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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Faith and the Holocaust Yeshivat Har Etzion
YESHIVAT
HAR ETZION
ISRAEL
KOSCHITZKY VIRTUAL BEIT MIDRASH (VBM)
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printing go to: www.vbm-torah.org/archive/shoah/05a-shoah.htm
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FAITH
AND THE HOLOCAUST
By Rav
Tamir
Granot
Lecture
#05a: The Holocaust as a Divine Punishment
Part
1
A.
Criticism of the Theology of Divine
Retribution
In
the previous lectures, I presented the theological position that prevails
among the main sectors of the Charedi public, according to which the Holocaust
should be regarded as a punishment for sins. In general, the sins referred to are the
Enlightenment, the abandonment of religion and assimilation. For the Satmar Rebbe, the sin that led
to the Holocaust was Zionism.
Either way, the theological model is a classical one: suffering is a
punishment for sin, and the sin must be identified; it is generally connected to
abandonment of Torah, a lack of faith, or rebellion against the Jewish
sages. The sin of Zionism is
admittedly not a "classical" sin, since there is no negative commandment
concerning violation of the "three oaths."
Nevertheless, according to the interpretation of the Satmar Rebbe, the
Zionist hastening of the end represents a heretical denial of the very
foundations of faith in Divine Providence, and a rebellion against Divine
Kingship.
A
view similar to that of the Satmar Rebbe was expressed by a prominent rabbi of
the Ger Chassidic sect, Rabbi Binyamin Mendelson of Komemiyut, following the
reburial in Israel of Rabbi Menachem Ziemba Hy"d, one of the great Jewish
scholars of Poland, who died in the Warsaw Ghetto Revolt:
On
Wednesday, as I walked with the cortege of the sage Rabbi Menachem Ziemba,
Hy"d, who was brought for burial from Poland to the Holy Land, I
pondered: the first and only one of those murdered in Poland, in sanctification
of God's Name, who was brought to the Holy Land for reburial, was one of the
greatest Torah scholars. What does
this tell us? One thought leads to another: the murder of six million of our
generation, in sanctification of God's Name how do we relate to this? The
answer is that it represents the birth-pangs of the
Messiah.
Rabbi
Elimelekh of Lizhensk, zt"l, spoke of the Tannaim who said that there
would be "birth-pangs of the Messiah" prior to "the Meilekh" coming,
but once "the Meilekh" had come to the world, there would be no
birth-pangs. His explanation for
this was, as explained the work entitled Leshon ha-Zahav (Shabbat,
chapter "ha-Zorek"), that the Sages of the generation believed that they
would merit that the Messiah would come during the lifetime of Rabbi Meilekh,
and that if the Messiah would come there would be no birth-pangs, for he had
elevated his generation and perfected it to the degree that there would be no
need for further repair through the birth-pangs of
Messiah.
In
our generation, we have sinned in believing in Zionism, which claims that Am
Yisrael is a nation like all the nations, and that it needs to redeem itself
by its own efforts. It is like the
sin of the golden calf, where the people said, "Moshe, the man who brought us up
out of the land of
Egypt" (Shemot 32:1)
not "Moshe, the man of God," but just "Moshe the man" the leader of the
people. It was for them as though
the nation had taken itself out of Egypt, while the truth is that "I am the Lord
your God Who took you out of the land of Egypt" (ibid. 20:2). It is not the people who took
themselves out, but rather God Who brought us out. In the same way, seventy years ago
Zionism declared that it is not God who will take us out of exile, but rather
the nation who by their own effort will redeem the nation from exile. Owing to this sin, and all the other
sins and the uprooting of the Torah arising from this rotten source owing to
this the righteous ones were not successful in the repairs which they performed
in order to prevent the birth-pangs of the Messiah, and the terrible birth-pangs
came, with disasters and murders, in our generation.
After
these birth-pangs and catastrophes the Messiah should have come, but owing to
our sins and especially the education of Am Yisrael for the past sixty
years with the idea that the nation must redeem itself by its own efforts,
through diplomacy among the other nations the minds and hearts of many of our
nation, and even some of the faithful, have been filled with the idea that the
way to redeem Israel is through our diplomacy among the other nations. It is for this that they yearned, and
the will of many Jews is taken into consideration in the heavens, such that the
redemption of Israel and the coming of the Messiah
are postponed. (Rabbi Binyamin Mendelson, Letters)
However,
viewing the Holocaust as a punishment for sins such as abandoning the Torah, or
Zionism, arouses several difficulties in both the psychological and the
philosophical realm.
Some
thinkers have rejected the very idea of connecting the Holocaust to any
sin. For example, we may cite Prof.
David Weiss-Halivni, a well-known scholar of Talmud, who grew up in the world of
ultra-Orthodoxy, but after surviving the Holocaust joined the Jewish Theological
Seminary in America, affiliated with the
Conservative movement. Halivni did
not regard himself as belonging to this stream, even though in certain respects
he was also outside of Orthodoxy.
In his memoir The Book and the Sword,
which recounts his experiences during the Holocaust and in America
afterwards, he writes the following:
It
must have been with tongue in cheek that the great second-century sage of the
land of Israel, Rabbi Shimon ben Yochai, speaking a different matter, said,
"Four things the Holy One, blessed be He, detests, and I don't like them either"
(Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Niddah 16b).
I would like to say the same, in all seriousness, in connection with the
Shoah. There are four things that
the Holy One, blessed be He, detests (at least this is my hope), and I reject
them as well. These four things
are, first, theological justifications of the Holocaust, which must be rejected
out of hand; second, even raising the theological question of why there was a
Holocaust, implying that an answer might be found; third, the notion that
survival was possible only at the expense of others and that, therefore, every
survivor must have a sense of guilt; and fourth, the idea that all survivors of
the Holocaust necessarily share certain sociological and psychological
characteristics. (In this last
instance, unlike the first three, I merely disagree. I would not go so far as to say that I
detest those who search for commonalities.)
Of
the four things I have named, let me speak first of one that I reject with
derision: the attempt to make theological excuses for the Holocaust. I consider it obscene to assume that the
Shoah took place (especially since it came from Germany) as a
divine response to the spread of German culture of Haskalah, or secularism,
among the Jews. First of all, these
apologies are historically absurd: Germany had the most secular Jews,
and yet more Jews of other nationalities were exterminated. But, more important,
these rationalizations are the theologically offensive. The phrase "For our sins, we were
exiled
" has a legitimate place in our tradition and liturgy; but dispersion,
even with its attendant sufferings, is one thing, and vast annihilation of man,
woman, and child is another. To say
to people whom we know, "because of our sins" we were sent to Auschwitz - this must be rejected out of hand. There are certain times in history when
justification almost smacks of participation. A justification, by definition, means:
it should have happened, it's justice, it is the fitting course of events. People who make such statements suggest,
in effect, that had it not happened, they would have worked to bring it
about. Even aside from the
historical absurdity, sensitive human beings must consider this
abominable.
I
would go even further: not only is justification itself abominable; even raising
the theological question of why there was a Holocaust implying that there
exists a satisfying answer is objectionable. One should be encouraged to describe the
enormity of the crime, its details and its comprehensiveness. One can also explain how it was
possible, in the midst of the "bright light" of European culture, to commit such
unspeakable atrocities. But one
ought not, indeed one should not dare, to explain why it took place, why it
happened as it did. For by merely
asking the question "Why was there a Holocaust?" implying that there is
answer, a just answer one increases the suffering of the victims. Whatever the suggested answer might be
aside from the tautological statement that the perpetrators were wicked and that
God "hid His face" and allowed things to occur it will inevitably relieve the
murderers, at least partially, of their guilt and place it upon the shoulders of
the victims.
There
are events in history, such as Revelation to the believer, that exist without
explanation; they just exist. They
have no "because." The Holocaust
should be treated as such an event an event without explanation. The repetition of the question "Why was
there a Revelation?" causes pain to no one, though who can find an answer? The repetition of the question "Why was
there a Holocaust," although no more answerable, causes pain to the
victims. The question justifies
their suffering. They very question
reduces the innocence of the victims and the culpability of the murderers. The question should remain
unasked.
Let
us pursue every detail, every lead, every avenue that describes the horror and
the tragedy explicit information about how and where and who the victims were,
how the evil was performed, how the crime was executed, how the atrocity came to
fruition. The logistics of how it
was possible to deceive such a large number of people and force them to their
death, how it was possible to slaughter millions of people, should be
explained. Everything that is
knowable about the actual facts of the destruction should be researched and
brought to public attention. All
the cruelty, the indescribable torture and suffering, should become public
knowledge.
Halivni objects
for two reasons to any attempt at a theological justification for the
Holocaust:
a.
Because it
represents an offense to and disrespect for the victims, who should not be
accused of any sin. Even if one
were to suggest that only some of them sinned, since most of them did not, the
accusation is a desecration of their memory.
b.
Because it is
disrespectful towards God. A person
who justifies the Holocaust as punishment is in fact saying: Because of the
Enlightenment, or Zionism, it was justified for six million Jews, a million and
a half of them children, etc., to die.
Is this the image that we have of God?! Would His Divine justice really
mete out this punishment? Does God really act with such cruelty in His
world?
Indeed, any
theodicy surrounding the Holocaust must confront these two fundamental problems,
arising both from the enormity and unique severity of the suffering, and from
the fact that the destruction took place mainly in places that were centers of
Orthodox Jewish life. It was
specifically the Orthodox communities, the Chassidim and the Mitnagdim, in
Poland, the
Ukraine, Lithuania and Hungary, who
suffered the greatest damage. The
blow to the enlightened, assimilated Jews of western Europe, and even the Jews
of Germany, was relatively lighter than that dealt to Polish Jewry, while the
pioneers in Eretz Yisrael the great majority of whom were secular Zionists
were spared altogether. It is
altogether absurd to propose that Divine retribution should strike specifically
those who did not sin. That which
may be asserted concerning an individual that so-and-so is a righteous person,
but nevertheless has a difficult life, while so-and-so is wicked, but
nevertheless prospers is more difficult to maintain in relation to national
events. Here, if an event is to be
understood in terms of categories of Divine retribution, then there must be at
least some minimal correlation between the measure of guilt and the extent of
the punishment.
Translated by
Kaeren
Fish
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