As the seventh and penultimate day of Chanukah arrives, the candles
are once again lit, wispy cotton wicks floating in pools of golden
oil, touched by a burst of white flame. In Israel the spreading
fire that killed 42 people and consumed 4 million has finally
abated. And the freeze that Obama attempted to impose on hundreds
of thousands of Israelis also melted in the light. And after a
severe drought, rain has begun to fall upon the land. But the worst
is not over. Not by far.divimg classalignright styleborder 0pt none
srchttp2.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METP8Pm7aseIAAAAAAAAEMgxBG47vK3Z7Is320ISRAELFIRE560x415.jpg
border0 alt width320 height237 divMuch like the Jewish commonwealth
of the second temple era, the present day State of Israel suffers
from two interlinked crises, a crisis of sovereignty and a crisis
of unity. Both these crises manifest themselves in problem after
problem and if they are not resolved, they will bring down Dayans
third temple, as they brought down the second temple.A united
nation determined to protect its independence can only be broken
through terrible force. But that description cannot be applied to
Israel today. Like the Maccabee kings, its prime ministers have
learned to come when Rome calls. And they have also come to believe
that if they do not do what they are told, then Rome will remove
them or take away their sovereignty as a nation. Its politicians
and power brokers care more about their own ends, than the survival
of the State of Israel. Which is why they are more willing to
listen to Washington or Moscow, than to their own citizens. Or to
plan for their countrys future, rather than for their own.The news
is not nearly as bad on the street level where despite housing
numerous quarreling communities, from the religious to the secular,
and the imported cultures of a hundred countries from the East to
the West, most Israelis agree on the survival of the State of
Israel and the need to fight terror. But the countrys political
system makes it virtually impossible to implement them or to
maintain a stable government. And like Western cultural elites, the
Israeli cultural elite is a selfdestructive leftist mess that is
doing everything possible to destroy its own country.Netanyahu is
one of the best and worst Israeli Prime Ministers, because he
combines economic reforms with a spineless foreign policy. And that
he is to be preferred, because the only alternative is a Kadima
drone or a Labor leftist who would give away everything without
having to be asked twice, shows just how bad the crisis of
sovereignty is.Meanwhile on the left Barak and Livni are showing
off Israels crisis of unity by strongly hinting to Washington D.C.
that if Netanyahus government were to fall, then they would be much
more reasonable about the countrys sovereignty and its borders. And
the Beltway establishment has responded by trying to pressure
Netanyahu into tossing out two immigrant parties, one of Middle
Eastern Jews and one of Russian Jews, and replace them with Livnis
Kadima party. A party that is left wing not because it believes in
anything, but because thats what Obama wants.The Israeli right has
failed to produce leaders. Begin is a wellloved failure who began
the process of turning over Israeli territory in exchange for
pieces of paper and presided over the disastrous Lebanon War.
Shamir proved too weak to do anything but hold the course. And
Netanyahu turned out to be even weaker. The illusion of Labor
leadership died after the Yom Kippur War. And the Likud is
overstaffed with princes like Olmert, Netanyahu and Livni who are
where they are because of the role their parents played in the
party. Meanwhile the Knesset is padded out with ethnic and
religious parties who only exist to take a set amount of money out
of the budget and pass it on to their supporters, while nurturing
their grievances against the country and all the other ethnic and
religious parties competing for those same Shekels.Begins worst
failure was his refusal to attack the culture of government
bureaucracy that his Labor predecessors had installed as a reward
for their own party members. That bureaucracy has since become a
Praetorian Guard, investigating and removing Prime Ministers and
Presidents on corruption charges when the right strings are pulled.
The false rape charges against President Katzav, manufactured in
order to allow Peres to replace him, showed that the Guard was
willing to drag Israels reputation through the mud just to reward
one of their own failed exPMs with a ceremonial position at the
top.And Netanyahu is well aware that his own time may come, when
the constant investigations that serve as warning shots will
suddenly bear fruit. Then the headlines will suddenly be full of
stories more damaging than revelations about a bed installed in his
plane, and parliamentarians who live the high life because they
were given a number on a party list while children in the working
class towns of Israel go hungry, will put on the mantles of justice
and the press will call for his head.divimg classalignleft
styleborder 0pt none
srchttp2.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METP8PrJ8vOkIAAAAAAAAEMkbNQmFtv7QeYs320MideastIsraelFireLeas640x407.jpg
border0 alt width320 height203 divThat is not what the government
of a sovereign nation looks like or acts like. And its not how a
nation united behaves. These two crises are interconnected. The
erosion of Israels sovereignty also erodes its unity, a unity that
depends on the perception of Israel as a country with a future.
Only such a unity can give leaders the sense that they need to
commit to a country, rather than to their own positions. If you
dont have an independent country, then youre less likely to act
like a leader, and more like an appointee serving at the beck and
call of a powerful patron. And ever since Shamir, that is exactly
how Israels PMs have acted. And that attitude has filtered on down.
There are a great many Israeli politicians who are loyal to
Brussels or Washington or Moscow, many more who owe them to the Tel
Aviv Stock Exchange, various Rabbis or the Histadrut, but a
decreasing number who owe their allegiance to Israel.A similar
situation led to the fall of the Maccabee dynasty, a civil war and
eventually a fullfledged Roman takeover. The miracle of Chanukah
eventually drowned in power plays between warring factions. The
light that burned for eight days could not withstand the
unwillingness of powerful men to stand by a Jewish state, rather
than sell out to foreign tyrants.Israel was rebuilt based on a
consensus of mingled history, idealism and survival. That consensus
maintained a fragile unity, in the face of conflicts and
contradictions but as the years have worn on, that consensus has
begun to fall apart. The country has come a long way from the
Kibbutz and the agricultural ideal is now mostly vested in
Religious Zionists, not the old Socialists who long for the bright
lights of Paris, not the privatized communal farms of today. And
they are the only people who are still invested in the land. The
left has moved on. The right has faded away into memorials and
commemorations, which their sons and daughters cynically attend
before going back to selling off the country to the highest
bidder.The old socialists have had their vision of Israel broken
apart before their eyes, and theyve turned on the country as a
whole. They are willing to give away the land, because they have no
use for it anymore. An Israel that is based on free enterprise and
is not run by their comrades is not a country they want to be part
of. They know that they cant turn the clock back, and so theyve
turned on Israel instead. It has failed to live out their 19th
century vision of agrarian socialism and so they want to turn it
over to a politically correct minority, that is also the regional
majority.The right has also lost its vision for the land. The
dwindling Israel at the mercy of great powers is not what they
envisioned, but it happened on their watch. And they have no way to
reverse the process. To turn Israel back into a confident and
strong nation. Unlike the left, they have failed to pass on their
legacy to a new generation. While the left has radicalized, the
right has become more moderate. Its horizons have shrunk. It can
talk about Trumpledor or Avraham Stern, but not about the future.
Because it no longer sees the future.The only people who still have
a vision for Israels future that doesnt depend on its dissolution,
are Religious Zionists who have not lost hope, because they still
have faith in a divine plan. They have worse setbacks than the left
or the right, but those have still not broken them, because their
vision is religious, rather than idealistic, and much less
dependent on the realization of a linear program. But even they can
be broken. And the political authorities are doing everything to
break them. Because if their vision for the land has fallen apart,
no one else may fulfill theirs.A situation in which hope has
vanished from Jerusalem and resides among the hillsides, all too
closely echoes the events of the original Chanukah. And not for the
first time in the history of the land either. Chanukah temporarily
bought time, but did not stop the clock. The same fault lines that
led to the events of Chanukah brought down the country not long
after.divimg classalignright styleborder 0pt none
srchttp1.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METP8PzQVar5IAAAAAAAAEMoCQTeuCoRlnss320hanukkahgeltmsndivinechocolate.jpg
border0 alt width320 height257 divIn that era, Israels lack of
sovereignty was often caused by its lack of unity. The fall of the
First Temple, the return from exile and the impact of the Greeks
upon the region raised questions as to what Israel was. Was it a
nationalist monarchy, a convenient port for the Mediterranean trade
or just a place where the Torah was studied. The inability to
answer that question in a way that the majority could get behind
destroyed the country. And variations of those same questions are
being asked today again. To reclaim its sovereignty, they must
urgently be answered.The signing of Israels Declaration of
Independence left many of those fundamental questions unanswered.
And that is only natural. Countries develop their identity and
ideals over time. But Israel is tearing itself apart, its morale is
in decline and it is undergoing dramatic changes. Its survival is
on the line, not just in the face of terror or war, but of its
internal tensions and its interaction with Europe and America. To
be sovereign, Israel must be united. Not under one political party,
but a consensus of what the country is. What it should be. Not in
every detail, but enough to command the loyalty of its people and
the commitment of its leaders.As Chanukah winds down and parents
distribute Chanukah gelt, chocolate coins wrapped in gold foil, to
the children they are commemorating the restoration of a Hebrew
currency after the defeat of the Seleucid Empire which had banned
such a Jewish nationalist symbol. These shining candies are symbols
of ancient Israeli sovereignty minted in defiance of an empire.
They remind us of one of the things that the Maccabees fought for.
Sovereignty. As the light of another Chanukahs menorah goes out,
these symbols of freedom remind us of what it is we are still
fighting for.
Date Published: