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HAS ISRAEL LOST IT'S SOUL?
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In recent years, I've grown increasingly worried about the
future of Israel, as the country's leaders appear to have
lost their senses entirely.
Fumbling and bumbling from one disaster to the next, they
inspire little confidence in their ability to grapple with
the challenges that lie ahead.
But now, to be honest, I'm even more concerned, because I
think that many of our leaders have lost their souls, as
well.
Take, for example, Meir Sheetrit, who was recently elevated
to the powerful post of Interior Minister in Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert's cabinet.
Though the ink is barely dry on his appointment, Sheetrit
has already made a series of statements that are as shocking
as they are callous, and which say a great deal about the
decay of values that has taken place among our political
leadership.
In an interview in the Jerusalem Post last week, Sheetrit
reiterated his call for an end to the Aliyah of the Falash
Mura from Ethiopia, declaring with nary a hint of shame,
"Who needs them?" That is how a minister in the government
of Israel dares to speak about 18,000 human beings, all of
whom are descendants of Ethiopian Jews forced to convert to
Christianity a few generations ago, many against their will.
The Falash Mura now wish to rejoin the Jewish people, and we
have an opportunity to save them and to bring them back
home. A broad spectrum of prominent people, ranging from
Israel's Sephardic Chief Rabbi to Canada's former Minister
of Justice to the head of the Reform movement, have all
called for their restoration to Zion, but that doesn't seem
to move Mr. Sheetrit one whit.
"We are creating a hell of a job for ourselves because of
political correctness or trying to be nice," Sheetrit said,
insisting that, "We need to take care of the future of
Israel and this Aliyah will never finish." Reading these
words should shake us all to the very core of our being.
Instead of viewing the immigration of our Ethiopian brethren
as a blessing from Heaven and the fulfillment of the vision
of the Prophets, Israel's Interior Minister prefers to
kvetch.
Sheetrit asserts that efforts to bring back Ethiopia's "lost
Jews" somehow distract us from "taking care of the future of
Israel." But he has got it precisely wrong. What he fails to
realize is that the two are intimately connected and can not
- no, must not! - ever be separated.
For if Israel ceases to concern itself with rescuing Jews in
distress, then it has undermined the very foundation of its
existence. We might as well then just close up shop, go back
to the Diaspora, and hope for the best.
And yet, even this self-evident truth seems to escape our
inimitable Interior Minister, who went on to say that he
thinks it is time for Israel to become a "real state" rather
than a "committee of the Jewish people."
Having lived here for over 12 years, I too would finally
like to see Israel start acting like a "real country," in
more ways than one. But Sheetrit's effort to strip away the
Jewish and Zionist core of national policy is simply
repugnant and distressing.
It speaks volumes about just how far our present government
has strayed from everything the Jewish people hold dear.
They view Jewish history as a burden, and Jewish destiny as
something to be mocked. No wonder the country is adrift,
unsure of where it is headed or even why it should continue
to struggle for its existence.
Sheetrit and his ilk are indifferent to the fate of the
Falash Mura, even though they are Jews. But their
indifference does not stop there. It extends to the refugees
from Darfur as well, hundreds of whom now face deportation
to Egypt, where they face the possibility of prison or even
death.
Israel is a country of seven million people. Is it really
too much to expect that we might give refuge to a few
hundred stragglers fleeing genocide and torture? When
Menachem Begin was premier, one of his first acts in office
was to grant entry to a group of 66 Vietnamese boat people
escaping persecution back home.
On June 10, 1977, an Israeli cargo ship sailing toward Japan
had rescued the refugees after their vessel began taking on
water. The refugees were fed and taken care of, and Begin
humanely decided to take them in.
Over the next two years, Israel welcomed an additional 250
Vietnamese refugees, giving them citizenship and a new home,
in what Begin later told US president Jimmy Carter was "a
natural act to us" in light of the Jewish people's history
of wandering.
But even the concept of "welcoming the stranger," which is
so fundamental to Jewish practice and belief, has now become
foreign to those holding the reins of power in our land.
They don't want Falash Mura Jews from Ethiopia, and they
could care less about the fate of Christians from Darfur in
Sudan.
What kind of leadership is this? The answer, sadly, is
clear. It is a leadership that has lost touch not only with
the most elementary sense of Jewish pride, but even with the
most basic values of humanity.
"Zion shall be redeemed through justice," the prophet Isaiah
foretold. "And those who return to her through
righteousness," he added.
Therein lies the key to our future - to act justly and to
uphold virtue. That is what will ultimately bring about our
longed-for redemption.
But men such as those who are currently in charge are so
disconnected from faith and from decency that our
deliverance has never seemed so far off.
And that is why I fear so much for the future of this
country. And so too, I think, should you.
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The writer served as deputy director of Communications &
Policy Planning in the Prime Minister's Office from 1996 to
1999
(Michael Freund, Jpost.com, August 7th, 2007)
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Surely the islands look to Me; in the lead are the ships of
Tarshish,
bringing your sons from afar, with their silver and gold,
to the honour of the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel,
for He has endowed you with splendour.
Isaiah 60:9
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