The British gave the
Golan to France’s Syrian colony in 1923. Syria attacked Israel in 1967
and lost the Golan. Syria had occupied it for 44 years. Israel’s
liberation of the Golan has lasted 45 years. Who has possessed the
Golan the longest?
Even as modern day Syria is convulsed in a murderous and bloody
civil war with untold thousands dead and maimed; even as its tyrant,
Bashir al-Assad, fights for his political and physical life; even with
all this, he nevertheless spews forth his hatred of Israel and his call
to take away the Golan Heights from the Jewish state.But so do those "rebels" who are fighting him and thus remind us of the famous aphorism: "better the devil you know."
Those
of us who have stood on the Golan's 1,700 foot steep escarpment, are
struck by its immense strategic value overlooking Israel's fertile Hula Valley and the beautiful harp shaped lake below, called in Hebrew, Kinneret (the Sea of Galilee.)
But
during Syria's occupation of the territory, no agriculture of any
significance took place and no restoration of its terrain was ever
undertaken. Instead, the Golan was a Syrian army artillery encampment
whose sole purpose was to deliberately rain down upon Israeli farmers,
fishermen and villagers an endless barrage of shells.
So what is
the history of the Golan Heights and what is its overwhelming biblical
significance to the reconstituted Jewish state? Perhaps we should return
primarily to the biblical books of Joshua and Numbers.
Before
the Tribes of Israel would cross the River Jordan and enter the Promised
Land, the first among them had already taken possession of territory
east of the River Jordan. These were the half tribes of Manasseh, Gad
and Reuben who liberated the Bashan and Gilead from the Amorites.
Biblical
Bashan incorporates today's Golan Heights. Gilead is the fertile land,
which lies in what is the north eastern area of today's Kingdom of
Jordan:
" ... a little balm, and a little honey, spices and myrrh, nuts and almonds" (Gen 43:11.)
It
was Canaan, west of the Jordan, (including today's so-called West Bank)
which would pose the formidable challenge to Joshua bin Nun, the
general leading the Israelite tribes. So it was that Moses, the
Lawgiver, spoke to the children of Gad and Reuben thus:
"Shall your brethren go to war, and shall you sit here?" (Numbers
32:6) The leaders of the two tribes replied that they would indeed send
their combat men west into Canaan and fight alongside their brethren
while their families would remain behind.
"We will build
sheepfolds here for our cattle and cities for our little ones. But we
ourselves will go ready armed before the children of Israel until we
have brought them unto their place: and our little ones shall dwell in
fenced cities because of the inhabitants of the land. We will not return
unto our houses until the children of Israel have inherited every man
his inheritance." (Numbers 32: 16-18)
The story of
reconstituted Israel and its people is mirrored in the biblical story of
those ancient ancestors. The young men and women of modern Israel have
gone again and again from their
homes; be they villages, towns or cities, to the borders and established
communities there in times of danger and peril, just like those young
men did from the biblical tribes of Gad and Reuben.
The Jewish
pioneers of today in Judea and Samaria — the biblical heartland known
today as the "West Bank" — are no different. But the world has chosen to
demonize them as "obstacles to peace" and an impediment to the creation
of a fraudulent Arab state to be called Palestine; a state that has
never existed in all of recorded history; certainly not as a sovereign
independent Arab state.
The pioneers are now called "settlers"
and their homes and farms derisively called "settlements." It matters
not to the infernal chorus that sings the international siren song of
hate and ignorance that these pioneers are returned to their ancestral
homesteads and seek to take up their ploughshares to sow, to plant and
re-possess their homeland.
But the purpose of this article is also to learn about the biblical and post biblical history of the Jewish descendants of Gad, Reuben and Manasseh.
The
Bashan region, now known as the Golan Heights, is a part of the
biblical territory promised to the Patriarch Abraham and the people of
Israel for an everlasting covenant — the Covenant of the Parts —
recounted in Genesis 15. The city of Bashan was a refuge city (Deut,
4:43).
During the biblical period of the Jewish Kings, a battle
high on the Golan took place between King Ahab and the army of Aram. A
Jewish victory occurred at the present site of Kibbutz Afik, which lies a
few miles east of Lake Kinneret, the Sea of Galilee.
After the
end of the Babylonian Exile, and during the Second Temple Period, Jews
returned to their homes on the Golan. Subsequently the returnees were
attacked by gentiles and Judah Maccabee brought his forces up to the
Heights to defend them.
At the conclusion of the Hasmonean
Period, King Alexander Yannai finally re-conquered the Golan and Jews
returned yet again. They rebuilt communities in central Golan, including
the major cities of Banias and Susita, which formed part of the defense of the Golan.
Their
residents fought heroically against the Roman legions during the Great
Revolt of 135 AD, known also as the Second Uprising. It was led by the
charismatic Shimon Bar Kokhba, known as the "Son of a Star" and a Jewish
folk hero as great as King Arthur. Some 10,000 residents of Gamla alone
perished fighting against Rome.
Second century Jewish coins were
found on the Golan after its liberation during the last days of the
June, 1967 Six Day War. These ancient coins were inscribed with the
words, "For the Redemption of Holy Jerusalem."
In the succeeding
period of the Talmudic Period, Jewish communities flourished and
expanded. Archaeologists have found the remains of 34 synagogues on the
Golan. Jewish life on the Golan largely ended after the defeat of the
Byzantine army by Arabs from Arabia carrying the new banner of Islam and
the region descended into a long period of neglect.
But Jewish
life returned yet again in the latter years of the 19th century when
members of the Bnei Yehuda society from Safed purchased land on the
Golan. In 1891, Baron Rothschild purchased around 18,000 acres in what
is present day Ramat Magshimim.
The Jewish pioneers of the First
Aliyah (immigration) began to farm land they had purchased in the Horan
region until the Turkish Ottoman occupiers evicted them in 1898. Their
land was then seized, and in 1923 the entire Golan was given away by
Britain to the French Mandate over Syria and Lebanon.
Zionist
leaders had earlier demanded the Golan be included within the new Jewish
National Home because of its immense historical roots in biblical and
post-biblical Jewish history. But Jewish liberation of the ancestral
land was not possible until Israel was forced to fight for its very
survival during the Six Day War.
The Golan is only 60 miles from
Haifa and the slopes of Mount Hermon, the highest point in the region,
are the present eyes and ears of Israel. The Golan Heights were
officially annexed to Israel in 1980. But it was the left wing Israeli
Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, who first offered to give the Heights
away in 1994.
Since then, Israelis have winced at the wrenching
offers made by subsequent left leaning Israeli governments and
politicians who declared publicly their desire to give the entire
Heights to the Syrians in return for a delusional peace. The
overwhelming majority of Israelis are adamantly opposed to any such
suggestion.
The Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group suggested that a
way out for the United States from its Iraqi imbroglio would be for
Israel to give the Golan Heights away to Syria. This, it was believed by
the ISG, would bring Syria into responsible nationhood and wean her
away from support of the "insurgents" attacking Iraqi and U.S assets. Of
course this was before the successes of the "Surge" instituted by
General Petraus made such a suggestion moot.
Obama's carrot to the Syrian dictator, should it ever be resurrected, inevitably will be the Golan Heights.
U.S.
President Obama mistakenly renewed diplomatic relations with Syria as a
way, he believed, of distancing the Arab dictatorship from its alliance
with Iran. This was yet another delusional act by the current U.S.
President whose foreign policy is now in tatters.
But Obama's
carrot to the Syrian dictator, should it ever be resurrected, inevitably
will be the Golan Heights. If he is re-elected and chooses yet again to
appease Arab and Muslim dictatorships, brutal pressure will be applied
against Israel to force it to give away yet more of its biblical
patrimony.
But what would such pressure on Israel to withdraw
from the Golan Heights mean? Bringing down the Israeli radar stations on
the Hermon Massif to the valley floor below would seriously degrade any
warning of future hostile Syrian attacks. It would further hamper
Israel's ability to prevent attacks upon it by Syrian forces and by
Hizbullah, now returned to even greater strength by Syria and Iran after
the two wars in southern Lebanon.
Israelis have been ill served
by too many of their leaders. The fact that any Israeli politician or
military leader would even contemplate throwing away both ancestral and
strategic territory is a recurring blight the Jewish state can ill
afford.
And to put any trust in an Arab nation, especially the
Iranian backed Syrian regime, is truly mind boggling. Besides which, the
so-called rebels fighting the Syrian regime have already stated that
their ambition is also to take the Golan from Israel at the same time
that they plan on making Syria yet another Islamic Republic and a future
part of an Islamic Caliphate.
And consider this. The British
colonial power gave the Golan to France’s Syrian colony in 1923. Syria
attacked Israel in 1967 and lost the Golan. Syria had occupied it for 44
years. Israel’s liberation of the Golan has lasted 45 years. Ask
yourself then, who has possessed the Golan the longest?
Any
thought of abandoning biblical Bashan (the Golan) to such Islamist foes
as exist in Syria would be a betrayal of those first Jewish ancestors on
the Golan who long ago "built sheepfolds for their cattle and cities
for their little ones."
No comments:
Post a Comment