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Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Vayeshev Genesis 37:1-40:23
By Shlomo Riskin |
EFRAT, Israel: -What is the value of a secular State of
Israel for religious Jews, especially when a largely secular government seems
to take lightly the innate sanctity of the Temple Mount and the Machpela Cave?
Our present Festival of Chanukah provides the answer. Despite the fact that
Chanukah is “merely” a rabbinically ordained Festival, it has become one
of the most popular and visible holidays on the American scene. One possible
reason may be that its place on the calendar (though not this year) often
coincides with the American Christmas, and the idea of a Jewish ‘festival of
lights’ fits in quite well with the general American “season’s greetings”
culture towards the end of the month of December.
Chanukah has also emerged as one of the most popular holidays in Israel;
undoubtedly the entire school system –religious as well as secular- being
closed for the entire week of the festival imbues the Israeli youngster with a
boundless love for this mid-winter period when the country is flush with
celebrations and special performances, all geared to the child’s growing
curiosity for the world around him. But there is also the simple, historic
element of the Macabeean victory against the Greeks which is so reminiscent of
the early struggle for our Jewish State of Israel, allowing Chanukah to take
on, for someone growing up in a country that is still surrounded by enemies
who would destroy us if they could, a much greater urgency and relevance.
Nevertheless, a case could be made against any Chanu¬kah celebration at all,
from a religious perspective. After all, the first Hasmonean Kings (rela¬tives
of Judah haMaccabee, hero of the revolt) descended from the tribe of Levi, the
tribe of priests, and the Bible insists that kings ought to emerge from the
tribe of Judah: “the scepter of rule shall not depart from (the tribe of)
Judah” (Gen. 49:10), with the Ramban (ad loc), forbidding a King from any
other Tribe, and even Maimonides (Laws of Kings) insisting that a messianic,
eternal dynasty can only emerge from Judah.
The historical fact is that the Hasmoneans, priests of the Holy Temple,
arrogated to themselves – in defiance of Jacob’s tribal blessings and
codified Jewish Law – the Kingship of Israel. Not only does this circumvent
the Torah, but it also brings an end to the separation of tem¬ple and state,
a wall which preserved priesthood and roy¬alty as two distinct ideas And this
separation was seen as crucial for two important reasons.
A king’s throne may be high, but it dare not be higher than the commandments
of the Divine: the same ritual practices which apply to the simplest Jew must
also apply to King David. It was deemed important that the King be equal - and
not superior to - any other Jew, at least in the realm of reli¬gious ritual,
and that such equality imbue the King with fundamental humility, enhancing the
powerful notion of universal subjection to the King of all Kings (Deut.
17:18-20).
Priests, however, whose re¬lationship to the Divine sets them apart,
obligates them to more than the average Jew and grants them special
privileges, entry to parts of the Temple wherein the ordi¬nary Israelite
cannot enter, can suggest specialness of persona and higher, Divinely bestowed
authority for the king which could spell disaster in the creation of a
totalitarian monarchy. Secondly, whereas the King might be forced to make
certain ritual compromises in his day-to-day activity with the international
community, the Jewish ritual must stand above the exigencies of the moment and
express eternal relevance and continuity. Moreover, the ritual authority of
the High Priest and the ethical authority of the Prophet – removed, as the
Bible sees these functionaries, from the possibility of Kingship, provided
crucial checks and balances upon the individual who sat on the executive
throne. Hence a King who is also High Priest provides a script for disaster.
Therefore, we shouldn’t be too surprised that the Hasmonean rule was doomed.
True, there were achievements, territorial ex¬pansion and great building
enterprises, but this couldn’t cover up the strife, civil war and
internecine conflicts between Hyrcanos II and his brother, or prevent the sad
fact that the descendants of the original Hasmoneans ended up on the edge of
apostasy, assimilating into the very Hellenistic world their grandfathers
fought against so zealously. Subsequent Hasmonean rule was the very antithesis
of religious fidelity and commitment.
Given all this, why the eight-day festivities beginning with the Hasmonean
victory on the 25th day of Kislev? What about all the dark spots we’ve just
mentioned, the stains on the Hasmonean legacy? Maimonides says it all when he
explains our rabbinic festival and its concomitant recitations of the Hallel
Psalms of praises to the Almighty “because the Hasmoneans restored Jewish
sovereignty in the Land of Israel for close to two-hundred years”! (Mishneh
Torahs, beginning Laws of Chanukah.) What we are celebrating is that the Jews
were able to wrest power from the Greek-Syrians, and re¬store the kingdom of
Israel. Yes, absolute power may corrupt absolutely, but what about absolute
powerlessness? Hav¬ing been the victims of so many foreign powers, the Jews
know that the impo¬tence of powerlessness leads to the brink of destruction
even more readily than corrupt power! Whatever may be the consequences of a
corroded Israeli government, they must pale in comparison to the injustices
wrought upon our people by the likes of an Egyptian Pharoah or a mad-man
Hitler..
Apparently, driving the Greek-Syrians out of Jerusa¬lem was of such
tremendous importance that despite the breakdown of the separation between
High Priest and King we nevertheless declared a Festival. All the stains of
the Hasmon¬ean dynasty - and there were many transgressions - could not
darken the successes of the Maccabees, vital to the future of the Jewish
people. The lights of Chanukah had to be lit or the light in the world would
have been extinguished forever, leaving Israel in total darkness. An Israeli
government may be far from perfect, but it nevertheless portends “the
beginning of the sprouting of our redemption” much more than any foreign
ruler can do. And the rest, how we change and develop that government, is
largely up to us, residents of the State of Israel.
Shabbat Shalom
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