Jesuralem
Jesuralem
Jesuralem
3 (2006), 225-236
time. Some Ultra-Orthodox are willing to engage in the political process, and
two political parties have developed: Degel-Hatorah representing the Ashkenazi
part of the movement, and Shas representing the Sephardi wing. Both partici-
pate in the political process in order to strengthen their position and gain access
to State resources while maintaining a hostile attitude to State ideology. Radical
separatist groups - Neturei Karta (NK) and Edah Haredit - eschew any political
activity since they do not recognise the State of Israel.
The Zionist Orthodox camp is mainly represented by the National Religious
Party (NRP). It was allied to the Labour Party in the first stage of Israeli inde-
pendence, and was then politically moderate. It relied on halachic rulings which
legitimised the Zionist stance, imbuing it with a positive religious definition as
heralding a gradual change in the condition of Exile. 4 However it was radicalised
by the 1967 Six Day War, and shifted its ideology to that of active messianism,
allying itself to the right-wing nationalist Ukud party. Its main plank became
the advocacy of Israel retaining the whole of Eretz Yisrael, claiming that halacha
forbids any withdrawal from parts of the Holy Land.
Haredi beliefs'
Jewish history has always been in a state of tension between 'Exile' and 'Redemp-
tion'. Following the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in AD 70, rabbinic Juda-
ism has opted for a pacifist stance, which saw the survival of the Jewish people as
the highest goal. Exile was God's will, imposed as expiation for Israel's sins. It was
sinful to try to hasten the appearance of the Messiah; Jews must wait patiently
for God's supernatural intervention to send the Messiah, ingather the exiles,
rebuild the Temple, restore the Jewish kingdom and bring about final redemp-
tion. 6 Hastening Messiah's return in any was strictly forbidden. All national and
political aspirations are deferred until the coming of the Messiah.? In exile, Jews
have opted out of the normal national and political processes, focusing on their
spiritual calling. Any suggestion that Jews should use political or military means
to escape the decreed exile is seen as heresy.8
According to Kabbala even the divine system itself has been damaged by ex-
ile, the shechina has gone into exile with the people, and required restoration
in the final redemptive stage. Israel's present condition is still defined by exile,
and in exile it is God's will that Israel submit to gentile rule. The sages enacted
the dictum of dia d'malchuta dina - the law of the (gentile) kingdom is the law,
and Jews must submit the gentile law even when it contradicts halacha. There
are only three exceptions to this rule, three extreme cases when it is preferable
to be martyred than to submit (yehareg vebal ya'avor): when asked to deny the
unity of God, to worship idols, and to engage in sexual immorality. In the exile,
meantime, Jews must focus on studying the Torah, keeping the commandments,
and maintaining themselves separate from gentiles and their sinful culture. This
guarantees the survival of the nation.
Early on the rabbis accepted three axiomatic bans (oaths) as binding on Jews
in exile: 9
1. Jews must not rebel against non-Jews.
2. Jews must not massively migrate to the Holy Land before the coming of the
Messiah.
3. Jews must not pray too strongly for the coming of the Messiah, so as not to
bring him before the appointed time.
The appearance of several false messiahs (Bar Kochba in the second century,
Shabetai Zvi in the seventeenth) caused great harm to the Jewish people, and
intensified the rabbinic fight against messianism.
In contemporary Orthodox Judaism the exilic past, particularly that which
evolved in Eastern Europe before the processes of Enlightenment, emancipa-
tion, secularization and modernization took place, is viewed nostalgically as
the paradigmatic golden age. Heredim look to this past model as the standard
for determining the legitimacy of modern Jewish life, and fight any perceived
deviation from it. From this perspective Zionism and the State ofIsrael are con-
demned as deviant. 10
In exile many laws pertaining to the Land and the Temple could not be imple-
mented. The sages could codify and theorise about the laws ofthe coming King-
dom, but they were perceived as not binding during the Exile, when Jews were a
persecuted minority. Thus all halachic laws concerning the Jewish kingdom in
the land were put on hold until the messianic restoration. In the meantime the
main criterion for action was the survival of the Jewish people, the discernment
of what is good for the Jews and what is harmful for them in the exilic context of
subjection to gentile powers.
Zionism is seen as a revolt against God's commandment of not being like other
nations. Zionist attempts at controlling history are seen as a mutiny against God.
The Jewish people are still in exile, despite the existence of the State of Israel.
century - the East European pogroms, the Russian revolution, the rise of racist
anti-SemitisID in western Europe, culminating in the Nazi Holocaust. and final-
ly, as a counterpoint, the establishment of the State of Israel, the ingathering of
exiles and the conquest of the biblical heartland and of Jerusalem in 1967, were
all catalysts in the gradual emergence of messianic fundamentalist Judaism.
Messianic religious Judaism stressed several accepted traditional beliefs, but
drew extreme interpretations from them. The uniqueness, exclusivity and sin-
gularity of the Jews as God's chosen people, possessing God's holy law, was em-
phasised in contrast to the more universalistic attitudes of mainstream Jewish
movements. This is taken to imply that there are no universal moral or behav·
ioural norms. Gentile norms are not binding on the Jewish people who are or·
dained by God to follow their own unique path. The sanctity ofthe Land ofIsrael
is stressed, but the conclusions drawn from this doctrine are the imperative of
its territorial integrity under Jewish sovereignty and the impossibility therefore
of any territorial compromise. The belief in the coming of the Messiah and the
ultimate redemption is reclaimed and shifted from an ahistorical distant future
to the immediate present: the messianic age has dawned and traditional norms
have therefore passed away.12
12 Ehud Sprinzak, 'Kach and Meir Kahane: The Emergence of Jewish Quasi-Fascism',
Patterns o/Prejudice, 19:3 & 4 (1985).
13 Menachem Friedman, 'Jewish Zealots: Conservative Versus Innovative', 136·37.
14 Martin L. Gordon, 'Messianism', Hagshama, Department of the World Zionist
Organization, 10 June 2003, www.hagshama.org.il/en/resources/view.asp?id=1436;
Moshe Halbertal, 'Exile and the Kingdom' The New Republic 16 March 1998.
Jerusalem in Jewish fundamentalism EQ • 229
Exile is an alienation of the divine from itself, and Jews have a duty to help to
restore its wholeness. 15
According to Lurianic mysticism, Jews should devote their lives to tikkun,
mending the cosmic disharmony, integrating the profane into the sacred. Re·
demption will come when tikkun is achieved. 16 Kook revolutionised this concept
by shifting it from the sphere of individual piety and spiritual exertion to the
sphere of practical messianic activism. According to Kook this final redemption
stage has now begun, the new dispensation ushering in the healing of the world
and of the whole cosmos as God moves in a new way to bring in the final stage
of history. Restoration of the earthly Jerusalem and the Temple as the centre of
Jewish national life has a spiritual and cosmic impact because it means victory
in the heavenly realms leading to cosmic healing. Activist participation in set-
tling all the Land and rebuilding Jerusalem and the Temple helps the messianic
process along. Jews must establish the Kingdom and implement the messianic
laws first, then Messiah will come.
According to Kook, secular Zionists, though ignorant agents ofthe divine will,
are sanctified because they are involved in the redemptive process. It is God's
calling that brought them into being, and they are unwittingly fulfilling his plan.
Zionism does not stem from a human initiative, but is a response to the divine
movements toward final redemption. The intrinsic holiness of Eretz Israel and of
the redemptive process will gradually correct secular misconceptions and per-
meate all Israel and all Jews. Secular Zionism, the State of Israel and its secular
society are thus accorded religious legitimisation as part of the redemptive proc-
ess. All are imbued with a special holiness, even in their most profane manifesta-
tions. The State of Israel is God's pedestal on earth, the nexus between the divine
and the corporeal. The enemies of Israel are the enemies of God. Israel's military
victories reflect spiritual victories in heaven. _
Kook used the example of the building of the first Temple to justify his sanc-
tification of secular Zionism. During the building process workmen who were
not priests were allowed to work on the holy site, even on the site of the Holy of
Holies, even though access to that sanctuary was later limited to the High Priest
once a year on the Day of Atonement. He explains this apparent contradiction
by a quote from the Gamara (Me'ilah 14a): 'First they would build and only later
would they sanctify.' Just as the Temple was constructed in a non-holy state to
enable the building process to take place, and on its completion the Temple was
sanctified, so secular Zionism is building the State which, when perfected, will
be sanctified. 17
Jews, the Land, and Torah are a sacred Triad. Jews can only be real Jews in the
Promised Land. Only here can all the laws be observed. including those relat-
ing to farming. settlement, government, politics. All the Promised Land is holy,
Jerusalem is its holiest part, and the Temple Mount is the holiest of all. The Land
is indivisible, hence the struggle for its ancient borders. Hidden within the po-
litical struggle over territorial boundaries and settlements is the battle over the
essence of Judaism itself: is it exilic or messianic?
Kook promulgated an explicit theory of change, a cosmic shift, a new dis-
pensation. The redemptive messianic age has dawned and the exile has ended.
Jews have been catapulted into the End Times. Exilic passivity and the three
bans are over, to be replaced by messianic activism. It is not Messiah who initi-
ates redemption, but Jewish messianic activism that will end with the coming
of Messiah, marking the culmination of the process. The keys to redemption are
Jewish dominance and sovereignty over Greater Israel, Jerusalem and the Tem-
ple Mount, and the rebuilding of the Third Temple. It is now a religious duty to
annex all the Promised Land and to rebuild the Temple. This means that it is
now also obligatory to enforce the commandments pertaining to an independ-
ent messianic Jewish State in the Promised Land that were in abeyance during
the exilic period. The State of Israel today is seen as being in a radically differ-
ent category to the Exile. It is a sign that the period of the 'footsteps of Messiah'
(pa'amei mashiach) has begun and the exile is at an end. The Bans are no longer
valid. A new dispensation of Jewish dominance and sovereignty has begun.18
A new consciousness is needed to understand that the advent of the Jewish
State is the beginning of the divinely inspired and ordained redemptive process.
This process depends, among other things, on the territorial integrity of Eretz
Israel, and on Jewish sovereignty over Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. The
Temple is a source of divine power. Withdrawal from any part of the Land could
cause interruption or even cessation of the redemptive process. In the messianic
age it is an obligation to conquer all the Promised Land, and never to give up any
portion of it to gentiles.
The dawning of the messianic age means that a new legal dispensation is now
valid: Jewish subservience is ended. Jerusalem and the final redemption are ex-
clusively for the Jewish people who are now politically dominant. A role change
has taken place: the gentiles are now subservient to the Jews. In the messianic
kingdom non-Jews are to be treated as Muslims treat dhimmis - they are toler-
ated if they accept their God-ordained inferior status; if they rebel they must be
subdued.
Kook made a distinction between Zion and Jerusalem. Zion represents the
physical rebuilding of the land and the people, while Jerusalem represents the
spiritual facet of Judaism. Both exist in the Jewish people at all times, but the
weightings change. In exile the balance between the two was skewed towards
the spiritual. In secular Zionism it is skewed towards the physical. It is impera-
tive to fuse the two facets in order to revive the whole nation. HI While engaged in
a pragmatic and earthly building project it is also important to deny pragmatic
considerations in pursuit of the redemptive programme initiated by God.
10. Jerusalem and the Temple Mount are eternally sanctified by God to the Jew-
ish nation and to no other. The Jewish people's right to the Temple Mount is
eternal and inalienable. There is no room for concessions.
11. Building the Third Temple in Jerusalem is essential for achieving the final
stage in redemption. The keys to final redemption are Jewish dominance and
sovereignty over Greater Israel, Jerusalem and the Temple Mount, and the
rebuilding of the Third Temple. It is now a religious duty to annex all of the
Promised Land and to rebuild the Temple.
12. Israel's wars have significance in the spiritual and cosmic realms as part of
the final conflict between good and evil, light and darkness. They are the Wars
of God that are vanquishing Satan and all spirits of defilement represented
on earth by gentile forces opposing Israel. These wars are not merely against
Arab forces, but against all the impurity of western secular atheist culture.
While Israel is already in the messianic era, wars continue as a process of
purification. Wars against the gentiles are ultimately for their own good, as
their redemption is conditional on the redemption of the Jewish people in the
whole Land of Israel. 211
28 Ian Lustick, For the Land and For The Lord (New York: Council on Foreign Relations,
1988), especially ch. 5: 'The Range of Disagreement Within Jewish Fundamentalism'.
29 Lustick, 'For the Land and For the Lord', ch.5.
234 • Ea David Zeidan
forts,30 radicals find no justification for compromise. They expect violent cata-
clysmic events to accompany the redemptive process, and are happy to instigate
them, in the assurance that Jewish vistory is now guaranteed and irreversible.:!l
Catastrophe is considered as a legitimate means to short-circuit adverse devel-
opments and precipitate total redemption. These final wars are understood as
the wars of Gag and Magog, when all nations fight against Israel and Jerusalem.
Out of this crisis emerges the ultimate redemption. since nothing can prevent
God's predetermined programme from being fulftlled.32
Jerusalem is seen as the spiritual as well as the physical centre of the world,
with the Temple as its heart. It is the source of divine light and inspiration, filled
with spiritual energies. The Temple and its service are a cosmic blueprint, and
its right functioning ensures the harmony of the universe. All energies and pow-
ers needed to fulfil God's purpose for Israel and for the world are concentrated
there. It is filled with the holiness and power needed for the rectification of Israel
and the world. 33 Therefore it is imperative that Jews control the Temple Mount
and rebuild the Temple, otherwise the final redemption will be delayed and frus-
trated.
Members of the various Temple movements see the Temple Mount as the
most important weapon in the struggle for the whole Land. It was ordained by
God as the remedy for idolatry. It is needed for victory. The aspiration for the
Temple is a spiritual attitude that includes a commitment to absolute holiness
and absolute acceptance of God's will. Israel must have the Temple at its centre
- all Jewish troubles are traceable to the sin of abandoning the Temple. 34 Radicals
criticise the importance given by most Jews to the Western ('Wailing') Wall. That
was a substitute during the exilic era, when Jews were forbidden by gentile rulers
from entering the Temple Mount, but the Temple Mount is the real Holy Place,
and it is a duty to place it once again at the centre of the renewed Jewish State. 35
As Jerusalem and the Temple Mount are the central venue for the final events
they must be appropriately transformed. 3fi The status quo which gives the Mus-
lim waqf authorities sovereignty over the Temple Mount, banning Jews from
praying there, are deeply resented: Jews must be allowed to raise their flag, build
a synagogue and hold public prayers on their most holy site." Rebuilding the
Temple is the most urgent issue, a positive perpetual Torah commandment that
it is sinful to ignore.38
Radicals see the years since 1967 as full of missed opportunities to rebuild the
Third Temple and restart the sacrificial system. 39 The Islamic shrines ('abomi·
nations' to the radicals) hinder the consecration of the site and the desired re·
building programme, and so must be removed. Some believe that they will be
destroyed imminently by an earthquake, while others suggest that they be trans-
ferred to Mecca40 and still others argue for their violent destruction. According
to Goldenberg radical messianic fringe elements conspire to blow up the Dome
of the Rock and then rebuild the Third Temple."
Radical messianists are changing the map ofJerusalem because they are con-
vinced that Judaising the City and rebuilding the Temple will hasten the corn·
ing of the Messiah. They see themselves as God's messengers, hastening his
programme. The Temple Institute in Jerusalem is dedicated to rebuilding the
Third Temple, developing a practical programme aimed at determining the ex-
act shape and materials of its utensils and clothes from sacred Jewish texts, and
then producing them. They have recently produced the golden Minorah, the In-
cense Altar and the Table of Showbread. 42
For some of these radicals violence and terror have become legitimate means
of hastening the messianic process and disrupting the peace overtures that ap-
pear to set it back. The dawn of the messianic age has an anarchic potential.
the sense that all normative frameworks ought to be shattered, all traditional
bounds burst. 43 The ultimate act of terror would be the bombing of the Haram
al-Sharifmosques that would inflame the whole Muslim world and ignite the
war ofGog and Magog, so paving the way for the final acts ofthe End Time. 44
The lack of commitment by the secular State to their goals leads them to the
conviction that it is illegitimate, and may be .resisted, if necessary by force, to
prepare the way for a messianic Kingdom ofIsrael under a Sanhedrin promul-
gating halacha. If the majority of Jews are not ready for the final redemption it
must be forced upon them, if necessary through great suffering. Democracy is
an alien, gentile system which is to be replaced by a messianic theocracy.45
38 Rabbi Chaim Richman, 'Why Build Another Temple?', The Temple Institute Website.
39 I. Shahak and N. Mezvinsky, Jewish Fundamentalism in Israel, 7.
40 'Objectives of the Temple Mount Faithful' and 'The Prophetic Endtime Promises of
G-d Continue to be Fulfilled', The Temple Mount Faithful, 26 February 2004.
41 Gershom Goldenberg, The End of Days, 5.
42 Goldenberg, The End of Days, 5; Rabbi Chaim Richman, 'About the Temple Institute',
the Temple Institute website; Richman, 'Focus on the Holy Temple', Restoration,
September 1996.
43 Gideon Aran, 'Redemption as a Catastrophe', 174.
44 Uri Avneria, 'The Temple Mount Bombers', Media Monitors Network, 19 September
2004; Khalid Amayreh, 'Hardline Threats to al-Aqsa Mosque', Aljazeera Net, 25 July
2004; GiIles Kepel, The Revenge of God, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania State University
Press 1994, 64.
45 Ehud Sprinzak, 'Kach and Meir Kahane'.
236 • EO David Zeidan
Abstract
Orthodox Jews are a small minority of the minority of religious Jews in Israel.
Some are anti-Zionist even to the extent of not recognising the State of Israel.
Other Orthodox Jews are messianic fundamentalists and Zionists. These ideas
are found especially in Gush Enumim, 'The Bloc of the Faithful', which teaches
that the Jewish people should occupy the whole land of Israel and rebuild the
Temple. Some more radical groups are prepared to use any means to hasten
this.
46 'Jewish plot over Temple Mount', BBC News, 17 March 2005; Imigo Gilmore,
'Palestinians and Israelis Take New Step on Peace Path', Daily Telegraph, 18 March
2005.
47 'Vision of Redemption', The Temple Mount Faithful, www.templemountfaithful.org!
vision.htm
48 'The National Religious Party and the Religious Settlers', in L Shahak and N. Mezvinsky,
Jewish Fundamentalism in Israel.