Troubling Israeli Religious
Fundamentalism: Extremist Jews Largely Ignored
10 August 2012
By Stephen Lendman
Islamic fundamentalism is vilified in the West.
Extremist Jews are largely ignored. In Israel they're
dangerous. They influence government policy. They seek
control of Israel's rabbinical system.
Last January, Haaretz reported that ultra-Orthodox
Shas party members used "improper methods bordering on
the criminal (to get) its people appointed to key
offices."
Israeli Haredim are ultra-Orthodox extremists. They
believe their way is the only way. Others are
heretics. Israel Shahak's (1933 - 2001) "Jewish
Fundamentalism in Israel" explained its pervasive,
destructive influence on Israeli politics, the
military and society.
He called all forms of bigotry morally reprehensible,
saying:
"Any form of racism, discrimination and xenophobia
becomes more potent and politically influential if it
is taken for granted by the society which indulges in
it."
In Israel, he added:
"The support of democracy and human rights
is....meaningless or even harmful and deceitful when
it does not begin with self-critique and with support
of human rights when they are violated by one's own
group."
"Any support of human rights for non-Jews whose rights
are being violated by the 'Jewish state' is as
deceitful as the support of human rights by a
Stalinist…."
Shahak was a holocaust survivor. He discussed Jewish
fundamentalist history. He examined its variations and
explained dangerous messianic ones. They espouse
Jewish superiority. Gentiles are inferior.
Fundamentalist Rabbi Abraham Kook (1865 - 1935) was
significant. He preached Jewish supremacy, saying:
"The difference between a Jewish soul and souls of
non-Jews - all of them in all different levels - is
greater and deeper than the difference between a human
soul and the souls of cattle."
He helped create the settler movement. His son, Rabbi
Tzvi Yehuda Kook, founded the extremist Gush Emunim.
Its slogan is "The Land of Israel, for the people of
Israel, according to the Torah of Israel."
Its adherents believe God created the world for Jews.
Others are lesser beings. Greater Israel belongs to
Jews alone. Holy wars are proper ways to gain it.
Kook was Israel's first chief rabbi. In 1924, he
founded Mercaz HaRav (the Rabbi's center). It's one of
Israel's largest yeshivas (Talmudic colleges).
It believes "non-Jews living under Jewish law in Eretz
Yisrael (the Land of Israel) must either be enslaved
as water carriers and wood hewers, or banished, or
exterminated."
Kook's modern adherents teach these ideas. Jews are
genetically superior, they believe. Gentiles are
completely evil. God's 10 commandments don't apply to
non-Jews. Killing them to defend Israel is acceptable.
Jewish Rabbinic Council Rabbi Dov Lior said:
"There is no such thing as enemy civilians in war
time. The law of our Torah is to have mercy on our
soldiers and to save them….A thousand non-Jewish lives
are not worth a Jew's fingernail."
Rabbi David Barsri called Arabs "a blight, a devil, a
disaster - donkeys, and we have to ask ourselves why
God didn't create them to walk on all fours. Well, the
answer is that they are needed to build and clean."
In 2007, Israel's former chief Sephardi Rabbi
Mordechai Eliyahu called for mass-murdering
Palestinians, saying:
"If they don't stop after we kill 100, then we must
kill 1,000. And if they don't stop after 1,000, then
we must kill 10,000. If they still don't stop we must
kill 100,000. Even a million. Whatever it takes to
make them stop."
In March 2009, Safed's chief rabbi/Chief Rabbinate
Council member Shmuel Eliyahu called for
"state-sponsored revenge" to restore "Israel's
deterrence."
"It's time to call the child by its name: Revenge,
revenge, revenge. We mustn't forget. We have to take
horrible revenge for the terrorist attack at Mercaz
Harav yeshiva."
He referred to an earlier incident. Eight students
died. These views aren't exceptions. Minority Haredim
make things hard for others. Representing about 8% of
Israeli Jews, their influence greatly outweighs their
numbers.
Eliyahu said he wasn't "talking about individual
people in particular. I'm talking about the state.
(It) has to pain them where they scream 'Enough,' to
the point where they fall flat on their face and
scream 'help.' "
Ethnicity in Israel defines religious segments.
Sephardic Jews originated from the Middle East, North
Africa and Spain. Ashkenazi ones are from Eastern
Europe. They differ in religious and cultural
traditions.
Both communities attend separate synagogues in
different neighborhoods. Israel has two chief rabbis,
one Ashkenazi, the other Sephardic. Extremists believe
in Jewish sovereignty over Eretz Yisrael (the Land of
Israel).
Thirteenth century Rabbi Moses Ben Nachman was their
spiritual godfather. He said Jews "should settle in
the land and inherit it, because He gave it to them,
and they should not reject God's inheritance." Our
rabbis say it's "a mitzvah (commandment) to settle in
the land and it is forbidden to leave it."
Similar dogma persists today. Extremist zealots
believe Jews alone have rights. Palestinians are
enemies for wanting their own land. All Arabs and
Gentiles everywhere are lesser beings. Killing them is
acceptable to serve Jewish interests.
Shas party spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef once
called for annihilating Arabs. On August 17, he met
secretly with senior Israeli defense and government
officials. He heads Shas' Council of Torah Sages. He
formerly served as Israel's chief Sephardic rabbi.
He's 91 but still active. In an earlier sermon, he
called the Palestinians "snakes (and) accursed, wicked
ones." He claims God regrets creating Arabs.
He later said it's "forbidden to be merciful to them.
You must send missiles to them and annihilate them.
They are evil and damnable." He considers Katrina
God's wrath against Godless Blacks. He claims God said
"let's bring a tsunami and drown them."
He compares non-Jews to farm animals. They're only fit
to serve Jews, he said. According to the Jerusalem
Post:
"Goyim were born only to serve us. Without that, they
have no place in the world - only to serve the People
of Israel."
Yosef believes only Jewish lives matter. He interprets
the chosen people notion dangerously.
'In Israel, death has no dominion over (Gentiles).
They need to die, but (God) will give them longevity.
Why? Imagine that one's donkey would die, they'd lose
their money."
"This is his servant….That's why he gets a long life,
to work well for this Jew.'
'Why are gentiles needed? They will work. They will
plow. They will reap. We will sit like an effendi and
eat. That is why gentiles were created."
Compassion isn't Yosef's long suit. Nor is reason and
belief about everyone deserving equal rights.
Friday's discussion focused on Iran. Netanyahu wants
Yosef approval for war. Perhaps he also sought his
spiritual blessing. So far it's not clear where he
stands. However, a day after the meeting, he said in
his weekly sermon:
"You know what situation we're in. There are evil
people (in) Iran (wanting) to destroy us….We must pray
before (God) with all our heart."
Shas party members have considerable influence in
Israel. They're part of Netanyahu's governing
coalition. Yosef must be reckoned with. Twenty years
ago Hosni Mubarak invited him to his private
residence. He thanked him for supporting peace. He
also sought personal ties.
Mubarak knew what others do now. Yosef's views matter.
If he's against attacking Iran, Netanyahu may have to
rethink policy. If he supports it, Netanyahu and other
hardliners will be freer to act.
Yitzhak Rabin met with him three times before
finalizing the Oslo Accords. Ariel Sharon saw him
twice before announcing his Gaza disengagement plan.
Thousands of Gush Katif residents were moved
unwillingly to new homes.
In 2007, before attacking Syria's alleged nuclear
site, Ehud Olmert discussed it with Yosef. He did
again before attacking Lebanon in 2006.
Last October, Netanhayu sought Yosef's approval on
Palestinian prisoners to be exchanged for Gilat Shalit.
US Israeli ambassador Dan Shapiro established a
friendly relationship with him before assuming his
post. He went out of his way to meet with him on
arrival. Other meetings followed.
On August 17, Yosef met privately with Netanhayu, Shas
party Interior Minister Eli Yishai and National
Security Council head Ya'akov Amidror.
Yishai opposes war. Amidror supports it. He's hardline
against Iranian influence. He calls its peaceful
nuclear program threatening.
Yishai expressed concern after the meeting ended.
Perhaps Yosef endorsed Netanyahu's plan. Whatever his
previous views, he may have been manipulated to
believe Iran poses an existential threat. He addressed
other views in Israel, saying:
"They (Iran) are capable of bringing about mass
destruction, God forbid. May God nullify their
thoughts. We cannot sit idly by. The nation of Israel
is in danger. We are not in regular times."
In 2010, Yosef asked God to hit Abu Mazen (Abbas) and
Palestinians with a plague. These "evil people should
perish from this earth," he said. "God should strike
them and these Palestinians, evil haters of Israel…."
Other extremist rabbis say similar things. Their views
matter. They influence policy. If Yosef urged war
Iran, expect it.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached
at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. His new book is
titled "How Wall Street Fleeces America: Privatized
Banking, Government Collusion and Class War"
http://www.claritypress.com/Lendman.html Visit his
blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio
Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
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