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Orthodox and Israeli: When the Two Don't Mix
Avraham Shmuel Lewin
Posted Feb 01 2006 Aaron Klein is Jerusalem bureau chief for WorldNetDaily, co-host of ABC Radio's national John Bachelor Show, and he appears throughout the week on other U.S. radio programs. Jewish Press readers know him best for his weekly Quick Takes column. Two weeks ago Aaron and I drove to the scene after an Arab suicide bomber blew himself up in a shawarma restaurant near downtown Tel Aviv's old central bus station. As we neared a police checkpoint blocking the entrance to the scene, Aaron took off his yarmulke and told me it would be best if I, with my black hat and beard, got out of the car and walked the short distance to the place so the police at the checkpoint would allow his car to pass without incident. I did as he requested. Aaron flashed his press credentials and drove through the checkpoint without being stopped or questioned. At the bomb site Aaron kept his yarmulke off until he was able to get through makeshift barricades set up by the police. On our return trip Aaron told me that if you wear a kippa in Israel, many don't consider you a legitimate journalist. He went on to describe what brought him, an Orthodox Jew, to habitually remove his yarmulke at checkpoints and other hot spots in the Jewish state:
Ironically, while Klein has had issues reporting as a religious Jew in Israeli-controlled territory, he had the opposite problem when interviewing a leader of a group sworn to Israel's destruction. "The first time I interviewed Hamas chief Mahmoud al-Zahar," says Klein, "I did not bring my yarmulke. I wanted to get out alive. But during the course of our conversation I ended up talking about my Orthodox Judaism. Al-Zahar asked why I didn't wear a yarmulke to meet him. I told him I'd been afraid to. He said he was insulted. He claimed he was a religious Muslim who only had a problem with the state of Israel and not with Judaism. He lectured me about not forsaking my religion or denying my Jewish identity. He said the next time we meet I had better be wearing my yarmulke. Since then I have interviewed him a number of times. Whenever we speak by phone or when he joins me on the radio, he first jokingly inquires as to whether I am wearing my yarmulke." Asked to explain the institutionalized anti-religious practices he's encountered, Aaron replied, "It's the new nature of the cultural war in Israel. The great divide used to be the so-called right wing versus the so-called left wing. Essentially, whether or not to give up land to the Palestinians. Now the mask is coming off and the real battle is starting to be waged openly - religious nationalism versus anti-religious post-Zionism. "More simply, is Israel supposed to be a Jewish state based on religious ideals or will it be a state like all others that just happens to be comprised mostly of Jews? At its core, it is what all the land withdrawals and proposed land withdrawals are about, and it's what my 'yarmulke problems' are about. That is the fight I am witnessing here. The victor will determine the future of Israel and the Jewish people." Klein hardly is the first Orthodox Jew to discover that sometimes it's difficult being a religious Jew in the Jewish state. An Israel Broadcasting Authority crew traveling toward Kfar Maimon to cover the events surrounding the March to Gaza last summer was stopped en route by police for a routine inspection. One crew member, an Orthodox man wearing a yarmulke, was instructed to step out of the vehicle. Questioned about the purpose of his presence, he explained that he was a member of the film crew. He displayed his Government Press Office press credentials, but police continued to suspect his motives for traveling to Kfar Maimon. It was only due to the intervention of co-workers that he was permitted to return to the vehicle and continue to Kfar Maimon. This phenomenon works the other way as well. Yoram Ettinger, the veteran Israeli diplomat, is not religious and does not wear a yarmulke. He recounts how his political view can confuse those who equate a right-of-center position on specific issues with religious orthodoxy. "One Shabbat prior to the Gaza disengagement," he says, "I was driving over to visit a member of my family when I was stopped at a red light by a police officer and told to roll down my window. The officer asked whose car I was driving. I told him it was mine and wondered why he would even suspect otherwise. The officer said, 'I saw a bumper sticker against disengagement on the back of your car and that does not conform with the secular community.' " Ken Burgess is a well-known musician from England who converted to Judaism some 20 years ago. He got the shock of his life when he witnessed how far the average secular Israeli Jew is from his heritage and tradition. To Ken Burgess, a convert, this was especially agonizing. Burgess had been working with the biggest record company in Israel and had helped to significantly boost their annual sales. "One day," he recalls, "after I had become Orthodox, I walked into the office with a kippa on my head. I was told that if I wanted to continue working with them I would have to remove it. This was so shocking to me. I could not understand how a Jew in the Holy Land could tell me not to wear a kippa. Dr. Arnold Seid is a surgeon from Santa Monica, California, who came to Israel last week to attend the annual Herzliya Conference on security. He says he "was struck by the fact that in this Herzliya conference with thousands of people in the hall including professors, academics, military men and politicians, maybe two percent had on yarmulkes." He continues: "Friday night and Shabbat morning I went down to the synagogue in the hotel and found that with hundreds of Jews gathered to discuss the future of the Jewish state, we didn't have a minyan. I have been to Israel enough times to understand that Herzliya is not exactly the center of Torah learning, but nonetheless I was astonished that there would be this degree of secularism. "More surprising yet, when I asked at the front desk if there was a nearby minyan, they had no idea. Surely if a traveler in Paris or Buenos Aires or Rome on Sunday morning were to ask at the front desk of a large hotel where to find a church, an answer would be forthcoming. "I would think that at a meeting of this importance they would want the religious or at least some diversity across the board. There was only one kippa-wearing presenter from Judea and Samaria but the rest were almost exclusively left-wingers or Arabs. It's not a lack, but a virtual absence, of spirituality. There were no prayers over wine or over bread. Absolutely a lack of Jewishness." Rabbi Joseph Gerlitzky, the Chabad shaliach in Tel Aviv, relates the following story:
An item that appeared in the Israeli press during Passover two years ago shocked even many of Israel's most secular citizens. An incarcerated Hamas terrorist observed his Israeli guard eating bread. When he asked the guard why he wasn't eating matzah, the guard laughed and said that as an enlightened, modern man, he wasn't bound by silly old traditions. The terrorist then assured his fellow inmates, "We will win after all. We respect and love our past, so we have a future, and we will win!" In a 1959 letter to Israel's first prime minister, David Ben Gurion, the Lubavitcher Rebbe wrote:
As an Orthodox Jew in Israel, I live with the reality of the Rebbe's prescient words day in and day out. In fact, after living in Israel for 24 years, I think the biggest surprise is that I still look Jewish. Avraham Shmuel Lewin is the Israel correspondent of The Jewish Press. Read Comments (1)
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Wow - Eye opening.
Date 05:06, 06-5, 07 As a secular Israeli looking for roots this article really clarified a few things for me. Religious Jews in Israel are not marginalized: there they are demonized and sub-humanized! That is why, for such a long time, I had so much trouble becoming religious, because in my eyes, religious people are backward, last century, non-sensical. I was educated that way. And because they are seen as second class citizens - as subhuman, there is no problem with driving them out of their homes, to beat them, even kill them. As a secular right-wing Israeli, I was always appalled by the injustice of Jews being massacred in bus explosions and then blamed for it by world leaders and media. But now I realize why they did it - because Israel''s citizens are prejudiced - against their own religious brethren. Until they don't realize that they are in this land not because they are Israeli, but because they are Jews and this land belongs to them - they deserve what they get from the world. As Israelis - we are foreign occupiers. As Jews - we are the aboriginals. Here's the proof - a European official who toured the Land of Israel 300 years ago visited Gaza and found that the majority of the population there is Jewish, with a minority Christian population and one Arab family! The cure is not in convincing world that we're right. The cure is within the Jewish people. We have to decide whether we're Israeli occupiers and leave, or Jewish aboriginals, and stay. -Shai Lipkovich
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