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Ted Belman runs the pro-Israel IsraPundit weblog.
Previous views
"Viable state" trumps "secure borders"
Making a silk purse from a sow's ear
Israel is being raped
Flying in the face of facts
Israelis have been had... many times
The problems would cross a rabbi's eyes
Postmortem on Sharon's plan
Bush should declare a new road map
In support of disengagement
Sharon's carrot and stick
Don't take orders... take charge
International Relations 101
Sharon is a lame duck prime minister
In defense of Ariel Sharon
When push comes to shove
What's more credible?
No choice but a unilateral solution

Views: "Palestinians" Don't Exist ... but neither do "Israelis"
Views: A prophet not honored in his own country
Views: This Chanukah, Israeli democracy was suspended
Views: The totalitarianism of ideas
Knesset passes bill granting military exemptions to yeshiva students

 
It pays to be Jewish
By Ted Belman   May 18, 2005


As far back as the seventies, my orthodox father-in-law used to argue that gentiles have more respect for authentic Jews than for assimilated Jews. There is something attractive about a people or person who is proud of his heritage and lives by its precepts. As you know this idea ran contrary to the prevailing view held by progressive Jews that the more they emulated the gentiles, the more they would be accepted. He was right. Just look at the affinity of the Christian Right in the US for the Jewish settlers and their fight to keep the land.

Paul Eidelberg makes the same point in his important book "Jewish Statesmanship".

"Contrary to the expectations of Jewish politicians and intellectuals who, out of fear of anti-Semitism, mindlessly portray Israel as a democracy so as to endow it (and themselves) with legitimacy and respectability, it is precisely this lack of Jewish national authenticity -- this adulation of decayed democratic values -- that underlies the international contempt for Israel."

He characterizes this contemporary democracy as upholding "indiscriminate egalitarianism and unrestrained libertarianism". Israel's embrace, without question, of this form of contemporary democracy has lead to Arab Israelis who are PLO surrogates and thus enemies of Israel, being elected to the Knesset. It also leads, among other things, to the PLO being permitted their own press in Jerusalem where they mightily contribute to anti-Israel propaganda and incitement. In other words, this slavish adherence to these contemporary democratic values threatens not only the character of the Jewish state but its very existence.

Instead, he argues that Israel's statesmen should emphasize Israel's raison d'etre as a Jewish State and that this necessitates that democracy must be assimilated to Judaism. It means that in an authentic Jewish Commonwealth should embrace the supremacy of Torah and not of democracy.

The Left in Israel and around the world considers this to be a sacrilege, at least for Israel, while at the same time it recognizes that democracy must be accommodated to Islam and Arab culture in the Arab states.

Prof. Eidelberg argues that western normless democracy is inferior to Judaism. Such democracy is "little more than a random aggregation of individuals and groups pursuing their own aims and interests". The result, he argues, is "eccentric pluralism and multiculturalism fortified by the doctrine of moral and cultural relativism that dominates every level of education in the West. Lacking in contemporary democracy are not only unifying norms of human conduct but any rational basis for national loyalty. Being normless, contemporary democracy denies the existence of universally valid standards by which to determine whether the way of life of one individual, group or nation, is intrinsically superior to that of another -- superior in the sense of being more conducive to human excellence or to domestic and international harmony."

"In contrast, Judaism is a nationality and a prescribed way of life."

He goes on to describe the conceptual differences between Judaism and contemporary democracy noting that Judaism has a different conception for democracy (replacing the considered judgment of the majority subject to the Torah for the will of the majority), freedom (freedom to serve a higher purpose rather than freedom to do what you want) and equality (everyone's life is equal to another's but their rights may vary i.e more is expected of a learned man than an ignoramus).

Yet the Left worries that Israel would become a "theocracy". By this, they probably mean a state ruled by priests or mullahs or rabbis. If so, then Israel could not be a theocracy because in Judaism, the rabbis don't rule. "There is no Church in Judaism, neither theologically, since there is no mediation between G-d and the individual Jew, nor institutionally since there is no ecclesiastical hierarchy. But, if "theocracy" means the rule of G-d, then Judaism is theocratic for G-d is the ultimate source of law and authority. So what does this mean operationally?

In Judaism, "only publicly tested scholarship can lay claim to any validity regarding the laws of Torah." Thus scholarship is the highest value of Judaism and any and all Jews can pursue it. A Jewish Israel would be ruled by the most learned people in the Knesset and in the Courts much the same way as it is in Western Democracies but with the added caveat that they are all subservient to the Torah.

Jewish law has developed and governed the Jewish people for thousands of years. It consists of laws between man and man (Mishpatim) and laws between man and G-d (Hukim). The former are based solely on reason and thus must be changed or administered to reflect new factors. The secularist need not worry about Mishpatim. As for Hukim, that's between man and G-d. Since the secularists have no fear of G-d, they need not worry about Hukim either.

"Strange as it may seem, secular Zionists in the pre-state period recognized that Israel's national renaissance and the rebirth of its national consciousness required the restoration of Jewish Civil Law, otherwise known as Mishpatim. As early as 1909 they declared,

"Our law is one of the most valuable assets of our national culture and a unifying force [among Jews] throughout the world. The Jewish People have developed and maintained a remarkable system of law whose foundations were laid at the dawn of our national existence: hundreds of generations have toiled over it, perfected it and adorned it, and even today it retains its power to renew its youth and to develop in a manner appropriate to the outlook of our time. During the thousands of years of the existence of our nation this law was influenced by many material and spiritual factors. It absorbed religious and ethical concepts; it reflected cultural, economic and social values; and it can still faithfully reflect the life of the people throughout the future."

Unfortunately over the last century Israel has moved away from the primacy of Jewish law to embrace the law as it exists in the western democracies. As Prof. Eidelberg and many others points out, this represents a greater existential threat to Judaism and to Israel than do the Arabs.

"Severed from its own laws and constitutional history, a country's political, economic and social history will be largely unintelligible. Its legal heritage will cease to have practical relevance. Fewer and fewer people will understand their past, the way their forefathers related to each other in daily life, the conditions under which they lived, their way of thinking, without such knowledge Israel will forget its world-historical mission."

This loss of mission leaves Israel defenseless before the onslaught of the Muslim mission to recover all the lands of Palestine. Rather than to pursue our rights to the biblical land of Israel, which are both historical and religious in nature, we abandon such rights and only pursue an illusory peace. We hear a great deal from the governments of Israel and the USA about protecting our security but nothing about protecting our rights to the land. It's as if we didn't have any rights.

The peace process should not be about a contest between their rights to the land and our right to security as enshrined in Resolution 242 but between our rights and their rights. The more we assert our Jewish rights to the land, the more support we will have for our cause. We could then argue that truth and justice are on our side. As it is, by default, the world considers that we are occupying Palestinian land and therefore must give it back. With Jewish leadership, this would change.

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


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