|
FAITH
AND THE HOLOCAUST
By
Rav Tamir Granot
Lecture
#23: The Holocaust and the State of Israel*
Introduction:
The connection between the State of Israel and the
Holocaust
In
our previous lectures, we have encountered some approaches to the nature of the
connection between the Holocaust and the State of Israel. Of course, the existence of a historical
connection is not open to question. The U.N. Partition Plan decision - and
especially the agreement of both Russia and the US to the plan supporting the
establishment of a state - was little less than an overt miracle; it was made
while the smoke from the crematoria still wafted in the European air, two years
after the war had ended. Rather,
the question concerns the nature of the ideological and spiritual connection
between the two events.
The
connection may be addressed in terms of cause and effect or in terms of a moral
lesson and significance. Rav Tzvi
Yehuda Kook maintained that the Holocaust was the cause that is, the surgery
that was needed in order to separate the Jews from their exile and the State
was the effect. Many others,
including Rav Soloveitchik, taught that the State is the proper lesson
arising from the Holocaust. The
most strident formulation of this view was proposed by the Jewish philosopher
Emil Fackenheim,
who asserted that following the Holocaust there is a new, 614th
commandment - not to allow Hitler a posthumous victory. It is our responsibility to ensure that
there will never be another Auschwitz, and the primary means for fulfilling this
commandment is through the existence of a strong, independent State of
Israel.
B.
"And
I saw you wallowing in your blood, and I said: 'Through your blood shall you
live' (Yechezkel 15:6)
"I
saw you wallowing in your blood" this was the Holocaust; "And I said, through
your blood" these are the wars of Israel; "Shall you live" this is the State
of Israel.
We
are accustomed to speaking of the connection between Yom Ha-Zikaron,
the day of remembrance honoring the soldiers who have given their lives in
defense of the country, and Yom Ha-Atzma'ut, Israel's Independence Day, which follows
immediately afterwards. This
connection is most aptly evinced in the poem by Natan Alterman, "The Silver
Tray" (Magash Ha-Kessef), in which he declares that the sacrifice of
our fallen soldiers is the assurance of the political independence of the Jewish
nation. This is certainly true, but
attention should be paid to anther connection, as well: the connection between
the Day of Remembrance for the fallen soldiers and the Holocaust Remembrance
Day, which is commemorated a week earlier.
The sacrifice made by the I.D.F. soldiers is, after all, meant to ensure
that there will not be another Auschwitz.
The alternative to Israel's wars against her enemies the War of
Independence, the Six-Day War, the Yom Kippur War, the Lebanon Wars is the
Warsaw ghetto, the Lodz ghetto, Treblinka, Auschwitz, and Babi
Yar.
It
is interesting that the date chosen for the Remembrance Day for Israel's fallen
soldiers is eight days after the Holocaust Remembrance Day. The image in Yechezkel, "wallowing in
your blood," referring to the moment of birth, is one that I associate with the
Holocaust, when the nation of Israel was indeed wallowing in its blood. The last part of the verse, "Through
your blood shall you live," is interpreted by Chazal (Mekhilta
De-Rabbi Yitzchak; Shemot Rabba 17,3; and others) as an allusion to
the Pesach sacrifice and to the blood of circumcision. Yechezkel speaks of a bloody, traumatic
birth, with no mercy and no Divine Providence. The "wallowing in blood" is a state of
helplessness:
And as for your birth, on the day you were born your cord was not cut, nor were
you washed in water to be cleaned, nor were salted at all, nor were you swaddled
at all. No eye pitied you enough to
do any of these, to have compassion on you; rather, you were cast out into the
field, in your loathsomeness, on the day that you were born.
(15:4-5)
However,
there is another possible scenario for wallowing in blood. The blood may be the result of a
sacrifice offered willingly, the Pesach sacrifice or the circumcision. Our sacrifices in Eretz Yisrael
are like the blood of circumcision, which is undertaken willingly, as well as
the blood of the Pesach sacrifice, symbolizing the struggle for liberty, the
struggle to leave the "wallowing in blood" of the European Holocaust. According to the literal text, the blood
"through which you will live" is exactly the same blood in which the Jewish
nation had been wallowing; it is from that very blood that God redeems us. In the midrash, Chazal
offer a transformation of the blood of circumcision and of the Pesach sacrifice,
the blood of covenant and of redemption, which, if we are ready, may pave the
way for redemption instead of the terribly painful birth that is described at
the beginning of Yechezkel's prophecy.
B. To be
Created or not to be Created
Thus
far, we have discussed the most fundamental significance of the establishment of
the State as a response to the Holocaust.
However, this is not enough.
Beyond the existential dimension of the establishment of Israel in
order that there will not be another Auschwitz there must also be a spiritual
dimension.
The
midrash speaks of a debate in heaven regarding the creation of
man:
Rabbi
Simon said: When the Holy One, blessed be He, was about to create Adam, the
ministering angels separated into groups and camps, some saying, "Let him not be
created," while others said, "Let him be created." This is as it is written,
"Kindness and truth meet, righteousness and peace kiss" (Tehillim 85:11):
Kindness says, "Let him be created, for he will perform acts of kindness." Truth
says, "Let him not be created, for he is full of deceit." Righteousness says,
"Let him be created, for he will perform righteousness." Peace says, "Let him
not be created, for he is full of quarrel." (Bereishit Rabba
8,5)
I
wrote the following during a visit to the Majdanek death camp:
In
Majdanek, almost everything is in its place. Sixty years on, and the sense of terror
and evil is still in the air. The
gas chambers, the crematoria, the huts with shoes, the ash. Majdanek lies on the outskirts of the
town of Lublin. On one side, people
are plowing and sowing; on the other, they are murdering and burning. At that moment this midrash went
through my mind, with Chazal describing the debate among the angels
concerning the creation. If there
is a place like Majdanek in the world and there is, more than one then the
angels who said, "Let him not be created" were correct. If this is what man has wrought in God's
world, it would have been better had he not been created.
Then
I wrote the following:
Two
groups of angels say, "Let man not be created." Today, these two groups have the
strongest of proofs, the most concrete of all evidence: Auschwitz, Majdanek,
Treblinka. Most convincing
evidence.
The
Heavenly Court will no doubt be persuaded.
Two
groups of angels say, "Let him not be created!" And the Heavenly Court is about
to rule, "He shall not be created!"
The
two groups of angels representing kindness and righteousness lack such
convincing evidence. The verdict is
about to be passed, but then Moshe Rabbeinu intervenes: "Lord, Lord, God Who is
merciful and compassionate, long-suffering and full of kindness and
truth
"
"It
may be that their verdict is true," Moshe admits. "But You are long-suffering and full of
kindness and truth so allow Your people, Israel, to state their
case."
The
Master of the Universe replies: "I have heard enough argument. The stage of arguments is over. But I am prepared to accept a proof, a
convincing proof."
Moshe
asks, "Give us time; give us a test."
Two
years after the Heavenly Court almost ruled, "He shall not be created," the Holy
One, blessed be He, gives humanity a test.
And we the nation of Israel are the test. We must bring
proof.
The
court is tense; the eyes of all of the world are resting on us here: Is this
world, is humanity, worthy of existence? Will the counter-proof, the opposite
evidence, be presented? Can we build a world of righteousness and kindness to
combat the world of war and of deceit?
And
if and if, Master of the Universe the date for the ruling on the appeal is
the 5th of Iyar, 5767, do we have convincing evidence to bring before
the Heavenly Court? Would the verdict now be, "Let him be
created?"
C. The
Significance of the Conflict between Nazism and Am
Yisrael
Am
Yisrael
brought the world a lesson that became the foundation of the morality of western
culture. No longer would beauty,
strength, ability, or desire perch at the top of the hierarchy of values, as in
the Greek and classical western tradition.
Rather, the supreme values would be the righteousness, truth, freedom,
mercy, and kindness of the Torah.
The children of Avraham are modest, merciful, and kind (Yevamot
79a). These signs characterize Jews
not only towards themselves, but are also recognized by the nations of the
world. Nechama Leibowitz
cites a letter written by a Roman senator describing the Jews he saw during his
visit to Eretz Yisrael: "[They are] immersed in reading, teaching, and
discussion; a group of cultured people elevated above the people would never be
possible." Their laws are
"nonsensical and meaningless such as this law commanding that they rest on the
seventh day, and to free a slave who has served them for six years." He writes
further: "You will be astonished to know that there is no land like this one for
lack of slaves. While our last
census counted twenty-three slaves for every free person, in Judea the opposite
is the case there is one slave there for every twenty-three
citizens."
Ceasing
to work on Shabbat, mercy for slaves, the value of freedom all of these
appeared to Roman eyes as a threat to civilized culture. Over the course of the years, Jewish
values seeped into European culture via Christian channels, although at times
they were warped along the way. At
a later stage in history, some anti-Semitic intellectuals such as Walter and
Chamberlain even argued that Jewish culture and morality had come to dominate
European culture. The fiercest and
most important exponent of this view was Nietzsche. He claimed that there is no such thing
as absolute morality; rather, there exist two main systems of morality, each
representing the interests of a different class. There is the morality of
masters, and the morality of slaves.
The morality of masters had developed among the ruling classes; it
centers around an appreciation for power, strength, beauty, and success. These
are the values of one who lives a life of freedom without disturbance by some
master. Jewish morality, Nietzsche
claimed, is the morality of slaves, the "morality of the weak." In other words, it centers around the
obligation of compassion towards the weak, towards those in need of
protection. The nature of Jewish
morality is such, he argued, because of its source in a weak and persecuted
culture, whose moral teachings express its own need for protection and
compassion.
According
to Nietzsche's analysis, the spread of Jewish morality throughout Europe was
simply the result of European weakness and lack of confidence in its own
classical values. At the center of
his new moral approach, he placed the desire for power the strongest human
existential drive. Nietzsche called
for the realization of this drive; he proposed that all human ability and talent
should be directed towards the creation of a type of man who would give
expression of his independence and strength. In his view, the Jewish morality of
kindness and compassion represented suppression based on self-interest - of
power and strength, blocking the full realization of human
potential.
Nietzsche
placed a question mark over both faith and morality. Jewish monotheism gives absolute
validity to morality the morality of God. Nietzsche's message was that Jewish
morality is not truth, but rather weakness. A weak nation seeks values that protect
the weak.
Hitler
was familiar with Nietzsche's teachings and took his ideas to their extreme
limits. The Third Reich was build
upon the philosophy of power and strength that justified everything. Hitler's justice and righteousness
flowed from the might of his regime and his army.
Was
Nietzsche correct in asserting that a morality of kindness and compassion can
exist only amongst a weak society, a weak nation? And beyond Nietzsche, is the
nation of Israel righteous, pious, merciful, and kind only because it is weak
and lacking in military might?
History
presented two diametrically opposed options: the Jewish nation had proven that
it was possible to be weak and righteous; the German nation had proven that
strength and might not only as natural qualities, but as values, as national
ideals forge a natural alliance with evil. History has already proven that it is
possible to be weak and righteous or strong and evil. However, does the historical playing
field also allow for the third option a nation that is strong and righteous?
Can there be existence based on might and mercy simultaneously? Can such a
nation survive and make a place for itself in history?
D.
Righteousness and Kindness vs. Quarrel and
Deceit
The
midrash places in confrontation two groups of angels, each representing
lofty ideals and speaking in their name.
Two ideals righteousness and kindness demand the creation of man; two
other ideals peace and truth reject it. The angels of righteousness and kindness
manage to look at the world and see mankind engaged in righteousness and
kindness, while the angels of peace and truth fail to detect such aspirations
among humans; they see only quarrels and deceit. Is all of mankind indeed engaged in
righteousness and kindness? On the other hand, among all the people in the
world, are there not some who do pursue peace and seek truth? Why are these two
pairs of values in the midrash arranged in this
way?
I
believe that a look at the midrash through the lens of the Holocaust
offers a new dimension of understanding.
The angels of righteousness and kindness are viewing the Jewish nation:
"For I know him, that he will command his children and his household after him,
and they will observe the way of God, performing righteousness and justice"
(Bereishit 18:19). We
already know that the descendants of Avraham are able to be discerned by their
compassion and their acts of kindness.
Individuals of this sort unquestionably exist everywhere, but the human
question, ultimately, concerns an entire society or nation: can there be a
social infrastructure of righteousness and kindness? Can there be a society that
holds these as its aspirations, that legislates these as its laws, that
establishes institutions to perpetuate them? The angels that justify the
creation of man are looking at Am Yisrael, and they bring this nation as
positive proof.
The
angels that vote against the creation of man envision the antithesis of the
above scenario. That is Nazi
Germany, sanctifying war as a central expression of might and strength and
along with them deceit. In Nazi
Germany, deceit and the worship of power forged an alliance to establish a realm
of evil. The principle of might
operates in nature, as well, and determines the survival of different forms of
life. However, there the power is
not unlimited, and every creator is sustained in accordance with its needs. Even the strongest of animals is strong
only proportionately. The
justification of force as an ideal based on the principle of survival in nature,
as Hitler sought to do, is a perversion of the natural principle of might. That natural principle can be twisted to
accommodate fantasies of power, greatness and glory of the individual or of the
nation, which have nothing at all to do with the natural need for survival. The combination of humanity and
unlimited power as an ideal goes against nature and against humanity
itself. Therefore, it can only
exist on a false basis. The Nazi
ideology of deceit, the perversion of history, the system of propaganda and all
that went along with it all of these forged an alliance with the kingship of
might, whose sole justification is that very might itself.
Human
culture unquestionably includes additional alternatives, to be found at every
point on the continuum that stretches between the kingdom of righteousness and
kindness, that of the descendants of Avraham, and the kingdom of war and deceit
of Nazi Germany. However, the real
conflict is as always between the two most diametrically opposed
possibilities.
It
is also clear why Nazi Germany viewed the Jewish nation as an absolute threat to
its sovereignty. Nazi Germany had
no fear on either the ideological or the practical level of strong nations,
since it was certain of its ability to prove even stronger. The true threat that it faced was
embodied instead by the weakest of the nations weak because it could not even
theoretically present any sort of opposition, and because for that nation, power
was not any sort of ideal or desirable aspiration. The Jewish nation did not confront the
might of the German offensive with any sort of counter-force; rather, it
confronted it with the opposite ideal, the ideal opposing aggression, the ideal
of righteousness and kindness and the claim that force is not an ideal at all,
and therefore can never provide justification.
E.
The World to Come
Shmuel
said: There is no difference between this world and the Days of the
Messiah
except for subjugation to the nations. (Berakhot
34b)
What
Shmuel means here is not simply that the decree of Jewish subjugation to the
other nations will be nullified at the time of the Messiah, but, more broadly,
that the principle of force will cease to operate in history. When will the "world to come" arrive?
Apparently when the experiment of this world ends. This world is a corridor because it is
not the true world, the one that is truly desired; rather, it is a laboratory in
which to investigate the question of whether it is worth creating a world that
is run by humans. The question of
whether the world is worthy of being created the same question that was
debated among the angels has not yet been decided. The Holy One, blessed be He, is patient
and long-suffering, and the Heavenly Court is still waiting for the
counter-evidence, evidence that there can be a society whose founding and
guiding principles are righteousness and kindness.
The
test will be complete when Am Yisrael also possesses the ability to wage
war, when the nation is strong and powerful. Will this nation, then, also become
quarrelsome? Will its might cause it to neglect its values? Or, perhaps, will it
decide heaven forefend that it must return to its former state of weakness
in order to be the most righteous of nations?
The
State of Israel arose after the fall of the Third Reich because it must provide
moral justification for the existence of the world and for the existence of
humanity in view of the ultimate negation.
The world knows this even if the idea is not expressed in the same
language and therefore it is obsessively interested in the sins of the State
of Israel.
There
is much room for forgiveness for the failure of the State of Israel and,
sometimes, Israeli society to establish an ideal kingdom in which power,
righteousness, and kindness operate seamlessly together. Our persecuted nation is motivated by
great fear, much doubt, and a lack of self-confidence rooted in thousands of
years of political non-existence, exile, and humiliation. Nevertheless, we must be worthy of this
test, the great test of reviving the kingdom of Israel in anticipation of the
World to Come. It is not by chance
that we were chosen by the kingdom of evil for annihilation and destruction;
rather, it is because we negated its fundamental claim. Now, left with those whom God spared, we
must pray that He grant us a spirit of wisdom and understanding, a spirit of
counsel and valor, and spirit of knowledge and the fear of God, so that we may
be worthy of our great test - worthy of the title, "A great nation, with
righteous statutes and judgments" (Devarim 4:8), and worthy of blessing
and praise: "For who is the great nation that has God close to them, like the
Lord our God whenever we call to Him" (ibid., 7).
Translated
by Kaeren Fish
|