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The Case Against a Palestinian State
By Simon Jacobson
Many are wondering what lies behind Arab rage
against Israel. Compared to the millions of Muslims slaughtered
by other Muslims in Sudan, Syria, Iraq and other countries,
Palestinian deaths in Israel are relatively few. Yet the millions
massacred and millions more repressed does not evoke Arab outrage
as do the events in Israel. Why the double standard? In this
week’s New York Times Nicholas Kristoff argues that this double
standard in the Middle East is due to the fact that Arab countries
are shame-based societies, and Israeli repression of Arabs is
seen not just as brutal, but also as humiliating.
He cites Arabs telling him that, “Israel is a
colonial outpost and that as a result while Israeli Arabs may
have ballots and free speech, they have no dignity. The Israeli
occupation represents a total humiliation of all the Arab regimes.
It's a continuous reminder of the weakness of the Arabs as people,
of their society and political system, as well as an indication
of the impotence and corruption of their regimes."
Arab humiliation seems to have become a mainstay
since the fall of the Ottoman Empire. The Arab world can simply
not get over their lost pride as a people who once ruled and
represented the epitome of civilization, and now are relegated
to Third World status. Israel and America represent for the
Arab world the source of this humiliation – so the argument
goes.
Many other speculations are offered to explain
Arab rage and frenzy against Israel and the West.
Understanding the underlying causes for Arab sentiments
is not academic; it is the only way to get to the bottom of
the issues. Understanding their mentality is the true key to
help provide us with a meaningful strategy. We can never devise
a workable plan as long as we focus on the superficial causes,
and do not understand the driving force of our adversary. Does
the Arab world just want justice for the Palestinians? Equal
rights (rights they do not have under any Arab ruler)? Some
land to live peacefully? Or perhaps they want something more
that they simply are not telling us?
I submit that the true reason and core root of Arab anger is
religious and not political.
The Arab world’s opposition to Israel is not due
to any Israeli actions, but rather to the very existence of
the Land of Israel and Jewish control over the land. This control
is a perpetual thorn in their side, and the root cause for their
“shame” and humiliation.
Why? Because Muslims fundamentally believe that
Israel’s existence – and Jewish control over Israel – in what
they consider to be their ‘conquered land,’ is a desecration
of their religious vision.
This is the reason why Muslims have always built
mosques on the sacred land of Jews and Christians (e.g. the
Temple Mount, Bethlehem) to demonstrate their absolute belief
that Muslim control over these lands fulfills and realizes the
Divine will.
This religious belief is the true cause for the
rage of the Arab/Muslim world against Israel. It is not about
human rights, Palestinian sovereignty, Arab dignity, oil, money,
harems, or any other issue. No amount of land return, no concessions
will satisfy them – other than the elimination of Jewish control
in Israel.
As uncomfortable as it may be, we will never be
able to resolve the issues until we realize that this is a religious
war not a political one.
Many of us would like to conveniently believe
that the issues are political ones, because that would make
the situation a lot more manageable and the problem a lot simpler.
We know how to deal with political challenges. But if this is
a religious war, we simply do not have the tools, experience
or interest to fight such a war.
Our existing modalities are secular ones. Our
political systems and governmental institutions have been built
with secular goals in mind, without much consideration to spiritual
and religious values, which we have relegated to the private
sector. We therefore do not see the world in context of religious
and spiritual vision. That’s why we cannot fathom or understand
the rage of the Arab world today.
And this is why a Palestinian state is not possible,
and for that matter not doable. A state will never satisfy the
Arab world. They will simply see it as a step in the direction
of their re-conquest of Israel. They do not want a state for
political reasons, but for religious ones. That is the key to
the underlying issues. As much as we wish to make the Arafats
of the world our “partners in peace,” we must realize that our
secular notions of peace are not part of their agenda at all.
But what lies beneath and behind – what fuels
– this Arab rage and passion? To understand this we need to
enter into the secret world of religious passion. This week’s
Torah portion can help enlighten us
Balance between the sacred and the mundane is
the theme of this week’s Torah portion, Achrei-Kedoshim (actually
two portions that are joined as one). In Achrei we read about
the aftermath of the death of Nadav and Avihu, the two sons
of Aaron who were consumed by Divine fire when, in their passionate
ecstasy they entered the Holy of Holies inappropriately. Kedoshim
commands us to “be holy, because I, your G-d, am holy.”
Sanctifying yourself in the material world is
no simple feat. Spirit and matter are dichotomous. Our physical
existence consumes us so that it leaves little room (space and
time) for spirituality. Our struggle for survival – eating,
sleeping, work, shelter – hampers our search for transcendence,
the pursuit of our calling and higher purpose. Material life
lends itself to corruption, which explains why the scouts sent
by Moses to Israel returned with a negative report, arguing
that Israel is a “land that consumes its inhabitants.” Who among
us does not have the struggle between our own personal higher
standards and the temptation to conform to society’s standards,
between home and career, between focusing on our transcendental
needs when we are so preoccupied with our material ones?
The challenge of creating harmony between body
and soul is twofold. When we are immersed in our daily needs
it is increasingly difficult to access our souls. When we are
inspired by a transcendental experience, we find it difficult
to reenter regular life. It seems as if the extraordinary and
the ordinary are mutually exclusive, like two different worlds
that can never entirely converge.
How often do we find someone caught up in spiritual
ecstasy that they cannot return intact? Being burned out by
the fire of a passionate high, unable to reenter ordinary life?
Case in point the famous Talmudic story of the ‘four who entered
the garden,’ three unable to return unharmed. This explains
why some mystics have chosen the ascetic path, separating themselves
from regular life, so that they can pursue the life of the spirit.
Nadav and Avihu succumbed to this temptation.
In their great passion and love for the Divine, they entered
the Holy of Holies, and they… ‘burned out’ and could not return.
This week’s Torah portion defines the necessary guidelines on
how to enter holiness and how to internalize and integrate the
experience and not self-destruct.
Of course this fear of being spiritually ‘burned
out’ can lead one to argue the merit of the exact opposite position:
We should just immerse ourselves in our material lives and forget
about our spiritual dreams and fantasies. The argument goes:
In our mundane world it is simply naïve to live a life
of spiritual and ethical integrity. If we do embrace the sublime,
we stand the great risk of ‘burn out’ and being unable to cope
with ordinary life. Why take the risk, better to just resign
ourselves to a mundane life, as close as we possible can to
‘animal bliss.’
Kedoshim tells us, no! We are obligated to sanctify
our lives. And this precisely is life’s challenge: To fuse both
worlds – matter and spirit, to spiritualize our material existence.
This requires a delicate balance – a delicate dance – to synthesize
both experiences, without one annihilating the other.
What is sanctity? Sanctity is recognizing that
that every aspect of your life is not self contained but meant
to become a channel for a Higher presence. Kedusha (holiness)
is bittul (see Tanya chapter 6), suspension of self that
allows the Divine to enter. Selfishness and narcissism does
not allow anything else in. “Where is G-d?” the future Rebbe
of Kotzk was once asked as a child. He replied: “Wherever you
let Him in.”
The command “be holy” instructs us to sanctify
all aspects of existence – time, space and human. We must sanctify
our personal behavior, through kindness and love. Then we sanctify
time – we realize the preciousness of each moment and fill it
with meaningful and Divine activities. Shabbat and the holidays
are sacred days. Yom Kippur – the holiest day of the year, the
Holy of Holies – is the epitome of time sanctification, serving
as the source of sanctity for all days of the year.
Finally we sanctify space, the homes, land and
countries in which we live. The Holy Land of Israel is the epitome
of space sanctification, serving as the source of sanctity that
spread to the entire globe. [This is one reason why we pray
facing the East – Israel, Jerusalem, the Temple Mount].
Jerusalem – especially the Temple Mount and specifically the
Holy of Holies on the Mount – is the center and nucleus of Holiness
on Earth. No wonder everyone always wanted to control Jerusalem.
Not just today but throughout history. How many battles have
been waged over that holy real estate?
So, Jewish control of the Holy Land and particularly of the
Holy of Holies is no small matter. Arab rage against Israel
may have many ostensible causes. But at its core root, it stems
from the Holy of Holies – from the need and will to control
that vital region. As long as Jews control it, they feel utterly
weak.
The Talmud gives us a profound psychological insight.
At times your unconscious – your mazal – may sense something
that causes a strong physical reaction. The holiness of Israel
and Jerusalem is the cause for the profound enmity of the Arab
world, even if there are other perceived causes and not everyone
may be conscious of the true cause.
But to devise a successful strategy requires a
true diagnosis of the problem. And sometimes (more often than
not) the truth is something no one wants to hear or acknowledge.
The war against Israel is rooted in religious belief (albeit
distorted). And this is very difficult for us to accept. Why?
There are many reasons. One compelling reason is this: After
all, our modern secular world still lingers in the long shadow
of the war between science and religion, a war many thought
was won long ago by science and secularism. Suddenly religion
comes back on the scene, and is threatening not just the Middle
East but New York and Washington – mighty secular America.
That is too much to absorb in one shot. That's why people are
in such shock. We need to get accustomed to this new reality
-- a religious global war being fought, a war that will determine
what G-d really wants of us, a war that will define and crystallize
once and for all what is true Islam, what is true Christianity
and what is true Judaism. We need to learn to reintroduce a
long forgotten G-d into our lives, to reacquaint ourselves with
G-d after a long hiatus, fueled by prosperity and its inevitable
complacency and spiritual lethargy.
As a Jew, I know that our role is to use every
platform available to us today to advocate the universal message
of Torah – what Abraham taught to all his children, how G-d
wants all of us to live, Jew, Muslim, Christian and all people.
The Torah’s essential message is that we can and
we must sanctify the material world. We need to integrate the
sacred with the mundane. One extreme or the other is simply
not acceptable: Violent passion – even in the name of G-d –
is destructive and therefore un-G-dly. Too much untempered chesed
(Ishmael) annihilates the universe. Conversely, overabundant
gevurah (Esau) and immersion in the material, or its
antithesis, radical disassociation with the physical (as in
celibacy), is equally destructive.
The holiness of Eretz Yisroel is complete when
it creates harmony between the physical land (Eretz) and the
Divine (Yisroel, meaning “You have battled with the Divine and
with man and you have prevailed”).
We are now experiencing perhaps the greatest ‘market
correction’ in history – in defining the truth of the world’s
religions; a reality check of the vastest proportions – the
final battle – and ultimate reconciliation – between the sublime
and the secular, between spirit and matter.
Truth or consequences is not a game today; it
has never been so apparent. The consequences of living a lie
are becoming more obvious by the day (see my previous article).
Lies and deception work well in shadows, where is difficult
to discern true from false. But as the dawn breaks and we can
begin to clearly see the price we pay for our falsities, the
truth emerges in direct proportion to the exposed lies.
Are we really surprised that chemical weapons
have now been found in Arafat’s Ramallah headquarters?
Sometimes the most obvious truths are not stated
and acknowledged because we fear the unknown. But then when
we do acknowledge them we begin to realize that we have the
power to face the challenge.
Let us hope and pray that we do not have to pay
with any more lives to realize the truth of our situation and
act accordingly.
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