Thursday, November 01, 2007

From Being a Jewess Liberal to a Jerusalem Divider?

The Forward reports:

Orthodox Rabbi Talks of Splitting Jerusalem, Faces Backlash

...a prominent Orthodox rabbi broke ranks with the official Orthodox line last week and called for an open discussion of the division of Jerusalem...Yosef Kanefsky, senior rabbi of B’nai David-Judea Congregation, a Modern Orthodox synagogue in Los Angeles’s Pico-Robertson neighborhood...an opinion piece he wrote for the October 26 edition of the Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles...Headlined “An Orthodox Rabbi’s Plea: Consider a Divided Jerusalem,” the piece called on Jewish leaders to approach the Israeli-Palestinian peace conference scheduled to take place in Annapolis, Md., with an open mind, especially on the question of Jerusalem...

...The discussion he sparked was so robust, in fact, that it made it into the pages of the Los Angeles Times, which ran a story on Kanefsky’s opinion piece on the front page of its October 28 “California” section(*)...The 44-year-old Kanefsky, a former associate rabbi at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale — a New York congregation led by Orthodox maverick Avi Weiss..Kanefsky said he learned to speak out from Weiss, who is known for advocating liberal positions that often put him at odds with the Orthodox establishment. For example, both Weiss and Kanefsky allow women to read from the Torah in their own prayer groups.

Daniel Korobkin, a West Coast representative for the Orthodox Union and a personal friend of Kanefsky’s, noted that..What is different about Kanefsky, Korobkin said, is his take on geopolitics. “His political positions are not necessarily aligned with liberal Orthodoxy or with his teacher, Rabbi Avi Weiss,” Korobkin said. “Rabbi Kanefsky not only takes a liberal religious worldview, but he does the same thing with his politics.”


I'm sure that consideration for the religious expressions of Jewesses doesn't necessarily affect a Rabbi's intellectual failure regarding the future of Jerusalem but I think maybe some time spent in a "mechitzahed" environment might help the Rabbi regain his senses.



Here's an outtake from the LA Times story:-

(*)
In a thoughtful, often anguished opinion piece in Friday's Jewish Journal, Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky, senior rabbi at Congregation B'nai David-Judea in West Los Angeles, wrote that neither Israel nor the Palestinians had been honest in telling the story of their conflict since the 1967 Mideast War. And without such honesty, he said, no meaningful peace talks could occur.

Now, the rabbi wrote, as Israel approaches a possible peace conference with the Palestinians this fall, the Israeli government must be free to discuss the status of Jerusalem, despite the strong opposition of many Orthodox Jewish groups and others.

"It's not that I would want to see Jerusalem divided," Kanefsky wrote in the article for the weekly Los Angeles newspaper that chronicles Jewish life and issues. "It's rather that the time has come for honesty."


Well, that's so much hogwash, you should excuse the non-kosher reference.

And in writing the following, it is obvious that Kanefsky has just finished reading Gershom Gorenberg's book:-

On our side, this means being honest about the story of how Israel came to settle civilians in the territories it conquered in 1967, and about the outcomes that this story has generated. An honest reading of this story reveals that there were voices in the inner circle of the Israeli government in 1967-1968 who warned that settling civilians in conquered territories was probably illegal under international law.


But it isn't nor wasn't. And the Rabbi, who, I presume has a grounding in Halacha and Talmud, Rambam and Radbaz, should know a few things about Israel, Eretz-Yisrael, the "reconstitution of the Jewish National homeland", the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine text and a few other things if this is what bothers him.

Maybe it's just the Los Angeles ambience?

And this excerpt illustrates that the Rabbi is, to be generous, slightly delusional and irrational:

The possibility that the Kotel, the Jewish Quarter or the Temple Mount would return to their former states of Arab sovereignty is unfathomable to me, and I suspect to nearly everyone inside the Israeli government. At the same time though, to insist that the government not talk about Jerusalem at all (including the possibility, for example, of Palestinian sovereignty over Arab neighborhoods) is to insist that Israel come to the negotiating table telling a dishonest story -- a story in which our side has made no mistakes and no miscalculations, a story in which there is no moral ambiguity in the way we have chosen to rule the people we conquered, a story in which we don't owe anything to anyone.


This bit doesn't make sense. What has a story or narrative and its truth have to do with the Muslim Waqf destruction of Jewish antiquities, with the Israel governments' decisions to discriminate against Jews and prohibit prayer on the Temple Mount and with many other issues discussed here at this blog for the past 3.5 years?

For one thing, as he says that his op-ed was preceded by a sermon, I am sure it didn't carry the title "Sermon on the Mount".

Here's the letter I sent to the Jewish Journal:-

A careful reading of Rabbi Kanefsky's opinions reveals an unsettled mind. While not calling directly for a redivided Jerusalem, he does everything to make that possible by suggesting that Israel's "story" of the past 40 years is dishonest and therefore, it and we Jews and Israelis are at fault, somehow.

His article was preceded by a sermon at his congregation, one, I am sure, that was not entitled "Sermon on the Mount". For if he had discussed but one issue, the state of the Temple Mount in Muslim hands, which is what a redivided Jerusalem implies, he would realize that he is telling a fairy tale. What story could we Jews tell in a decade after the Temple Mount would be surrendered? Would there be any archeological artifacts left? Could Jews pray below at the Kotel in security? Would there be any graves to be found on the Mount of Olives?

Rabbi Kanefsky may be the spiritual leader of an Orthodox synagogue but I think his loyalty is to the League of Trembling Israelites, an intra-denominational Jewish sector that seeks the high moral ground while retreating from what it means to be Jewish.

4 comments:

Daniel said...

"a prominent Orthodox rabbi "

I never heard of him.

YMedad said...

Well, now a lot of people have.

Anonymous said...

Divide Jerusalem to create a terrorist state?

Rabbi Kanefsky reflects a schizoid personality that the so-called ‘progressive’ Jews of LA suffer of, regretfully. In effect, they feed the anti-Semites and those who wish to wipe Israel off the map and at the same time encourage those intractable enemies of the West who seek world dominion such as fanatical Islam today, which include most of the Arab/Palestinians society.

Rabbi Kanefsky is removed from reality, facts and history.

Dan said...

AN OPEN LETTER TO RABBI KANEFSKY, A MUST READ. EDUCATIONAL.

Dear Rabbi Kanefsky,

Your efforts at upholding the truth are quite commendable. As you rightly said in your last paragraph, “There will be peace the day after there will be truth.” Unfortunately, truth has been ignored by politicians since the “peace process” started in 1993, which explains the existential anguish that Jews and Israelis are going through. I hope Israeli leaders will heed your call for disclosing the full truth so that they can embark upon a new era of lasting peace.

Of course, the pursuit of truth requires knowledge first. What are we to call “truth” if we have no clue of reality? Also, reality should be known in its entirety and this knowledge should not be truncated, as the Palestinians do, a point you aptly emphasize in your article. It is only when all the facts are brought to light that the full story can be told honestly. I have no doubt that honesty is paramount to you, as you mentioned this term – and any variations thereof – no less than 21 times in your piece.

I am prepared to grant you the mantle of honesty but only partially, very partially. Knowingly or not, you jumped on the honesty wagon before ascertaining the truth of what you wrote. And what you omitted from your exposé is so glaring that you are misinforming your readers in a grand scale. Like the Palestinians who regularly present their narrative in their distorted fashion, you too have grossly truncated the truth by limiting your view of reality to the post 1967 period. Had your vision not been so narrowly limited, you would have discovered that the international community recognized the historical connection of the Jewish people to the whole of Palestine, including Jerusalem, back in 1920; that Jewish settlement of the whole land, including Judea and Samaria, was not only allowed but highly encouraged; that these territories were not to be ceded to any foreign power; and that all those provisions received the imprimatur of international law.

Instead, you write that Israel is illegally occupying these territories; that the settlement of these lands should not have taken place; that this situation violates international law; and that those who challenge these views “refuse to read history honestly.” The most eminent legal experts in international law – Stephen Schwebel, Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, Eugene Rostow, Julius Stone and many others – would strongly disagree with each and every one of your assertions. On your side, though, you may find some allies in characters like Jimmy Carter; Arab academics of dubious credibility; the Neturei Karta sect; the leaders of Hamas, Fatah and Hezbollah, as well as a host of their Jewish sycophants who have been thoroughly brainwashed by the very kind of article you just wrote. I leave it to you to choose the most credible camp.

Allow me, Rabbi Kanefsky, to conclude with a saying from the Talmud: “If you add to the truth, you subtract from it.” What you did in your article is far worse: you started by subtracting from the truth. This can only be attributed to ignorance, sloppiness or, dare I say, malice. Whatever the case may be, your 21 instances of the word “honest” ring hollow. I don’t know what drove you to jettison the collective rights of the Jewish people and to disparage Jewry in the process. But I suggest that you and your supporters get better informed and, most importantly, get finally over your guilty Jewish hang-ups.

Best regards,

S.B. Toronto, Canada

P.S.: You claim that those who oppose your views “have never offered any alternative solution.” Nothing could be farther from the truth. Consider just a few of the alternatives:

- Dr. Martin Sherman: “The Humanitarian Solution”,

- MK Benny Elon: “The Israeli Initiative”