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BS”D Parashat Vayaishev 5773

What does the Honorable Ron Prosor, our Ambassador to the UN, have in common with Yosef, son of Yaakov, Viceroy of Egypt?

The Midrash (Devarim, Va’atchanan parasha 2) records:

Rabbi expounded that Moshe argued before HaShem, “If Yosef’s body will be permitted to enter Eretz Yisrael, why will I be prohibited from entering? And HaShem explained, “He who admitted that his homeland is Eretz Yisrael will be permitted to enter. Did Yosef not say to the Minister of the Wineries that he was taken from the land of the Hebrews! Whereas, when the daughters of Yitro told their father that an ‘Egyptian’ had rescued them, you did not correct them by saying that you are a ‘Hebrew’ and not an ‘Egyptian’! Therefore you will not be permitted to enter the holy land.

The quandary in this midrash is that each one was telling the truth. Yosef, who was born in Eretz Yisrael, was correct in saying that he was taken from the land of the Hebrews; and Moshe, who was was born in Egypt, was correct in declaring himself an Egyptian.

The obvious answer is that a Jew, regardless of his physical birthplace, must consciously regard Eretz Yisrael as his homeland.

During the most difficult period of Yosef’s life, he still stood proud and exclaimed that he is an Ivri (Hebrew, Jew) and his homeland Eretz Yisrael.

I am not a jealous person. I thank HaShem for everything he gives me, and I understand that there is a good reason for not giving me more. But I was green with envy when I watched Ambassador Prosor standing before the UN’s General Assembly and declaring proudly:

“As for the rights of Jewish people in this land, I have a simple message for those people gathered in the General Assembly today. No decision by the UN can break the 4000-year-old bond between the people of Israel and the land of Israel.”

These words were a gift of God that emanated from the depths of Ambassador Prosor’s Jewish neshama (soul).

To stand before the world and declare that the combined efforts of all the UN member states could never break our bond to Eretz Yisrael is a gift beyond human comprehension, even surpassing the merit of Yosef. And although I could never equal Ambassador Prosor’s eloquence, I would have held high a copy of the Bible and stated, “This is our deed to the holy land”.

Indeed, Ambassador Prosor’s declaration to the UN is an eternal truth springing forth in a moment of great spiritual elation, and the inference is equally true and even foreboding.

“No decision by the UN can break the 4000-year-old bond between the people of Israel and the land of Israel.”

However, we Jews are breaking the 4000-year-old bond between the people of Israel and the land of Israel by chipping away, slowly but surely, the bond of millions of Jews through ignorance, apathy, and misguided leadership.

There are millions of Jews, mostly in the United States, who openly declare that they have no religious or emotional connection with Eretz Yisrael or with anything Jewish for that matter, as was shown in a recent national survey prior to this year’s presidential election.

These people are either direct products of the reform and conservative movements or children of parents who were once part of those movements or students in many misguided yeshivot. These people, who are devoid of any national Jewish allegiance, are to be found on college campuses from Maine to California, and in the yeshivot of Lakewood, Williamsburgh and many other cities in the galut.

The shockingly huge spiritual Shoah is manifested in the following facts:

1. The estimated intermarriage rate in the US is 50%; but if you subtract the 20% who are Orthodox, the intermarriage rate of non-Orthodox Jews is closer to 75%.

2. It is estimated that only 20% of American Jews have ever visited Eretz Yisrael; but if you subtract the Orthodox, then only about 15% of the non-Orthodox Jewish community has ever been here.

It is the responsibility of every spiritual leader – rabbi, rosh yeshiva, grand rabbi, etc., – in every shiur (lecture) class and in every speech to encourage his people to return to their homeland of Eretz Yisrael. This is the message the Midrash is telling us, “He who admits that his homeland is Eretz Yisrael will be permitted to enter”.

The very omission of Eretz Yisrael in rabbinical discourses resonates to the listener that Eretz Yisrael is non-essential, and even detrimental, to their spiritual agendas.

Remember my words: The time is not far off when these spiritual leaders will not be permitted to come home, because their conscious homeland is the galut. They have become “Mitzrim” and not “Ivrim”.

Part B:

The Deadly Israeli House – an article written by Daniel Greenfield

There are few weapons as deadly as the Israeli house. When its bricks and mortar are combined together, the house, whether it is one of those modest one story hilltop affairs or a five floor apartment building complete with hot and cold running water, becomes far more dangerous than anything green and glowing that comes out of the Iranian centrifuges.

Forget the cluster bomb and the mine, the poison gas shell and even tailored viruses. Iran can keep its nuclear bombs. They don’t impress anyone in Europe or in Washington DC. Genocide is equally not worthy of attention when in the presence of the fearsome weapon of terror that is an Israeli family of four moving into a new apartment downwind from Jerusalem.

Sudan may have built a small mountain of African corpses, but it can’t expect to command the full and undivided attention of the world until it does something truly outrageous like building a house and filling it with Jews. Since the Sudanese Jews are as gone as the Jews of Egypt, Iraq, Syria and good old Afghanistan, the chances of Bashir the Butcher pulling off that trick are rather slim.

Due to the Muslim world’s shortsightedness in driving out its Jews from Cairo, Aleppo and Baghdad to Jerusalem, the ultimate weapon in international affairs is entirely controlled by the Jewish State. The Jewish State’s stockpile of Jews should worry the international community far more than its hypothetical stockpiles of nuclear weapons. No one besides Israel, and possibly Saudi Arabia, cares much about the Iranian bomb. But when Israel builds a house, then the international community tears its clothes, wails, threatens to recall its ambassadors and boycott Israeli peaches.

You can spit on the White House carpets and steal all the gold in Greece. You can blow up anything you like and threaten anyone you will, but you had better not lift a drill near Gilgal, where Joshua and a few million escaped Hebrew slaves pitched their camp.

Some may think that genocide or nuclear weapons are the ultimate weapons, but as we see, time and time again, the ultimate weapon is a hammer and a fistful of nails in a Jewish hand. How can even the most talented Iranian nuclear scientist hope to compete with the humble tools of a Jewish carpenter?

Obama has yet to respond to the Muslim Brotherhood coup in Egypt. The gangs of paid rapists assaulting women in Tahrir Square on behalf of the Sharia state are nothing for the White House to worry about. Tunisian protesters against Islamist rule are losing their eyes, but Tunisian eyes come and go, Jewish houses are forever.

Everyone has their standards and he and the international community have theirs. There are things that we all cannot abide. And for all the Miss America answers about ending war, hunger and people who wear plaid in public, the one thing that everyone will stand up against or sit down in opposition to is the Israeli house.

White House officials are already insisting that Netanyahu “humiliated” Obama by authorizing the building of houses. This is the worst Israeli crime since two years ago when the city of Jerusalem passed some houses through one stage of a multi-stage approval process while Biden was visiting the country.

Hillary called it an insult and spent two hours yelling at Netanyahu over the phone. Axelrod declared it an affront. Biden was so furious that he refused to come down for dinner until an hour later. For weeks the media howled that Netanyahu had humiliated Obama through the dastardly act of allowing one of the country’s mayors to approve housing while the sacred presence of Joseph Robinette Biden Jr was intersecting with Israeli airspace.

While Russia may threaten war against the United States, China may mock the United States at a ceremonial banquet in the White House, Iran and North Korea may play Obama for a fool, but only Israel has managed to achieve official recognition for “insulting and humiliating” Obama, without even trying, proving once again that the Jewish race is so talented that it often achieves things that other people may only dream of, without even realizing that they are doing it.

Now that Netanyahu has gone to the mattresses, literally, by authorizing new housing, the media has begun braying that Israel has humiliated Obama all over again. They say that every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings. But every time an Israeli jackhammer roars, Obama stands, like that famous trash-mourning fake Indian, off Highway 1 between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, with a tear slowly making its way down one glistening cheek at the sight of another humiliating Israeli house.

According to the New York Times, which is never wrong, building more houses makes peace impossible. Peace, which is not in any way obstructed by rockets, suicide bombers, unilateral statehood bids and declarations of war, comes up against only one obstacle. The stout unyielding wall of the Israeli house. You can shell Israeli houses, bomb them and break inside to massacre the people living inside, but then after all that, Israel goes and builds more of those damn things.

Hamas shoots thousands of rockets and Israel builds thousands of houses. But Israeli houses generally stay where they’re built, while Hamas rockets are as likely to kill Gazans as they are to put holes in the roofs of those dastardly houses. And in the arms race between houses and rockets, the Israelis appear to be winning. And that’s not good for peace. If Israelis get the dangerous idea that they can just keep building houses and outlast all the talented rocketeers who spend their time with the Koran in front of one eye and the Anarchist’s Cookbook in front of the other, then what hope is there for peace?

That is why no one cares much about Hamas rockets, which only kill Israelis, who most reasonable people in London, Paris and Brussels think have it coming anyway, but get into a foaming lather about an Israeli house. Killing Israelis has never been any obstacle to peace. Twenty years of killing Israelis has not dissuaded a single Israeli government from sitting down at the table to dicker with the terrorists. But an Israeli family living in a house is holding down territory that it will be harder to then cede to terrorists when the angels have blown their horns, the seas have all gone dry and peace is carried in on a golden platter by 72 virgins accompanied by their flying suicide bomber mates.

The problem is an old one. Pharaoh struggled with it. So did Hitler. And so does Hamas. What do you do when there are too many Jews living. The answer is usually obvious. Israel’s Peace Partners tried to go back to the time-honored Egyptian tradition of throwing all the Jews into the sea. But despite an entire officer corps temporarily “on leave” from the armed forces of the United Kingdom, they only got as far as half of Jerusalem, where they blew up every synagogue, and took the West Bank of Israel, or as the non-indigenous Zionist invaders with no roots in the region call it, Judea and Samaria.

Nineteen years later, Israel’s Peace Partners had traded in their British officer corps for a Soviet officer corps, and lost Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza, proving that when it came to killing Jews, the Communists were better at it when the Jews weren’t shooting back. Ever since then the world, or those portions of it populated entirely by diplomats and the better class of journalists, has been urging Israel to give back the land to an imaginary country to be populated entirely by terrorists.

This peace plan, which has worked as well as fighting fire with gasoline, has not in any way been endangered by two decades of terror, but trembles down to its toes every time an Israeli hammer falls on an Israeli nail in the vicinity of Jerusalem. Because that land must go back so that rockets can be shot from it into Israel, so that Israel can invade it and reclaim it, and then sit down for another peace process to return the land from which the rockets will be fired, which will be invaded, which will be given back… for peace.

And Israeli houses endanger this cycle of peace and violence. They endanger it by creating “facts on the ground”, a piquant phrase that only seems to apply to houses with Jews. Muslim houses in no way create facts on the ground, even though they are built out of the same material and filled with people. Or perhaps they create the good kind of facts on the ground. The kind of preemption of negotiations that the professional peacemakers approve of.

But it’s hard to know what exactly the peacemakers approve of, because their arguments and their definitions keep changing all the time. All that we know is that they disapprove of Israeli houses.

The United States repeatedly assured Israel that Jerusalem would in no way be endangered by the peace process. No less a personality than Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. co-sponsored three Senate resolutions urging that Jerusalem should remain Israel’s undivided capital. Then like all good politicians, he was horribly offended when the Israelis actually took him at his word.

Obama gave an election speech four years ago where he declared that Jerusalem should be undivided. A day later he explained that he meant “undivided” in some spiritual sense that did not preclude it from actually being divided.

UN Chief Ban Ki-moon has declared Israeli houses to be an “almost fatal blow” to the peace process. It is, of course, only an “almost fatal blow” because the peace process, like Dracula, cannot be killed. Israeli houses, fearsome as they may be with their balconies and poor heating in winter, are never quite enough to kill it.

Like the monster of a horror movie, the peace process always comes back and no matter how many blows the Israeli house delivers to it, a year later there’s a sequel where the Israeli house is being stalked by the peace process monster all over again.

The army of lethal Israeli houses, which may not be built for another five years, if ever, seem formidable in the black newsprint of the New York Times, in the fulminations of Guardian columnists and the shrill talking pointation of CNN talking heads, but its actual potency is limited to housing Jewish families and infuriating international diplomats and their media coat hangers.

Shabbat Shalom

Nachman Kahana
Copyright © 5773/2012 Nachman Kahana

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