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      Iyar 5, 5767, 4/23/2007

      What the Chief Rabbinate Had to Say

      by Nissan Ratzlav-Katz


      In honor of the tremendous day of Jewish independence in the Land of Israel, I'd like to simply quote from a resolution of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel from Av of 5749 (August 1989):

      The Chief Rabbinate of Israel is saddened that again there have recently been heard in the rabbinical world sounds of criticism and claims against the settlement of the Land of Israel in all of its borders, sounds that weaken the belief of the people in the value of the Land of Israel and of the State of Israel, and the commitment to its existence as a Torah commandment.

      Those voices raise pseudo-legal doubts about those values, relying on three claims:

      a) There is no positive commandment of settling the Land of Israel, its conquest and maintenance;

      b) There are Three Oaths [mentioned in the Talmud], which include the commitment not to "go up as a wall" nor to "defy the nations"; and

      c) That when there is life-threatening danger to Jews one should not struggle, but must rather withdraw from any place in the Land of Israel.

      All of the foregoing three points were always the basis for those opposing immigration and settlement in the Land of Israel. In fact, all of them are null and void statements and they have been rejected by those authorized to decide the law for Israel.

      We will reiterate what is clear and simple:
       
      a) The commandment to settle the Land of Israel includes, according to the words of the Ramban, aliyah, settlement, the establishment of a state, the conquest of the land and its defense, and not to relinquish it to others. And in accordance with the words of the
      Anyone who today requires withdrawal for reasons of preservation of life is effectively determining that the very establishment of the state was contrary to Torah, God forbid.
      Ramban, it has been decided in the Shulchan Aruch, Even HaEzer, that a husband may coerce his wife to make aliyah to the Land of Israel. And it was explained in the book Beit HaLevi, vol. 2, that the Halacha is according to Ramban, that the conquest and settlement of the Land of Israel is a commandment even now, and therefore, the husband can coerce his wife. However, the woman is not obligated in conquest and thus does not coerce her husband. Thus, in the opinion [of the Beit HaLevi], the Shulchan Aruch decided the law as the Ramban, and not as was publicized in the name of Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef, Sh'lita, that the Beit HaLevi decided the law differently than the Ramban, while the opposite of that is the truth. Likewise, the Rambam decided the law explicitly that there is a current commandment of settling the Land of Israel, and therefore, the husband can coerce his wife. And thus also did the author of Sha'ar HaChatzer write. There is almost no single legal authority among the early authorities who explicitly differs with the Ramban; and the latest authority in these matters, the Pe'at HaShulchan, wrote that the words of the Ramban are the essence of Halacha.

      b) The entire issue of the Three Oaths - aside from the fact that their status as practical obligations is far from clear - has already been written about by the authorities of the previous generation, the Or Sameach and the Avnei Nezer; at this time, certainly according to all opinions, the practical obligation of these oaths has been nullified. All of the authorities of our generation are students of these giants of Israel and there is no one who can presume to differ with them.
       
      c) The decision of the Minchat Chinuch that, as far as the war of conquest, the matter of war is a matter of self-sacrifice; therefore, a war for the conquest or holding of the Land of Israel takes priority over the saving of life. And no legal authorities have been found who disagree with him in this.
       
      The three aforementioned arguments were collected and focused before the War of Independence by a group of rabbis, headed by the Rebbe of Satmar, who used the three aforementioned negative arguments to forbid the establishment of a Jewish State in the Land of Israel. However, the clear majority of rabbis in the Land of Israel decided with all of their authority that according to Halacha, a Jewish State must be established and defended. The people of Israel rejected those negative opinions and passed them by, and today everyone recognizes the value of the state of Israel to the people of Israel and to its existence.

      If at the time of the War of Independence, when thousands of people were in danger, it was so decided, then all the more so today - when there is no such danger, God forbid - certainly nothing obligates withdrawal. Quite the opposite, when all admit that there is a danger in withdrawal from the borders, but there are those who say that such an endangerment is worthwhile - to withdraw from parts of the Land of Israel and to endanger lives - such is certainly forbidden according to Halacha.

      Anyone who today requires withdrawal for reasons of preservation of life is effectively determining that the very establishment of the state was contrary to Torah, God forbid.

      We are saddened at the return at this time of the above criticisms - which are null and void words according to the Halacha - and that important rabbis have been swept up by the opinions of the aforementioned members of Satmar, who to this day object to the right of the state to exist. And it is even more saddening that such arguments are brought before non-Jews, which includes a measure of endangerment to life and which is also contrary to the words of our sages not to discuss internal matters of the people of Israel with non-Jews.

      It is imperative to once again be strengthened in faith, as in the words of Calev and Yehoshua bin Nun in the period of the Spies: "God is with us, do not fear them."