By SaraLehmann
The Jewish Press
The Jewish Press
Aside from the
clichéd quip about Pesach (Passover)
preparations mirroring Jewish labor in Egypt, a concept I can well relate to,
Pesach is universally regarded as the Jewish holiday of emancipation. The
precept of Zeman Cheiruseinu (Season
of our Liberation) is so fundamental to our Jewish identity that it is not
consecrated solely on Pesach but is repeated throughout the year in much of our
davening, berachos (prayer and blessings)
and practices.
This idea of Jewish independence from other nations and
dependence on Hashem (G-d) alone has
guided Jewish thinking and influenced humanity as to the innate worth of the
individual. And it is a reason so many Jews have found themselves at the
forefront of liberation movements over the years.
Which is why the abandonment of this course by many Jews
nowadays is so baffling. Despite the
enormous accomplishments of their people, in Israel and elsewhere, some Jews
seemingly find it difficult to recognize their own sovereignty, frequently
bowing to foreign gods rather than to God.
In his
renowned 19th century commentary on the Haggadah, Rabbi Dr Marcus Lehmann
offers a description of this phenomenon that eerily portends present-day
realities. “It is a historical fact,” he
writes, “that slavery produces a slave mentality…. The slave still remains
a slave when his shackles are finally sundered. Even if the Israelites had been
freed from the servile yoke of Pharaoh and Egypt by some political upheaval,
they would have long since lost the capability of becoming a free and noble
nation. Therefore the Haggadah rightly says that if God had not freed us, then
we and our children and our children’s children would still have to bear the
servile yoke of Pharaoh, even when Pharaoh and Egypt had long ceased to exist.”
Despite the exodus thousands of years ago and our break from
the ghettos hundreds of years ago, the slave mentality follows us like a long
shadow.
Israeli leaders since 1967 have exhibited that mentality in
their continuous pandering to contemporary taskmasters at the expense of their
Jewish brethren and homeland. Oslo, the Gaza Disengagement, “Peace”
negotiations and prisoner releases all point to a deteriorating pride in Jewish
heritage and identity.
And the mentality is not limited to Israeli leaders. (Think AIPAC, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, in particular) How else can one explain the subservient attitude of Jewish leaders in America who year after year kowtow to whatever administration happens to be in power? During one of Obama’s humiliating foreign policy faux pas this year, he succeeded in rustling up high-profile U.S. rabbis and Jewish leaders to petition Congress to authorize American military intervention in Syria. (This against the better wishes of the American public and at a time when the Israeli government was trying its best to maintain silence and neutrality.)
And the mentality is not limited to Israeli leaders. (Think AIPAC, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, in particular) How else can one explain the subservient attitude of Jewish leaders in America who year after year kowtow to whatever administration happens to be in power? During one of Obama’s humiliating foreign policy faux pas this year, he succeeded in rustling up high-profile U.S. rabbis and Jewish leaders to petition Congress to authorize American military intervention in Syria. (This against the better wishes of the American public and at a time when the Israeli government was trying its best to maintain silence and neutrality.)
More recently, American Jewish leaders did an about-face on
the Iranian threat. At Obama’s behest,
they ceased lobbying Congress for support of the Iran Sanctions Bill after
America’s disastrous November capitulation to Iran. They furthered this ignominy by using every creative way possible to
avoid discussion of the topic at the recent AIPAC convention.
Perhaps the most egregious aspect of Israel’s prisoner releases is that they constitute an elemental affront to Jewish decency. No other government prides itself on such intense loyalty to its citizens on and off the battlefield yet simultaneously mocks that fidelity in a warped political farce aimed at placating world leaders. And Netanyahu’s latest refusal to release the last batch of Palestinian prisoners was less a defiant unburdening of American shackles than a grudging recognition of the binding shackles of his own political coalition. One member of that coalition, Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon, has been the government’s Jiminy Cricket, condemning further prisoner releases and threatening to resign if a release goes through.
Perhaps the most egregious aspect of Israel’s prisoner releases is that they constitute an elemental affront to Jewish decency. No other government prides itself on such intense loyalty to its citizens on and off the battlefield yet simultaneously mocks that fidelity in a warped political farce aimed at placating world leaders. And Netanyahu’s latest refusal to release the last batch of Palestinian prisoners was less a defiant unburdening of American shackles than a grudging recognition of the binding shackles of his own political coalition. One member of that coalition, Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon, has been the government’s Jiminy Cricket, condemning further prisoner releases and threatening to resign if a release goes through.
I spoke with
Danon last week, and even with John Kerry scrambling to clinch a deal by
throwing in the sweetener of a Jonathan Pollard release, Danon was not budging.
“I have been fighting for Pollard for the last twenty years,” he said, “and I
continue to fight for him to come back to Israel. But I don’t think we should
make a linkage. Even if Pollard will be released I will still resign as deputy
minister of defense. This is a moral decision. We should not allow murderers to walk freely.”
Danon condemned Kerry’s shuttle diplomacy as “unacceptable” and lamented how “in the past Netanyahu said there will be
no pre-conditions and then we saw that a settlement freeze and releasing
murderers became pre-conditions. Even now we are negotiating about the price to
continue to talk. We need tell our friends in the U.S. that there are red lines
that we are not willing to cross.”
Is it mere
coincidence that these negotiations, which serve only as a vehicle for Jewish
self-immolation, are unraveling at a fast and furious pace as the holiday of
our redemption approaches?
The lessons of
Hashem’s deliverance of the Jewish people became all the more crystallized when
I heard Danon admit he was “very concerned” about Kerry. “He is adopting the
Palestinian ideology and talking about two states and two capitals in
Jerusalem, meaning that we have to go back to the 1967 lines.”
Danon’s solution? “We should count only on ourselves,
despite our friends in the Jewish community and in both houses of Congress.
Israel is preparing itself for all options, even the option of dealing with the
threat of Iran by ourselves.”
(And … let us say, Amen)
Welcome words
from a politician whose ascent in Israeli politics is not accompanied by
selling out the citizens he represents. Coupled with reliance on Hashem, this
should be a wake-up call to other policy makers who suffer from an affliction
of Jewish insecurity that threatens the security of us all.
About the
Author: Sara Lehmann, a freelance writer living in Brooklyn, was formerly an
editor at a major New York publishing house.
Jsk Addendum: This painful but brave and factual article
brings to my mind a beautifully descriptive, newly coined Hebrew word —
“Mamlachtiyut”
Mamlachtiyut, a neologism (The invention of new words
regarded as a symptom of certain psychotic disorders which eludes English
equivalents but which, in this case, roughly translates as “ The ability to act
in a sovereign-like manner,” thus employing and preserving a nation’s power).
By mamlachtiyut, Ben-Gurion meant the Jews’ ability to
handle power — military power as well as democratic and political power
— effectively, justly, responsibly. The Jews of Israel, Ben-Gurion
knew, might succeed in repelling Arab armies, in absorbing many times their
number of new immigrants, and in creating world-class governmental and cultural
institutions, but without mamlachtiyut, without the ability to deal with power
and take responsibility for its ramifications, they could not ultimately
survive.
The above Ben Gurion quote is from former Israeli ambassador
to the US, Michael Oren 2006, who himself suffers from a lack of mamlachtiyut,
as he continually recommends that Israel give up Judea and Samaria to the Arabs
– a virtually guaranteed step toward Israel’s ultimate self-destruction, Hashem
forbid.
Jerome S.
Kaufman
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Jerome S. Kaufman
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