a wonderful, beautiful and challenging journey and if you are serious I would strongly urge you to contact a rabbi in your local community and share your story, seek advice and come up with a plan. In regard to Passover there is no reason you can't attend a Seder (the festive meals and discussions on the first two nights of the holiday), join a community for services and enjoy some of the food for Passover. Judaism is a religion, culture, ethnicity and community - it holds many wonderful gifts and interesting and unique challenges your pull toward it is a wonderful first step in a process of learning more and growing as an individual. Whether you decide to convert or not this process will be fulfilling not only of your dreams of celebrating passover but of connecting to a new and interesting faith, tradition and community.
I applaud your connection to what is very clearly a deep desire to connect and learn more about Judaism - embrace it, no matter where the end of your journey leads you! I hope this helps!
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Question: Just wondering if there is a simple and appropriate prayer for friendship. I teach preschool and I was hoping to find a prayer of thanks to others for their friendship.
How lovely to celebrate friendship with your students it is certainly an important Jewish value and idea.
In fact friendship was so relevant to the rabbis they once told the following story:when the legendary miracle-worker Honi the Circle-Maker woke from seventy years of sleep, he faced despair because he was shunned by a new generation of scholars who neither recognized nor attended to him. In his suffering, Honi prayed for death to release him from loneliness, prompting an unnamed sage to utter, "Either friendship or death" (Babylonian Talmud Ta'anit 23a)
The benefits of friendship are appreciated by Jewish tradition. Ecclesiastes wrote, "Two are better than one because they have a good reward for their labor. For if they fall, the one will lift up his fellow; but woe to him that is alone when he falls, for he has not another to help him up" (4:9-10).
Friendship is clearly more than a social connection in the Jewish context. Friends offer each other help, loyalty, protection, support, unselfish love, and moral guidance. Judaism defines friendship as one of the primary relationships in life, a tie at times exceeding that which bonds blood relatives.
A blessing is a lovely idea and so though there is not a specific or traditional blessing for friendship I think the idea of blessing one another is a traditional Jewish way of celebrating the joy of others in our lives...and so I would suggest saying/singing the priestly blessing also known as the parents blessing. Here is a version on video with the Hebrew and some lovely music and here is a translation too!
May God bless and protect you
May God make God's face shine on you and be gracious to you
May God turn toward you and place upon you peace and wholeness
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHEjpFWjSJg
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Question: I would like to convert to Judaism. My fiance is Muslim. He fully supports my decision to convert and has agreed to raise any children we may have Jewish, although he does not want to abandon his own religion. Is this a problem? May I convert in this situation?
Welcome to the tent! I like to describe Jewish community as big tent and converting in is a big commitment to so congratulations and Mazal Tov! Of course as you probably already know conversion is big commitment - not just the process of learning and preparing for the official transition but the post-conversion living of a Jewish life. Judaism is an all encompassing religion, culture and civilization. I applaud you for your decision and commitment to see the process through.
Of course you are welcome to convert (assuming you fulfill the requisite obligations of the community and rabbi you are working on your conversion with) regardless of your husband's religious background or desire. However, it will of course present some significant challenges in your life if your home has two religions being practiced. Let me give you some examples to think about and discuss with your husband and I think in asking and answering these questions you will be able to answer your own question.
Have you discussed what it means to "raise your children as Jews"? Will he be able to help with taking your children to Jewish schooling and holiday/Shabbat services?
What about areas of practice in Judaism and Islam that conflict - how will you rectify those differences?
How will you explain these differences to your children?
Is he comfortable if you don't practice the laws surrounding women and marriage in Islam?
Are you comfortable if he is not able or willing to participate fully in synagogue life? At lifecycle events like bar/bat mitzvah?
Are you thinking of keeping kosher? How would he feel about a Kosher home?
Are you considering keeping Shabbat? What does he do on Friday night and Saturdays?
Though these should not neccassarily be deterents to your conversion being a part of an interfaith family presents certain challenges and I believe (no matter what the faiths are) a couple needs to work hard on addressing some of the most difficult and challenging issues which will inevitably come up over the course of a lifetime especially when children are involved. This is certainly true when one partner is of the Jewish faith as it is a religion of daily ritual practices which change the nature of one's life in a drastic way. It is important to consider the impact of the differences in your religion will have on your relationship, your future children and your home life. In doing so I think you will discover you will be able to answer your own question posed here.
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Question: Does Judaism include any aspects to protect against the exploitation of the poor by the wealthy?
We are commanded in Deuteronomy Chapter 15: 7 to care for the poor in your land as it is said: “If there be among you a needy man, […] you shall not harden your heart, nor shut yourhand from your needy brother.” In Leviticus 19:33 we are commanded “When a stranger (ger) resides with you in your land, you shall not wrong him. The ger who dwells with you should be like one of your citizens. ” In Deuteronomy 16:12, we are commanded to establish a justice system: “Judges and police officers you shall place in all your gates, […] and they shall judge the people with righteous justice.” Everybody should be treated and protected equally by the justice system, regardless of their socio-economic status and in Leviticus 24:22 we are taught. “You shall have one law for the stranger and the citizens alike.” All of these Torah ethics and responsiblities highlight Judaism's strong sense of the power imbalance in society based on socieconomic status, demographic difference and biases which many of us hold.
The Torah attempts here to remedy the explotation of all those on the fringes in society. We are reminded 35 times in the Torah of the obligation to care for the stranger, for the outsider to do just as the questioner asked, to protect those who are most vulnerable from those who are most powerful.
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Question: Naama Shafir, the Orthodox woman’s basketball superstar, says, “If you have a dream, it’s not a question of ‘either-or.’ You can do both. You can be religious and fulfill your dreams.” What is the Jewish view on this? Is it true that a person can always fulfill his/her dream and be in line with Torah values?
One of the fundamental elements of Judaism is the concept of kedushah (holiness). We are told in the book of Leviticus "You shall be holy for I the Lord your God am holy" (Leviticus ) The essential definition of this idea in Judaism is the act of separation - though we live in and interact with the world Jewish practice and belief asks its adherents to distinguish themselves through mitzvot commandments related to everyday life. These rules and obligations challenge us to guide every aspect of our life from the mundane to the sanctified with these guidelines from what we eat to how we use our time to the rituals surrounding life cycles, the Torah and the Rabbis outline certain guidelines for how we are to live our lives. There are times where this creates limitations on what we are able to do, say, eat - in other words, how we live.
However, I do think Na'ama is right in many ways the greatness of the Torah as blueprint for our lives is its' ability to be stretched, adapted and developed throughout the ages. During each generation Jewish law has been thrown new and interesting challenges. From using electricity on the Sabbath to women in leadership roles as times change the tradition enables us to live rich and fulfilling lives in the world at large while addressing head on these new challenges. It is possible to maintain a high level of Kedushah holy commitment to Torah while still fulfilling your dreams. Sometimes this will require her to have some give and take between her dream and her Torah it will likely require some compromise on her part. However, I do believe in the end if she holds true to the values of her tradition and the truth of her dreams she will be able to fulfill both albeit perhaps not in a strictly traditional sense.
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Question: I invited a dear non-Jewish friend to my Pesach dinner for the second night. She wrote back stating that her other Jewish friends told her it would be inappropriate for her to attend. As a new Jew I find this off-putting. Were we not strangers in Egypt??
Likely because originally the Passover Seder night was dedicated to the eating of the Paschal sacrifice reserved only for Jews it became a custom, unlike on Shabbat and other holidays not to include Gentiles on Seder night. However, this custom is only that a custom from days of old and some today not only consider it permisable but preferable to include a diverse group at your Seder thus enhancing your discussion and learning. So here are a few halachic (Jewish legal) reasons to do so:
1."Mishum chinuch, letzorech mitzva" : for educational reasons and for the purpose of performing the commandments for example, allowing conversion candidates to initiate themselves in Jewish practice.
2. "Mishum K'vod Horim" :Respecting one's parents or other family members who might not be Jewish. It is hurtful for a parent not to be invited to a meal because of his/her status of "gentile"
3."Mishum Kiruv" :To bring people close" -- This is applicable for both partners of a mixed marriage. It is not right to refuse the Jewish partner the opportunity to be a part of the community.
4."Mipnei Darkei Shalom - Mishum Eiva" (To walk in ways of peace or: to prevent animosity)": Many halachic authorities, in different circumstances, have preferred to remove various antique rules of discrimination, in order to reinforce confidence and to edify the brotherhood between the Jewish and non-Jewish community.
For these and many more reasons - let all who are hungry come eat and if non Jews or Jews want to join our Seders we should open up our table to all who are searching and seeking meaning and experience on Seder night!
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Question: Is there such a thing as a “chained man”? What happens in Jewish Law when a wife refuses to grant a divorce?
According to Halakha (Jewish law) traditionally when a couple gets divorced the man has to present the woman with a bill of divorce, called a get. Without one the couple is still viewed as married, whether a civil divorce is obtained or not. In the past, if a woman was refused a divorce because a man would not give his wife a get, the rabbis of the local Jewish community were authorized, under certain circumstances, to force the husband to do so (e.g., his refusal to be intimate with his wife as well as not giving the get), However since the Haskalah (Enlightenment) the local Jewish communities lost their autonomous status, and were merged into the nations in which they lived. Since the Jewish community lost its civil powers to enforce marriage and divorce laws. The unintended result was that rabbis lost the power to force a man to give his wife a get, and Jewish law traditionally does not allow a woman to give a get to the husband. Without a get, a Jewish woman is forbidden to remarry and is therefore called an agunah (literally "an chained woman").
At the 1998 Jerusalem Agunot Conference, Rabbi Mayer Rabinowitz, the Chairman of the Joint Bet Din of the Conservative Movement, explained the four approaches taken by leaders of Conservative Judaism to find remedies for the problem of the Agunah what follow is my summary of his remark, outlining four approaches to this issue:
One beginning in the 1950's, the inclusion of the Lieberman clause,in the Ketubah, requiring that a get be granted if a civil divorce is ever issued. Later, because some civil courts viewed the enforcement of a religious document as a violation of the constitutional principle of the separation of church and state, Conservative rabbis began to require couples to sign a separate letter, stating that the clause had been explained to them as part of pre-marital counseling, and that both parties understood and agreed to its conditions, recognizing that this letter would constitute a separate civil document, enforceable in a civilian court./ However, many Conservative rabbis, including some on the movement's own law committee, had growing concerns regarding the clause for religious reasons.
The second approach was based on the concept of something called conditional marriages, t'nai b'kiddushin, and was based in part on past approaches used by both French and Turkish rabbis—but, according to Rabinowitz—had improvements gleaned from lessons learned from those past experiences. The ketubah was not changed, but a separate pre-marital agreement was signed, and in the presence of the rabbinical court, the prospective groom read it, and the prospective bride stated that she agreed to it. The agreement was that the parties understood that if a civil divorce were ever granted, then a get must be delivered within six months of that date. A refusal to abide by that agreement would give the court no choice but to consider the original marriage, and the original declaration of the groom, so flawed that it would be as if that marriage never occurred.
The third approach was to coerce the recalcitrant husband to grant a get. These included pressure on the husband with financial implications, liens from organizations of which he is a part of and through spiritual guidance.
The final approach was adopted by a unanimous vote of the law committee, when it was decided that the Joint Bet Din of the Conservative Movement could annul marriages as a last resort, based on the Talmudic principle of hafka’at kiddushin – the same principle used to compel the husband to act in option number two. By doing this, the rabbinical establishment returned much of the power of the process of divorce to the rabbinical court, returning to its original source and giving woman clear recourse for contentious situations.
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Question: Fox news commentator Glenn Beck accused financier and Holocaust survivor George Soros of "sending Jews to the death camps" as a teenager without any factual basis. As Jews, we struggle to honor the memories of those who perished, and to ensure such atrocities never happen again. As Americans, we honor and uphold the right to free speech of every person, generally no matter how wrong, stupid, or hateful it may be. How and where should we draw the line between Holocaust denial and revisionism, and political attacks on a controversial figure as a form of expression? How do we balance these two important values?
Freedom of speech is a crucial part of a free society. However, it comes with limits, responsibilities and obligations. In one US Supreme Court Decision we are famously told one is not permitted to shout "fire" in a crowded public arena where this no fire - all freedoms require limitations for societies to function.
However, we witness tremendous slander both personal and communal from many sources in the media, include Glenn Beck's comments. Gossip has become a "column" in newspapers across the country. We are so addicted to this type of information we have become thirsty for it but it is dangerous and insidious and certainly problematic on ethical and religious level.
In fact the Torah does deal with the evils of Lashon Ha'Rah (evil speech) and bids us not to speak about other human beings. the Talmud even goes so far as to say even when our words might be positive we shouldn't utter them. Many of us, of course know that snide and sarcastic remarks even when true can be just as painful as words of untruth. The rabbis in this way understood the problem of free speech without any strictures or limits.
A great effort was made, and is still being made, in the Jewish world to speak in an acceptable and refined holy fashion. There is no room for slander in Jewish life. The expose, whether oral or in print, usually leaves the speaker more exposed than the victim. Our rabbis taught us that lashon hara "kills" three victims - the speaker, the listen- er, and the subject of the conversation. Uninhibited speech leads to bad consequences.
In fact the quality of our speech is exactly what distinguishes us from other animals in the animal kingdom, for it represents our capacity for intellectual capability. Judaism always has taught that this characteristic is a holy gift from Go. We should always work toward using it for good and not evil. Gossip, muckraking, slander, and cynical language all fly in the face of the purpose of this holy gift of speech. Even when one is speaking the truth, one is cautioned to avoid the pitfalls of lashon hara, for unlike the case of a libel action, truth alone is not a sufficient cause for speaking about others. Perhaps these words and guidelines of the tradition can help you draw the conclusion about Glenn Beck's harmful words and the words of others.
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Question: Why cannot Ashkenazic Jews be named after a living person? Why are Sephardic Jews named after a living person? Is this law or just custom?
It has become an Ashkenazi custom to name a new baby after a relative that has died. The idea behind this custom is it keeps the name and memory alive, and in a metaphysical way forms a bond between the soul of the baby and the deceased relative. However, it is by no means forbidden to give a child the same name as a living relative. The living relative should be asked permission. The reverse is true in Sephardic communities - the custom is to give the child the name of a living relative, often a grandparent. This custom is based on a desire to honor the living, while they are still here and give the child a sense of the qualities in real life the parents' are hoping he/she will live up to. However, this too is custom and not law and if you choose to name a child after a deceased relative in a Sephardic family you might want to give family members accustomed to a different custom time to process the difference.
It is however, all custom and as such parents should take great thought and care in naming their child. In many way this is the beginning of our identities, our names shape how we see ourselves and how others see us. Often choosing a name is challenge, in Judaism in particular this is seen,much like Adam names the animals in the garden, as our sharing in the creation of a human being with God. So we think of qualities we want in our children, we think of relatives and friends who have impacted our lives and their honor and we think of the child and who we hope they become - naming is an important aspect of the early stages of raising a Jewish child so whatever your custom is or whatever custom you decide to follow think carefully and seriously about the importance of your role as a "namer, creator" of this child! Happy hunting.
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Question: What does Judaism say about pre-marital sex?
Your question is an excellent one and it is as most questions at first glance, simple but much more complex. Sex with all of its emotional weight is always a very complicated issue particularly in a religious community and context. The Torah tells us early on that sex within the context of an established relationship is an important value:
God built the rib that he took from the man into a woman, and God brought her to the man. The man said, 'Now this is bone from my bones and flesh from my flesh. She shall be called Woman (Ishah) because she was taken from man (ish).' A man shall therefore leave his father and mother and be united with his wife, and they shall become one flesh. The man and his wife were both naked, but they were not embarrassed by one another. (Genesis 2:22-25)
Obviously, this story raises serious questions about gender equality in the Torah, but let's leave that discussion for the moment. It is important to note that all of the early characters in the Torah are sexually intimate in the context of a marital relationship. Sex, even as far back as the Bible within those confines is clearly a normal, natural and healthy part of the dynamic. In early Genesis itself we received the commandment “be fruitful and multiply” which obviously requires sexual intimacy. This intimacy is so critical to the Torah’s view of relationships a violation of the marriage covenant is condemned in the strongest terms:
Do not lie carnally with your neighbor's wife, since this will defile her. (Leviticus 18:20)
The later rabbinic tradition also strongly condemned acts of lust or non-marital sexuality. Marriage and family are understood as holy obligations; making a covenant with another human being is part of fulfilling our covenant with God. It is primarily within that context that sex is discussed.
However, this is simply not the reality for most people today. People wait longer to start careers, they have access to birth control, and they have long, caring, committed monogamous (but non-marital) relationships, not particularly common in pre-modern society.
So how should we create a Jewish sexual ethic in this context? Well, although there is no document endorsing pre-marital sex there are certain guiding approaches we might use to create such a document. We should seek to create a document, which perhaps would recognize the possible holiness that might be created between two monogamous, consenting adults in a loving relationship in the context of their sexual relationships. A beautiful ethical framework for understanding sexual relationships is articulated by (my teacher) R. Elliott Dorff, in A Rabbinic Letter on Intimate Relations, published by the Rabbinical Assembly.
R. Dorff describes eight values that should affect Jewish sexual decision-making:
1) Seeing oneself and one's partner as the creations of God
2) Respect for others
3) Modesty
4) Honesty
5) Fidelity
6) Health and safety (including emotional safety)
7) The possibility of a child
8) The Jewish quality of a relationship
While R. Dorff, would not explicitly say that premarital sex is the Jewish ideal, premarital sex can be sanctified and made holy by applying these basic Jewish principles and ideals to those parts of our life. If a relationship is characterized by honesty, respect, commitment, mutuality, humility and modesty it can be seen within the framework of Jewish sexual ethics.
Though historically premarital sex may not have been the ideal, the reality before us is of import: young American Jews are waiting longer to get married and engaged in meaningful relationships outside of marriage well into their 30’s. Sexual and physical intimacy is an important part of these relationships and we want as Jews to sanctify even new, modern constructions of relationships. Much of Judaism’s wisdom comes from its ability to construct holy moments, holy encounters in the most basic parts of our human existence. Judaism’s ability to respond to new concerns and new needs in relationships is its greatest strength, always keeping in mind the basic values and ideals of respect, responsibility and commitment.
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Question: How and where can I be ordained as a female rabbi?
Ordination as a rabbi within any denomination is a long, arduous but rewarding process of study, practice and reflection. There are several options as a woman as to where to go. However, the first step in your process is determining where you fit, if at all, on the denominational spectrum. Each movement has clearly held beliefs, philosophies and ideas about Jewish life and thought. It is important to explore where you fall in the spectrum to determine what the right school for you. Most of the schools have a 5-6 year process of graduate school often incorporated with work in the field. The movement, where I was ordained is the one I can share the most about but here are some basics on all the options.
The Conservative movement ordains rabbis in 3 places: Israel, NY and Los Angeles.
The school in Israel: Machon Shechter can be found here...http://www.schechter.edu/Page.aspx?ID=993608081
The school in NYC: The Jewish Theological Seminary can be found here http://www.jtsa.edu/x731.xml
The west coast school is Los Angeles: The Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the American Jewish University can be found here: http://www.ajula.edu/Content/ContentUnit.asp?CID=187&u=982
Independent: The Hebrew College in Boston and the Academy of Jewish Religion in NYC and Los Angeles, all ordain women and men independent of any movement affiliation.
Reform: The Reform movement also ordains women at its Seminary - Hebrew Union College, Institute of Jewish Religion (HUC-JIR) on campuses in Cincinnati, NY and Los Angeles.
Reconstructionist: This movement ordains its rabbis in Pennslyvania at their seminary the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College.
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Question: I have heard that my grandma's parents came from Israel. How do I find out about that? Does that make me Jewish?
It is hard to know from that one simple piece of information but it is possible that you come from Jewish ancestry, you can definitely explore more to find out. The best resource for such information online is http://www.avotaynu.com/wwwsites.html which is a database of Jewish geneology websites and resources.
In traditional Jewish definitions a person is Jewish in one of two ways:
1. You are born to a Jewish mother
2. You choose to be Jewish and go through an official conversion process.
During the course of change over the last few decades there are Jewish community, for example much of the Reform movement, which accepts patrilineal descent, that is you can be born of 1 Jewish parent, mother OR father and you are considered, if you consider yourself, Jewish. So the define of who is a Jew is still changing in some communities while in others it has remained the same for many many generations.
The best thing for you to do to verify where you come from is to go on a bit of a hunt and try and find some more information about your grandmother's family through one of the resources above!
Happy hunting!
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Question: Can one be Jewish and not believe in God?
Yes, a person is Jewish not simply by virtue of belief but of choosing a Jewish life through conversion or being born as a Jew. However, there is an important difference between being Jewish and living Jewishly.
Judaism asks us to uphold certain standards of practice and belief, so though you do not somehow automatically leave the Jewish people by your belief or practice certain beliefs and practice challenge some basic Jewish assumptions. One of those assumptions is a belief in an overarching power, a thread which connects all creation to a single source. We call this single source God in English, because we, as human beings need to assign language to belief. This belief of oneness, a connecting force in the world is a fundamental Jewish belief and underlies much of our practice, from the Calendar year to the commandments to bring greater justice to the world, to ritual observance. Underlying all of these behaviors which are essential to living a Jewish life is the idea that we are all connected to each other, the world, a power beyond our understanding and even beyond our imagination. God, if you will, in Judaism is an ever changing entity not the "man" on high you might have learned about in school judging from above. God in this Jewish conception is a part of the ongoing process of creation woven into the fabric of human existence.
So yes, of course you can be Jewish and not believe in God - because being Jewish literally is simply a definition of your birth or your conversion but living Jewishly is a whole different story and is all about how you act, what you believe and the connection to a higher power woven into the fabric of your very world.
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Question: I truly support Israel, but in this day and age it is difficult to do so, with so much dissent in the news and on the streets. Where in the Torah does it state that the land of Israel belongs to the Jews? Does the Torah delineate borders?
I truly support Israel, but in this day and age it is difficult to do so, with so much dissent in the news and on the streets. Where in the Torah does it state that the land of Israel belongs to the Jews? Does the Torah delineate borders?
Thank you so much for your question on a critically important topic for the modern day Jew, our relationship to Israel. There are the facts, which answer your questions, and then there is the deeper question and answer, about how to support a State when its policies are not always in line with your beliefs or convictions. So first to the practical, fact based question at hand.
Yes. According to the Torah the land is given to the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and eventually the Israelites. The promise is first made to Abraham (Genesis 15:18-21) and then once again to Isaac his son and finally to Isaac’s son Jacob (Genesis 28:13), Abraham’s grandson. The “promised land” was described in terms of the territory from the River of Egypt to the Euphrates (Exodus 23:31). This verse of Exodus is the most precise of the Torah’s geographical borders. However, references to the land with different borders are made throughout the Torah and even in the Christian Bible. For instance in Deuteronomy 1:8 the Torah once again reiterates the Biblical promise of land when it states, “see, I have given you this land. Go in and take possession of the land that the LORD swore he would give to your fathers—to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob—and to their descendants after them.”
However, as we know from the wisdom of our tradition issues like Israel are much more complex than a series of quotations. Certainly the Torah gives us a sense of the unique holy quality of the land in Israel. There is no specification (fortunately or unfortunately) of governmental control of the land or rules about the kind of State, which would exist in the land of Canaan. Instead the Torah’s promise outlines the sense of centrality and wholeness of the land. As such we in the modern day Jewish world run into the challenge of confronting question as much about statehood, government and law as about the land itself. I will leave arguments about borders for another question. It is the larger challenge about supporting a place, the land and its government, which we love and feel connected to when its policies often diverge and at times even completely contradict our own views, our moral compass and even our religious view point, which is at he heart of your genuine concern and question.
It is here in the question of criticism and discomfort where we turn to the Rabbis for guidance. We are taught throughout Rabbinic literature of the concept “Makhloket L’Shem Shamayim -dispute for the sake of heaven”. It is in this concept where the rabbis outline the ability to contradict the actions of others, even those who are leaders within our own community. It is in fact the reason for the contradiction, conflict that is important, that is “for the sake of heaven” for the purpose of bettering each other and our community in service to God.
The rabbis understand under the umbrella of any group or community there will inevitably be disputes, disagreements about how the community should be built and how it should function. Certainly, the State of Israel and its government exemplify this – there is no clear certainty about the best way to run any country. Therefore, though I would say it is important to support the State of Israel as a Jew in the modern world, this does not mean removing all discomfort, dispute or uncertainty about particular policies. In fact given the rabbis understanding of “dispute for the sake of heaven” if our intention in the end is to help create and grow Israel at its best – a country, strong and secure but also living up to our ideals as a people and a tradition then it is our obligation to analyze and understand Israel’s policies to make sure we know why the government might have done something and at times it is acceptable to express our disappointment in the way the government metes out policy. We must always find ways to support Israel and her people but this support does not negate our ability to criticize or express our discomfort at particular policies her government upholds – we simply must do so l’shem shamayim for the sake of heaven, for the sake of a better Israel, a better Jewish people and a better world.
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