Monday, September 22, 2025

RAV SOLOVEITCHIK ON THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STATE OF ISRAEL Rabbi Reuven Ziegler

The Two Covenants and the State of Israel In 1935, on his only trip to Eretz Yisrael, Rav Soloveitchik submitted his candidacy for the chief rabbinate of Tel Aviv as the representative of Agudath Israel, a non-Zionist, perhaps even anti-Zionist, political-religious organization. By 1944, he was chairman of the Central Committee of the Religious Zionists of America. He testifies that his move to Mizrachi was not an easy one, as it entailed a break with his family’s position and rejection by his rabbinic peers: I was not born into a Zionist household. My parents’ ancestors, my father’s house, my teachers and colleagues were far from the Mizrachi religious Zionists … My links with the Mizrachi grew gradually; I had my doubts about the validity of the Mizrachi approach… I built an altar upon which I sacrificed sleepless nights, doubts and reservations. Regardless, the years of the Hitlerian Holocaust, the establishment of the State of Israel, and the accomplishments of the Mizrachi in the land of Israel, convinced me of the correctness of our movement’s path. The altar still stands today, with smoke rising from the sacrifice upon it … Jews like me … are required to sacrifice on this altar their peace of mind as well as their social relationships and friendships. (Five Addresses, 34, 36)¹ A variety of factors—some related to fate and some to destiny— contributed to the Rav’s support for Mizrachi and to his personal commitment to the State of Israel.


continue 



No comments:

Post a Comment