Thursday, January 31, 2008

letter to Avi Shafran Re: UTJ - RE:MY PHONE CALL by Shmuel Koenig

In a message dated 1/30/2008 5:57:18 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, shmuelkoenig@verizon.net writes:
DEAREST RABBI SHAFRAN,
 
THE POOR PEOPLE IN THE YISHUV IN ERETZ YISRAEL NEED MONEY.
 
PART OF THIS MONEY LEGITIMATELY COMES FROM THE GOVERNMENT.
 
HOWEVER, THIS SHOULD NOT STOP UTJ AND THE GEDOLIM FROM SPEAKING OUT.
 
THANKS,
SHMUEL KOENIG
Rabbi Shafran, amv'sh
 
Rav Eliashiv is clearly against all concessions.  He has stated to more than one individual that Agudath Yisroel should do whatever they can to be activists against concessions.  Yet Agudath Yisroel of America is SILENT to President Bush's statement regarding a Palestinian State which translates to the expulsion of Jews in Yesha and concessions.  Why isn't Agudath Yisroel of America clearly following the dictates of the Gadol Hador?  I would have expected at Public Statement protesting President Bush's remarks. I would have expected that the Yeshivas would have instituted a letter writing campaign to President Bush to set the record straight regarding the Torah position of Bush's roadmap plan.  However, there is only Silence. It is my feeling that the Silence is because Agudath Yisroel of America has real concerns of incurring the wrath of its benefactor the United of States of America.  In the Agudah Convention, I believe Rabbi Bloom mentioned the great services of Agudath Yisroel of America to the frum community and this includes the acquisition of millions of dollars of government funding to push through legislation for many worthy projects that benefit the Jewish community.  These projects such as funding for special education, helping to pay for fertility treatments, low income housing, food subsidies, etc. etc. help pay for services that would be otherwise impossible and unaffordable and provides funding for jobs for many Jewish  professionals. 
 
These considerations are understandable.  However, it must not buy our Silence when it comes to Pikuach Nefesh and when it comes to abandoning our fundamental principles of the Torah.  The Land of Israel belongs to the Creator.  The Torah says "Ki Li Kol Haaretz".  It is not Olmert's or Bush's private real estate.  Shtika Kehodaya Damya!




Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape in the new year.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Shemittah Miracle!

 
Hi,
I figured that you may want to share this story on your shemitah blog.
 
 
Kol Tuv,
Asher
 
Thanks Asher!




Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape in the new year.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Letter to the President. Response to State of Union Address re: the Holy Land.

bs"d
 
January 29, 2008
 
Dear Mr. President,
 
>We're also standing against the forces of extremism in the Holy Land,
 
President Bush, why do you use the terminology Holy Land?  Allow me to suggest that The "Holy Land" is Holy when the Priestly Nation, the Nation of Israel, performs it's Priestly functions,  service to G-d, the Creator of the World, via the commandments in the Torah.  The Palestinians do not have the slightest inclination to accomplish this objective.
 
>Palestinians have elected a president who recognizes that confronting terror is essential to achieving a state where his people can live in dignity and at peace with Israel.
 
President Bush, didn't the Palestinians democratically elect a government that  is clearly for Terror?  Didn't they democratically vote for Hamas which is for the destruction of Israel?
 
>Israelis have leaders who recognize that a peaceful, democratic Palestinian state will be
a source of lasting security.
 
President Bush, Israelis have leaders who are blinded to the reality of Sderot which has been bombarded with Kassam rockets ever since the disengagement from Gaza. Is this what you call "lasting security?"  They have been releasing terrorists with blood on their hands and have turned a blind eye to the smuggling of weapons into the Gaza Strip.
 
>The time has come for a Holy Land where a democratic Israel and a democratic Palestine live side-by-side in peace. (Applause.)

President Bush, This imaginary dream of a democratic Israel living side by side with a democratic Palestine is an illusion, a figment of our imagination.  Look at the Palestinian textbooks.  They clearly call for the destruction of Israel.  The entire Israel.  True Peace is keeping the Holy Land where it is meant to be, in Jewish hands  who love peace and whose inner desire is to better mankind via technology, advances in medicine and the arts, sciences and agriculture. The Torah is the moral compass for the entire world.  A precious violin belongs with the violinist, protected and secure and not at the mercy of those that hate music and wish to destroy the precious violin and burn the music.   
 
President Bush, The Holy Land of Israel is also called the Promised Land.  It was promised to Abraham and then again to Isaac and then again to Jacob to the Nation of Israel exclusively as an Eternal Inheritance. 
 
 
Taken from Bush's State of the Union address. 
 
We're also standing against the forces of extremism in the Holy Land, where
we have new cause for hope. Palestinians have elected a president who
recognizes that confronting terror is essential to achieving a state where
his people can live in dignity and at peace with Israel. Israelis have
leaders who recognize that a peaceful, democratic Palestinian state will be
a source of lasting security. This month in Ramallah and Jerusalem, I
assured leaders from both sides that America will do, and I will do,
everything we can to help them achieve a peace agreement that defines a
Palestinian state by the end of this year. The time has come for a Holy Land
where a democratic Israel and a democratic Palestine live side-by-side in
peace. (Applause.)




Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape in the new year.

CAJL CC 012908 In Response to President Bush State of Union - HOLYLAND

bs"d
 
CAJL Conference of Authentic Jewish Leadership
CC Calling Campaign to Rabbinic Leadership
Shvat 6758 January 29th, 2008
Re:  President Bush's comments regarding the HolyLand
 
Once again, with a standing ovation of most of the House, President Bush spoke of his vision of peace and harmony in the HolyLand with Two Democratic States living side by side in the HOLYLAND.   
 
How can we be Silent to this clear disregard of the Torah??? The Promised Land was Promised to the seed of Abraham in the Brith Bein Habesarim. and subsequently to the seed of Isaac and to the seed of Jacob as an EVERLASTING inheritance exclusively to the Nation of Israel and we in turn must observe the commandments..
 
Please call and/or email:
 
Rabbi Rabbi Chaim Dovid Zwiebel, Rabbi Avi Shafran, and Rabbi Gertzulin - Public Affaris can be reached at Agudath Yisroel  212-797-9000 
Rabbi Pesach Lerner at The Young Israel can be reached at 212-929-1525
Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Weinreb of the OU can be reached at  212-563-4000
Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky Chabad Headquarters  at 718 774.4000 / fax 718 774.2718
 
and ask them to please end the Silence regarding Judea and Samaria and the establishment of a Terror State Chas Vechalilah.
 
Their respective emails are:
 
The Silent Majority must break its SILENCE!  Otherwise evil will take over G-d forbid.




Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape in the new year.

Jewish Roots of the American Constitution

bs"d

You may ask "Mah Inyan Shemittah Eitzal American Constitution". What is the connection between Shemittah and the American Constitution.  The answer is that many of the ideas regarding democracy has it's roots in the Torah and not visa versa.  When the Nation of Israel demands that the country be governed by Torah and not democracy, they are going to the root source of a model of the ideal society.  The Torah clearly states that the Promised Land was promised exclusively to the Nation of Israel and is not to be shared by 2 democratic States as President Bush clearly advocated in the State of the Union address tonight.

 

Jewish Roots of the American Constitution

Prof. Paul Eidelberg

Introduction
Although many of the framers of the American Constitution were not devout, their political mentality was shaped in universities whose curriculum was based very much on Jewish ideas. Accordingly, this essay will be divided into two parts. The first part will show how Judaism, in particular the Five Books of Moses, influenced higher education in 17th and 18th century America. The second part will examine the institutions prescribed in the American Constitution and show their roots in Jewish laws and principles.

A. Historical Background[1]

1. No nation has been more profoundly influenced by the "Old Testament" than America. Many of America's early statesmen and educators were schooled in Hebraic civilization. The second president of the United States, John Adams, a Harvard graduate, had this to say of the Jewish people:

    The Jews have done more to civilize men than any other nation…. They are the most glorious Nation that ever inhabited the earth. The Romans and their Empire were but a bauble in comparison to the Jews. They have given religion to three-quarters of the Globe and have influenced the affairs of Mankind more, and more happily than any other Nation, ancient or modern.[2]


2. The curriculum at Harvard, like those of other early American colleges and universities, was designed by learned and liberal men of "Old Testament" persuasion. Harvard president Increase Mather (1685-1701) was an ardent Hebraist (as were his predecessors, Henry Dunster and Charles Chauncey). Mather's writings contain numerous quotations from the Talmud as well as from the works of Saadia Gaon, Rashi, Maimonides and other classic Jewish commentators.

3. Yale University president Ezra Stiles readily discoursed with visiting rabbinical authorities on the Mishna and Talmud. At his first public commencement at Yale (1781), Stiles delivered an oration on Hebrew literature written originally in Hebrew. Hebrew and the study of Hebraic laws and institutions were an integral part of Yale's as well as of Harvard's curriculum.

4. Much the same may be said of King's College (later Columbia University), William and Mary, Rutgers, Princeton, Dartmouth, and Brown University. Hebrew learning was then deemed a basic element of liberal education. Samuel Johnson, first president of King's College (1754-1763), expressed the intellectual attitude of his age when he referred to Hebrew as "essential to a gentleman's education."

5. This attitude was not merely academic. On May 31, 1775, almost on the eve of the American Revolution, Harvard president Samuel Langdon, addressing the Congress of Massachusetts Bay, declared: "Every nation, when able and agreed, has a right to set up over itself any form of government which to it may appear most conducive to its common welfare. The civil polity of Israel is doubtless an excellent general model" (emphasis added).

6. The Higher Law doctrine of the Declaration of Independence is rooted in the Torah, which proclaims "The Laws of Nature and Nature's God," and appeals to the "Supreme Judge" and "Providence." Even though Jefferson, the principal author of the Declaration, was no admirer of the Hebrew Bible, he nonetheless framed the Declaration with a view to galvanizing a bible-reading public in support of the American Revolution.

7. During the colonial and constitution-making period, the Americans, especially the Puritans, adopted and adapted various Hebraic laws for their own governance. The legislation of New Haven, for example, was based on the premise that "the judicial laws of God, as they were delivered by Moses, and as they are a fence to the moral law, being neither … ceremonial, nor ha[ving] any reference to Canaan, shall … generally bind all offenders, till they be branched out into particulars hereafter." Thirty-eight of seventy-nine statutes in the New Haven Code of 1665 derived their authority from the Hebrew Bible. The laws of Massachusetts were based on the same premise.

8. The fifteen Capital Laws of New England included the "Seven Noahide Laws" of the Torah, or what may be termed the seven universal laws of morality. Six prohibit idolatry, blasphemy, murder, robbery, adultery, and eating flesh from a living animal, while the seventh requires the establishment of courts of justice. Such courts are obviously essential to any society based on the primacy of reason or persuasion rather than passion or intimidation.

9. The seven universal laws of morality (together with their particular branches) comprised a "genial orthodoxy." This genial orthodoxy transcends whatever social or economic distinctions exist among men: it holds all men equal before the law. By so doing it places constraints on governors and governors alike and thereby habituated Americans to the rule of law. As a further consequence, this ancient Hebraic orthodoxy dissolved or subordinated many ethnic differences among immigrants in the new world. It moderated the demands of various groups, helped coordinate their diverse interests and talents, and thereby contributed to America's growth and prosperity.

10. Now, without minimizing the influence of such philosophers as Locke and Montesquieu on the framers of the American Constitution, I believe America may rightly be deemed the first and only nation that was explicitly founded on the Seven Noahide Laws of the Torah. Indeed, the legislation of the several states comprising the Federal Union embodied these laws—including the prohibitions against blasphemy and adultery—well into the nineteenth century. It should also be noted that the constitutions of eleven of the original thirteen states made provision for religious education. Some even had religious qualifications for office.

11. Strange as it may seem, the Seven Noahide Laws were recently and explicitly incorporated in Public Law 102-14, which established March 26, 1991 as "Education Day"! What presumably saves this Congressional joint resolution from violating the First Amendment is its silence about the Hebraic origin of the Noahide code. Here I must digress for a moment and say a word about the First Amendment.

12. The First Amendment states that, "Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion …" This clause is now misunderstood. It was intended not to prevent Congress from enacting laws supportive of religion, but to prohibit Congress from establishing a state or national religion. In his "Farewell Address," George Washington declared:

    Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, Religion and morality are indispensable supports…. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that National morality can prevail in the exclusion of religious principle.

Incidentally, the theme of Washington's Farewell Address is national unity. National unity, he believed, requires national morality, a precondition of which is religion. Religion and morality counter man's natural inclination to self-indulgence and his tendency to be preoccupied with the immediate gratification of his own desires. Religion and morality foster self-restraint and consideration of others. Far more than secular humanism, religion inspires men with reverence, with deference to wisdom, with concern for posterity. But these ideas are Jewish ideas, rooted in the Seven Noahide Laws.

B. The Institutions Prescribed by the American Constitution
1. The House of Representatives represents 435 districts of the United States, where the people of each district elect one person to represent their views and interests. The idea of district elections is implicit in the Torah. "Select for yourselves men who are wise, understanding, and known to your tribes and I will appoint them as your leaders" (Deut. 1:13). The word "election" obviously comes from the word "elect," and the "elect" means men of high intellectual and moral character.

    a. Exodus 18:19 states: "… seek out from among all the people men with leadership ability, God-fearing men–men of truth who hate injustice." Similar qualifications are prescribed in the original constitutions Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. This is what the word "election" means. It is not a democratic but an aristocratic term!

    b. So, each tribe must select the best men to be their representatives. Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch comments that "each tribe (shevet) is to choose out of its own midst men whose character can only be known by their lives [hence whose character] is known only to those who have associated with them." This is the biblical source of residential requirements for Representatives and Senators in the United States. Also, what is here called a shevet was called a district after the Second Temple.[3]

    c. Moreover, the idea of district elections conforms to the Jewish law of "agency" (Kiddushin 59a). This law synthesizes the "delegate" and "trustee" concept of representation prevalent in the non-Jewish democratic world. Whereas the delegate concept binds a representative to the instructions of his constituents, the trustee concept allows him to judge whether adherence to these instructions, when additional knowledge or new circumstances intervene, will harm his constituents' immediate and/or long-term interests.

    d. Finally, it is a principle of Jewish law that "No legislation should be imposed on the public unless the majority can conform to it" (Avoda Zara 36a). This obviously requires legislators to consider or consult the opinions of their constituents. Hence representative democracy can be readily assimilated to Judaism simply by adding that representatives must be "men who are wise, and understanding." This would make for a "high-toned" or aristocratic democracy, or a universal aristocracy. (Bear in mind that Israel is supposed to be a "Nation of Kohanim," meaning a nation of noblemen.)

2. The Senate. The Senate represents the 50 states of the Federal Union; it therefore represents the Federal principle. But the idea of federalism goes back to the Torah and the twelve tribes. Each tribe had its own distinct identity, its own governor and its own judicial system.

3. The Presidency. Unlike Israel, which has a Plural Executive or Cabinet consisting of a prime minister and other ministers representing different political parties in the Knesset, the United States has a Unitary Executive, namely, the President. Of course the President has a Cabinet, but its members cannot hold any other office and they are wholly responsible to the President, not to any political party.

    a. Now it so happens that a Unitary Executive is a Torah principle! Thus, when Moses told Joshua to consult the elders when he was about to lead the Jews across the Jordan, God countermanded Moses: there can only be one leader in a generation. And if you look at tractate Sanhedrin 8a, you will see that Jewish law opposes collective leadership. Nor is this all.

    b. Just as a President of the United States must be a native-born American and not a naturalized citizen, so a king of Israel must be born of a Jewish mother and not a ger or convert..

4. The Supreme Court. Just as the American Supreme Court is the final interpreter of the American Constitution, so the Great Sanhedrin is the final interpreter of the Jewish Constitution, the Torah.

So we see that the original American Constitution was very much rooted in Torah Judaism.
——————————————————————————–

[1] This section of this essay is based on Abraham Katsh, The Biblical Heritage of American Democracy (New York: KTAV, 1977).

[2] Cited in Pathways to the Torah (Jerusalem: Aish HaTorah Publications, 1988), p. A6.2.

[3] For a detailed analysis of Israel's political system, see Paul Eidelberg, Jewish Statesmanship: Lest Israel Fall (Ariel Center for Policy Research 2000; University Press of America, 2002).

Posted by Ted Belman @ 6:24 pm |




Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape in the new year.