http://israel-commentary.org/?p=7514
Menachim Begin
Redacted from an Op-Ed in The Jewish Press
Redacted from an Op-Ed in The Jewish Press
Thirty years ago this month, when
Menachem Begin resigned as prime minister of Israel, he was a broken man.
Politically, the 1982 invasion of southern Lebanon to expel the PLO, followed
by the horrific massacre perpetrated by the Lebanese Christian militia at the
Sabra and Shatila refugee camps, had undermined his leadership and provoked the
first massive anti-war protest movement in Israel’s history.
Personally, the death of his beloved
wife Aliza two months later plunged Begin into severe depression. On September
15, after six tumultuous years as prime minister, Begin officially resigned,
isolating himself in his home for nearly a decade until his death in 1992. His
close aide Yehuda Avner recently recalled: “He just walked away and disappeared
into mysterious seclusion, a man of silence, distant and withdrawn.”
Rejecting a state funeral, he had
insisted on adherence to Jewish tradition: “No lying in state, no military
guard of honor, no official delegations, not even eulogies — just a shroud.” He
was buried in the ancient Mount of Olives cemetery in Jerusalem. In death as in
life, Menachem Begin remained who he had
always been: a proud yet humble Jew.
The trajectory of Begin’s life and
political career is well known. Descended
on his mother’s side from a line of distinguished rabbis, Begin received
his religious Zionist education in Brest-Litovsk, a city filled with
synagogues, Zionist youth groups, and a rich Jewish culture. A devoted disciple of Revisionist leader
Vladimir (Ze’ev) Jabotinsky, he led the militant Irgun in the valiant struggle
for statehood after his arrival in Palestine in 1942.
Along the way, he incurred the wrath of
David Ben-Gurion (who considered him his
arch political rival and despised him as a result) and his secular
socialist followers for the bombing of British military command headquarters at
the King David Hotel; the massacre (a
deliberate lie perpetuated by Israel haters and the rival Labor Party) of
Arab villagers in Deir Yassin; and, above all, for bringing desperately needed
military weapons and fighters on board the Altalena during the first month of
the independence war. (Ben Gurion
considered the Atalena a direct threat by Begin to his leadership. In a moment
of mindless hatred and jealousy, he ordered his lackey Yitschak Rabin to fire
on Jewish concentration camp survivors on board and in the water and destroy
munitions in the vessel vital to the immediate defense against invading Arab
armies!) jsk
Despite Haganah collaboration in
planning the military attacks, and Ben-Gurion’s explicit approval for the
arrival of the ship (which he then ordered shelled and sunk in a tragic
outburst of Jewish brothers at war), Begin was dispatched by the Israeli
dedicated secular Left into political exile, where he remained for nearly
thirty years.
Almost 20 years later The Six-Day War
(June 6-12, 1967) fulfilled ancient Jewish dreams and created new Israeli
territorial possibilities (much closer to
the biblical and historical political promises made to them) On his first
visit to the Western Wall in 1967, Begin recited a prayer that he had composed,
concluding: “Today we stand before the
Western Wall, the relic of the House of our Glory, in Jerusalem, the
Redeemed…and from the depths of our hearts there arises the prayer that the
Temple may be rebuilt speedily in our days.”
Ten years later, on the election night
when he finally became prime minister, Begin wore a kippah and recited Psalms
as he faced exultant supporters. After he was asked to form a new government he
visited Rabbi Tzvi Yehuda Kook, spiritual leader of the nascent settlement
movement in Judea and Samaria, to receive his blessing before going to pray at
the Western Wall. The new prime minister bowed in a gesture of respect with
evident political overtones. “I felt that my heart was bursting within me,”
said one of Rabbi Kook’s students who witnessed the momentous encounter.
In
his inaugural speech as prime minister to the Knesset he boldly proclaimed:
“There are those who question our right to our ancient homeland, and even our
right to exist within its sacred boundaries. How dare they?… Let the world know
that we were granted our right to exist by the God of our fathers at the
glimmer of the dawn of human civilization 4,000 years ago. The Jewish people
have a historic, eternal and inalienable right to the whole of the land of our
forefathers.”
Subsequently asked by The New York Times whether he intended to annex the West Bank, he responded sharply: “You annex foreign territories, not your own country whose territories have been liberated. A Jew has every right to settle in the liberated territories of our Jewish homeland.”
Subsequently asked by The New York Times whether he intended to annex the West Bank, he responded sharply: “You annex foreign territories, not your own country whose territories have been liberated. A Jew has every right to settle in the liberated territories of our Jewish homeland.”
Begin made a point of visiting Elon
Moreh, the site of two years of unrelenting struggle to establish the first
settlement in Samaria, in the biblical
place where God had told Abraham: “To your descendants will I give this land”
(Genesis 12:6). Standing between Rabbi Moshe Levinger, the founding father
of the settlement movement, and Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon, who would
soon seed Judea and Samaria with new communities, Begin held a Torah scroll and
declared that there would be “many more Elon Morehs.” So there were.
Begin’s
courageous decision to authorize the bombing of Iraq’s nuclear facilities at
Osirak displayed his unyielding determination to save the Jewish people from
another Holocaust. Begin knew the consequences of
appeasement all too painfully from his family’s experiences in wartime Poland,
where his parents and brother were murdered. Yet he also was a peacemaker,
sharing the Nobel Prize with Egyptian president Anwar Sadat for the
breakthrough agreement that ended thirty years of Israeli encirclement by
hostile Arab states dedicated to its annihilation.
American Jews were frightened of guilt
by association with an Israeli prime minister who did not resemble their
beloved Franklin D. Roosevelt. Begin, after all, was the Israeli pariah who challenged their Diaspora conceit that
New Deal liberalism was the updated version of ancient Hebrew prophecy.
Some years later, when a reporter asked Begin how he would like to be
remembered, he responded: “As a decent
human being, and a proud Jew.”
He
understood what still eludes a majority of Israeli and Diaspora Jews: the unity
of religion and nationalism, Judaism and Zionism. His unyielding determination
to unite the State of Israel with the Land of Israel earned Menachem Begin his
unique place of distinction in Jewish and Israeli history.
And,
Let us say, Amen.
- See more
at: http://israel-commentary.org/?p=7514#sthash.CPin9IOx.dpuf
http://israel-commentary.org/?p=7514
Menachim Begin
Redacted from an Op-Ed in The Jewish Press
September 13, 2013
Thirty years ago this month, when Menachem Begin resigned as prime minister of Israel, he was a broken man. Politically, the 1982 invasion of southern Lebanon to expel the PLO, followed by the horrific massacre perpetrated by the Lebanese Christian militia at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps, had undermined his leadership and provoked the first massive anti-war protest movement in Israel’s history.
Personally, the death of his beloved wife Aliza two months later plunged Begin into severe depression. On September 15, after six tumultuous years as prime minister, Begin officially resigned, isolating himself in his home for nearly a decade until his death in 1992. His close aide Yehuda Avner recently recalled: “He just walked away and disappeared into mysterious seclusion, a man of silence, distant and withdrawn.”
Rejecting a state funeral, he had insisted on adherence to Jewish tradition: “No lying in state, no military guard of honor, no official delegations, not even eulogies — just a shroud.” He was buried in the ancient Mount of Olives cemetery in Jerusalem. In death as in life, Menachem Begin remained who he had always been: a proud yet humble Jew.
The trajectory of Begin’s life and political career is well known. Descended on his mother’s side from a line of distinguished rabbis, Begin received his religious Zionist education in Brest-Litovsk, a city filled with synagogues, Zionist youth groups, and a rich Jewish culture. A devoted disciple of Revisionist leader Vladimir (Ze’ev) Jabotinsky, he led the militant Irgun in the valiant struggle for statehood after his arrival in Palestine in 1942.
Along the way, he incurred the wrath of David Ben-Gurion (who considered him his arch political rival and despised him as a result) and his secular socialist followers for the bombing of British military command headquarters at the King David Hotel; the massacre (a deliberate lie perpetuated by Israel haters and the rival Labor Party) of Arab villagers in Deir Yassin; and, above all, for bringing desperately needed military weapons and fighters on board the Altalena during the first month of the independence war. (Ben Gurion considered the Atalena a direct threat by Begin to his leadership. In a moment of mindless hatred and jealousy, he ordered his lackey Yitschak Rabin to fire on Jewish concentration camp survivors on board and in the water and destroy munitions in the vessel vital to the immediate defense against invading Arab armies!) jsk
Despite Haganah collaboration in planning the military attacks, and Ben-Gurion’s explicit approval for the arrival of the ship (which he then ordered shelled and sunk in a tragic outburst of Jewish brothers at war), Begin was dispatched by the Israeli dedicated secular Left into political exile, where he remained for nearly thirty years.
Almost 20 years later The Six-Day War (June 6-12, 1967) fulfilled ancient Jewish dreams and created new Israeli territorial possibilities (much closer to the biblical and historical political promises made to them) On his first visit to the Western Wall in 1967, Begin recited a prayer that he had composed, concluding: “Today we stand before the Western Wall, the relic of the House of our Glory, in Jerusalem, the Redeemed…and from the depths of our hearts there arises the prayer that the Temple may be rebuilt speedily in our days.”
Ten years later, on the election night when he finally became prime minister, Begin wore a kippah and recited Psalms as he faced exultant supporters. After he was asked to form a new government he visited Rabbi Tzvi Yehuda Kook, spiritual leader of the nascent settlement movement in Judea and Samaria, to receive his blessing before going to pray at the Western Wall. The new prime minister bowed in a gesture of respect with evident political overtones. “I felt that my heart was bursting within me,” said one of Rabbi Kook’s students who witnessed the momentous encounter.
In his inaugural speech as prime minister to the Knesset he boldly proclaimed: “There are those who question our right to our ancient homeland, and even our right to exist within its sacred boundaries. How dare they?… Let the world know that we were granted our right to exist by the God of our fathers at the glimmer of the dawn of human civilization 4,000 years ago. The Jewish people have a historic, eternal and inalienable right to the whole of the land of our forefathers.”
Subsequently asked by The New York Times whether he intended to annex the West Bank, he responded sharply: “You annex foreign territories, not your own country whose territories have been liberated. A Jew has every right to settle in the liberated territories of our Jewish homeland.”
Begin made a point of visiting Elon Moreh, the site of two years of unrelenting struggle to establish the first settlement in Samaria, in the biblical place where God had told Abraham: “To your descendants will I give this land” (Genesis 12:6). Standing between Rabbi Moshe Levinger, the founding father of the settlement movement, and Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon, who would soon seed Judea and Samaria with new communities, Begin held a Torah scroll and declared that there would be “many more Elon Morehs.” So there were.
Begin’s courageous decision to authorize the bombing of Iraq’s nuclear facilities at Osirak displayed his unyielding determination to save the Jewish people from another Holocaust. Begin knew the consequences of appeasement all too painfully from his family’s experiences in wartime Poland, where his parents and brother were murdered. Yet he also was a peacemaker, sharing the Nobel Prize with Egyptian president Anwar Sadat for the breakthrough agreement that ended thirty years of Israeli encirclement by hostile Arab states dedicated to its annihilation.
American Jews were frightened of guilt by association with an Israeli prime minister who did not resemble their beloved Franklin D. Roosevelt. Begin, after all, was the Israeli pariah who challenged their Diaspora conceit that New Deal liberalism was the updated version of ancient Hebrew prophecy. Some years later, when a reporter asked Begin how he would like to be remembered, he responded: “As a decent human being, and a proud Jew.”
He understood what still eludes a majority of Israeli and Diaspora Jews: the unity of religion and nationalism, Judaism and Zionism. His unyielding determination to unite the State of Israel with the Land of Israel earned Menachem Begin his unique place of distinction in Jewish and Israeli history.
And, Let us say, Amen.
- See more at: http://israel-commentary.org/?p=7514#sthash.CPin9IOx.dpuf
Menachim Begin
Redacted from an Op-Ed in The Jewish Press
September 13, 2013
Thirty years ago this month, when Menachem Begin resigned as prime minister of Israel, he was a broken man. Politically, the 1982 invasion of southern Lebanon to expel the PLO, followed by the horrific massacre perpetrated by the Lebanese Christian militia at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps, had undermined his leadership and provoked the first massive anti-war protest movement in Israel’s history.
Personally, the death of his beloved wife Aliza two months later plunged Begin into severe depression. On September 15, after six tumultuous years as prime minister, Begin officially resigned, isolating himself in his home for nearly a decade until his death in 1992. His close aide Yehuda Avner recently recalled: “He just walked away and disappeared into mysterious seclusion, a man of silence, distant and withdrawn.”
Rejecting a state funeral, he had insisted on adherence to Jewish tradition: “No lying in state, no military guard of honor, no official delegations, not even eulogies — just a shroud.” He was buried in the ancient Mount of Olives cemetery in Jerusalem. In death as in life, Menachem Begin remained who he had always been: a proud yet humble Jew.
The trajectory of Begin’s life and political career is well known. Descended on his mother’s side from a line of distinguished rabbis, Begin received his religious Zionist education in Brest-Litovsk, a city filled with synagogues, Zionist youth groups, and a rich Jewish culture. A devoted disciple of Revisionist leader Vladimir (Ze’ev) Jabotinsky, he led the militant Irgun in the valiant struggle for statehood after his arrival in Palestine in 1942.
Along the way, he incurred the wrath of David Ben-Gurion (who considered him his arch political rival and despised him as a result) and his secular socialist followers for the bombing of British military command headquarters at the King David Hotel; the massacre (a deliberate lie perpetuated by Israel haters and the rival Labor Party) of Arab villagers in Deir Yassin; and, above all, for bringing desperately needed military weapons and fighters on board the Altalena during the first month of the independence war. (Ben Gurion considered the Atalena a direct threat by Begin to his leadership. In a moment of mindless hatred and jealousy, he ordered his lackey Yitschak Rabin to fire on Jewish concentration camp survivors on board and in the water and destroy munitions in the vessel vital to the immediate defense against invading Arab armies!) jsk
Despite Haganah collaboration in planning the military attacks, and Ben-Gurion’s explicit approval for the arrival of the ship (which he then ordered shelled and sunk in a tragic outburst of Jewish brothers at war), Begin was dispatched by the Israeli dedicated secular Left into political exile, where he remained for nearly thirty years.
Almost 20 years later The Six-Day War (June 6-12, 1967) fulfilled ancient Jewish dreams and created new Israeli territorial possibilities (much closer to the biblical and historical political promises made to them) On his first visit to the Western Wall in 1967, Begin recited a prayer that he had composed, concluding: “Today we stand before the Western Wall, the relic of the House of our Glory, in Jerusalem, the Redeemed…and from the depths of our hearts there arises the prayer that the Temple may be rebuilt speedily in our days.”
Ten years later, on the election night when he finally became prime minister, Begin wore a kippah and recited Psalms as he faced exultant supporters. After he was asked to form a new government he visited Rabbi Tzvi Yehuda Kook, spiritual leader of the nascent settlement movement in Judea and Samaria, to receive his blessing before going to pray at the Western Wall. The new prime minister bowed in a gesture of respect with evident political overtones. “I felt that my heart was bursting within me,” said one of Rabbi Kook’s students who witnessed the momentous encounter.
In his inaugural speech as prime minister to the Knesset he boldly proclaimed: “There are those who question our right to our ancient homeland, and even our right to exist within its sacred boundaries. How dare they?… Let the world know that we were granted our right to exist by the God of our fathers at the glimmer of the dawn of human civilization 4,000 years ago. The Jewish people have a historic, eternal and inalienable right to the whole of the land of our forefathers.”
Subsequently asked by The New York Times whether he intended to annex the West Bank, he responded sharply: “You annex foreign territories, not your own country whose territories have been liberated. A Jew has every right to settle in the liberated territories of our Jewish homeland.”
Begin made a point of visiting Elon Moreh, the site of two years of unrelenting struggle to establish the first settlement in Samaria, in the biblical place where God had told Abraham: “To your descendants will I give this land” (Genesis 12:6). Standing between Rabbi Moshe Levinger, the founding father of the settlement movement, and Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon, who would soon seed Judea and Samaria with new communities, Begin held a Torah scroll and declared that there would be “many more Elon Morehs.” So there were.
Begin’s courageous decision to authorize the bombing of Iraq’s nuclear facilities at Osirak displayed his unyielding determination to save the Jewish people from another Holocaust. Begin knew the consequences of appeasement all too painfully from his family’s experiences in wartime Poland, where his parents and brother were murdered. Yet he also was a peacemaker, sharing the Nobel Prize with Egyptian president Anwar Sadat for the breakthrough agreement that ended thirty years of Israeli encirclement by hostile Arab states dedicated to its annihilation.
American Jews were frightened of guilt by association with an Israeli prime minister who did not resemble their beloved Franklin D. Roosevelt. Begin, after all, was the Israeli pariah who challenged their Diaspora conceit that New Deal liberalism was the updated version of ancient Hebrew prophecy. Some years later, when a reporter asked Begin how he would like to be remembered, he responded: “As a decent human being, and a proud Jew.”
He understood what still eludes a majority of Israeli and Diaspora Jews: the unity of religion and nationalism, Judaism and Zionism. His unyielding determination to unite the State of Israel with the Land of Israel earned Menachem Begin his unique place of distinction in Jewish and Israeli history.
And, Let us say, Amen.
- See more at: http://israel-commentary.org/?p=7514#sthash.CPin9IOx.dpuf
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