{"id":25026,"date":"2023-06-19T14:53:00","date_gmt":"2023-06-19T14:53:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/?p=25026"},"modified":"2023-06-21T20:16:24","modified_gmt":"2023-06-21T20:16:24","slug":"the-return-to-zion-an-excerpt","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/the-return-to-zion-an-excerpt\/","title":{"rendered":"The Return to Zion: An Excerpt"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1221,h_2560,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA\"><img width=\"1221\" height=\"2560\" data-public-id=\"Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-post-25026 wp-image-25030\" src=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1221,h_2560,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA\" alt=\"\" data-format=\"jpg\" data-transformations=\"f_auto,q_auto\" data-version=\"1687207744\" data-seo=\"1\" data-responsive=\"1\" srcset=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1221,h_2560,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA 1221w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1048,h_2197,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA 1048w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_848,h_1777,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA 848w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_648,h_1358,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA 648w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_448,h_939,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA 448w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_248,h_519,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1687207744\/Jewishaction\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba\/RAV7_CMYK_250305f3ba.jpg?_i=AA 248w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1221px) 100vw, 1221px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">The article that follows is excerpted from <\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">The Return to Zion: Addresses on Religious Zionism and American Orthodoxy\u2014The Karasick Family Edition,<\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\"> a new volume, published by OU Press and KTAV Publishing, consisting of addresses by Rabbi Joseph Ber Soloveitchik between the years 1939 and 1958. The addresses, originally in Yiddish and translated by Shaul Seidler-Feller, were delivered at gatherings convened by the Mizrachi Organization of America and\/or Hapoel Hamizrachi of America. The talk below, entitled \u201cJewry\u2019s Present Concerns,\u201d was delivered at a mass demonstration for a \u201cTorah-True Land of Israel,\u201d on May 21, 1946, in New York City, and organized by the Religious-National Bloc, which included Hapoel Hamizrachi, among other organizations.<\/span><\/i><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><b><span data-contrast=\"auto\">\u201cAnd a Man Wrestled with Him until the Break of Dawn\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/b><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">When we consider the present situation from a historical-ethical standpoint, we must assert that to analyze the cataclysmic pains of these last four years and ask \u201cwhy\u201d is futile and leads only to despair. We dare not imitate Job with his questions; they lead nowhere. But we also dare not\u2014and it would constitute a historical crime if we were to do so\u2014ignore our quiet, continual, daily suffering, which derives from the loneliness of the modern Jew; from the indifference of the nations of the world; from the lack of assurance that they will not say to us, one fine day, \u201cGo away from us, for you have become far too big for us\u201d (Gen.\u202f26:16); from the awareness that there is a chasm, mysterious and unfathomable, that separates the Jew from the Gentile; from the fate that we very often become the scapegoat for every tyrant and demagogue. Our paradoxical character brings us suffering.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">We dare not allow all of this to simply remain a paradoxical fate, an illogical and incomprehensible enigma; rather, it must be transformed into destiny, self-determination, and free choice. Our current book is not Job but Genesis. Abraham\u2019s motto was: a nation is born of paradoxes and suffering. Our motto must be: a nation is reborn of paradoxes and suffering. \u201cAnd a man wrestled with him until the break of dawn\u201d: following the generations-long tussle between the Keneset Yisrael and historical fate, the sun, the morning star of a new era, must rise.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">How so? Through assimilatory measures? Or, as recommended by other, extreme Orthodox parties, through complete isolation from Western culture, compressing our existence into sectarianism, sealed off and secluded from the tempo of modern times? You know quite well that both solutions are empty dreams. Jews cannot assimilate, and Gentiles will not start liking them for doing so. At the same time, we cannot enclose ourselves within a Great Wall of China and break off all of our connections with the surrounding culture. The segment of Orthodoxy preaching such a strategy is insincere: they do not raise their own children that way. And I hate hypocrisy, believing one thing and saying another.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">But if our history is one of tension between Abraham ha-Ivri and his environment, it is also one of contact with the world and its culture. Tension is a type of relationship, a kind of connection with the opposing side. Where there is isolation, there can be no tension. If positive electricity is not united with negative electricity, there is no electrical tension, and no dynamic electricity or electrical current can be produced. Only contact and unification yield the tension that results in electrical sparks and a current.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Our history, from our forefather Abraham onward, is one of constant contact with world history, connection with general culture, and collaboration as well. By the same token, however, there remains the paradoxical tension of those lonely wanderers who saw a great vision and sought to establish their splendid prophecy as the fundament of a new world. Such suffering opens new horizons, and a new morning star beckons to us from the historical distance.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">At the same time, there approaches another moment, the moment of vengeance. We Jews wish to take revenge against the German murderers of a third of our people. We have always maintained that vengeance is sometimes necessary and holy, because evil must at times be eradicated with violence. The Old Testament, with its \u201cpassionate, avenging G-d\u201d (Nahum 1:2), spilled far less blood than did the New, with its god-man of love and its ethical pacifism, which has lately become very much in vogue thanks to Romain Rolland, Tolstoy, Stefan Zweig, Franz Werfel, and the non-Christian Gandhi. If the political world would have understood the Old Testament, it would not have come to catastrophe. \u201cGreat is vengeance, for it was positioned between two letters, as it says, \u2018G-d of retribution, L-rd, G-d of retribution, appear!\u2019 (Ps. 94:1)\u201d (<\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Sanhedrin <\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">92a) \u2014vengeance appears between two Names of the Master of the Universe. As they were dying in crematoria in Poland and Germany, our martyrs demanded vengeance.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">But what is vengeance? We cannot take physical revenge, and I doubt Jews would do so against the hundreds of thousands of murderers even if they could. Our hands are clean of blood, far cleaner than those of the Catholic nuns with their eyes trained heavenward.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><b><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Sometimes, in moments of gloom, in twilights of melancholy, when Satan, wrapped in shadow, asks me, \u201cWill Jews succeed in their two gigantic undertakings, the building of the land in Palestine and the establishment of Torah everywhere, when there are so many Sanballats, destructive forces, and adversaries, both internal and external; when ignorance, dismal assimilation, and indifferent resignation consume the organism of the Jewish nation like a cancer?\u201d \u2014I get disoriented for a moment.<\/span><\/b><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Could there be a greater form of vengeance, historical vengeance, undying vengeance\u2014in a world that left us to be slaughtered and massacred and that sought to rid itself of us\u2014than our very continued existence, paradoxically-mysteriously in contact with world culture but simultaneously in opposition to the evil therein, dreaming an eternal vision of the End of Days, and vying with a mysterious, universal man\u2014 \u201cAnd a man wrestled with him until the break of dawn\u201d? In spite of all of our enemies, and even many liberals and supposed friends, who advise us to commit spiritual-national suicide and undergo good-natured, painless self-dissolution\u2014advisers who can probably be justified if we consider our suffering from the standpoint of Job, from the perspective of almighty fate, which plays with man as with a ball\u2014we must, on the contrary, grow larger and more powerful, becoming spiritual giants like Abraham after the Binding or like Jacob after his tussle with the angel! We must capture the admiration and envy of the world, and with their blessing: \u201cAnd he blessed him there\u201d (Gen.\u202f32:30).<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Moses received the rays of light not from the first Giving of the Torah but from the second. Why? The first Giving of the Torah took place in the context of an apocalyptic Theophany, without suffering, paradoxes, enigmas, resistance, opposition, and tension: \u201cThere was thunder, and lightning, and a dense cloud upon the mountain, and a very loud blast of the horn\u201d (Ex. 19:16). The mountain burned like fire, angels soared through the air. Six hundred thousand Jews went forth to accept the Torah, shouting, \u201cWe will do and we will listen!\u201d (Ex. 24:7). The whole cosmos was quiet, calm: \u201cThe world was silent and still\u201d (S<\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">hemot Rabbah,<\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\"> sec. 29:9). The entire universe bore witness to the Theophany, and Moses became the hero of mankind.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">The second Giving of the Torah, by contrast, was full of suffering, disappointment, and mourning. The nation suddenly goes mad, creating a Calf and repudiating the G-d they had seen only a short while before. They go back to being slaves, idolaters, and wild men. G-d wishes to obliterate them, and the Shekhinah departs. Moses is on his own, fighting with the nation for G-d\u2019s sake and also\u2014as if one could say this\u2014fighting with the Master of the Universe for the nation\u2019s sake. G-d says to him, \u201cCarve two tablets of stone like the first\u201d (Ex. 34:1). You want new tablets, Moses? Chisel them yourself from stone: take boulders and carve Divine tablets out of the lifeless, unfeeling, cold rock. \u201cBe ready by morning, and in the morning come up to Mount Sinai and present yourself there to Me, on the top of the mountain. No one else shall come up with you, and no one else shall be seen anywhere on the mountain\u201d (Ex. 34:2\u20133). You have no following. You stand alone, solitary, betrayed by all. Go up to the mountain on your own, without thunder and lightning, without the blast of the horn, without G-d\u2019s voice, and without six hundred thousand Jews; all of them are sleeping, steeped in nonsense and egotistical trifles. You, alone. Lonely, forsaken, broken. And you will wait for Me, not the other way around, as happened early in the morning on Shavuot.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">And how does G-d appear to Moses then? Not openly as before: \u201cAnd they saw the G-d of Israel: under His feet there was the likeness of a pavement of sapphire\u201d (Ex. 24:10). No, Heaven forbid! Rather, \u201cThe L-rd came down in a cloud; He stood with him there\u201d (Ex. 34:5) \u2014enveloped in clouds, mysteries, paradoxes, contradictions, suffering, and enigmas. Almost no Divinity is visible, no Providence perceptible; everything is shrouded in shadow and darkness. It seems to Moses that blind fate governs the world and Jewish history. Only lifeless boulders and sand stretch out before him into infinity. Mount Sinai is rocky, hard, indifferent to Moses\u2019 dreams and hopes. The Golden Calf and its attendant dancing circles dictatorially rule the world. Moses\u2019 fate is paradoxical, everything ridicules him, his task is laughable; he will never fulfill it. No Eternal Israel can emerge from the mixed multitude. Suffering, illogic, mysteriousness.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">But just in that moment, when Moses finds himself \u201cin a cleft of the rock\u201d (Ex. 33:22), in a cold, unfeeling boulder, he sees G-d in a way he had never previously seen Him in the heavens and he hears the words of the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy: \u201cThe L-rd! the L-rd! a G-d compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in kindness and faithfulness, extending kindness to the thousandth generation, forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin; and He remits\u201d (Ex. 34:6\u20137). Out of paradox, a great vision must be born; from suffering and loneliness, bountiful kindness and faithfulness come into the world. Fate is transformed into destiny, self-determination, and free choice. And Moses, crouching under the cold boulder, becomes much greater, mightier, profounder, loftier, and more illustrious than when he was in the heavens. He becomes the master of all prophets and father of all sages, and his face begins to shine.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><b><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Building the Land of Israel is a task that is paradoxical in its entirety.<\/span><\/b><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">And where, <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">morai ve-rabbotai<\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">, can we carve tablets out of cold mountain boulders, and where can we implement the vision of \u201cThe L-rd! the L-rd! a G-d compassionate and gracious\u201d in contact with, and in opposition to, the rest of the world\u2014if not in the Land of Israel? Not in Reform temples, not in Conservative synagogues, not even in Orthodox <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">battei kenesiyyot<\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\"> can any of this be implemented. Certainly all modern Jews are paradoxical, both vis-\u00e0-vis Gentiles and vis-\u00e0-vis themselves. The Gentile does not comprehend their existence as Jews, and they themselves do not understand it either. But these Jews\u2019 paradox is that of Job, a paradox of sharp, senseless, gratuitous pains that befall a man suddenly and break him. Their paradox is that of fate, of Greek tragedy, of Sophocles or Euripides\u2014not that of Genesis, of the self-determination of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, and the other prophets. They lack the mystery of Jewish existence as a form of opposition to evil in the world. The paradox of the modern Jew is that of \u201cAnd a man wrestled with him,\u201d but without the vision of \u201cuntil the break of dawn.\u201d<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Building the Land of Israel is a task that is paradoxical in its entirety. However, it is not fatally paradoxical but prophetically paradoxical, the paradox of free self-determination that is connected with suffering. Sometimes, in moments of gloom, in twilights of melancholy, when Satan, wrapped in shadow, asks me, \u201cWill Jews succeed in their two gigantic undertakings, the building of the land in Palestine and the establishment of Torah everywhere, when there are so many Sanballats, destructive forces, and adversaries, both internal and external; when ignorance, dismal assimilation, and indifferent resignation consume the organism of the Jewish nation like a cancer?\u201d \u2014I get disoriented for a moment. But then I suddenly remember the paradoxical, illogical, irrational nature of our task and the suffering with which the implementation of all of these ideals is bound up. In front of my eyes appears the scene of Abraham returning from the Binding, behind him a paradoxical, ridiculous life that is simply full of contradictions, and learning that everything had come so easily to Nahor; the scene of Moses standing alone and seeing nothing but clouds and darkness and a tefillin knot (see <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Berakhot<\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\"> 7a). In those moments, I answer Satan firmly, \u201cYes, we will succeed, because the task is paradoxical, and paradox is the eternal rule of our history . . .\u201d<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">The question of the Land of Israel reaches even deeper than we imagine. The whole future of the Torah depends on it. And I wish to stress again that I am definitely not one of the pessimists who foresee the collapse of American Jewry, and I am not asking for a million dollars in order to forestall the plague. \u201cThe Glory of Israel does not deceive or change His mind\u201d (I\u202fSam. 15:29). I believe in that. True, it is paradoxical, but because it is incomprehensible, I believe that it is impossible to predict. Both optimists and pessimists should be a bit more conservative in their prophecies.\u00a0<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">There is, however, a danger to the Diaspora if there is no Jewish center at the same time. I refer to the dimensions of Judaism:\u00a0<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">You know this well\u2014a standard Euclidian space has three dimensions: length, width, and depth. [Hermann von] Helmholtz demonstrated that certain creatures in the zoological world cannot perceive a three-dimensional space, and their entire universe consists either of lines or of planes. It is difficult for us to imagine such a perspective on the world, and yet it is that of insects. This same kind of differentiation in the perception of space can also be found in the spiritual sphere in general and in Judaism in particular. Judaism is not, in essence, a unidimensional line connecting man with G-d via a certain ritual behavior. It is also not a two-dimensional plane, with a <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">beit midrash <\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">on one side and a cemetery on the other. Judaism is an all-encompassing system of cosmic proportions in three-dimensional (length, width, and depth) space \u2014 \u201cdeep, deep down; who can discover it?\u201d (Eccl. 7:24). It embraces the whole of life, one\u2019s entire existence. All modern problems must be refracted through the Jewish prism, and the Jewish consciousness must adopt a position on them: sociological problems, political questions, cultural-historical opinions, pedagogical methodologies, concepts like state and society, the relationship between the individual and the community, social ethics and justice, and population politics must be viewed in a Jewish light and understood from a Jewish perspective. The Torah\u2019s \u201cmeasure is longer than the earth and broader than the sea\u201d (Job 11:9). But if a Torah scroll is missing entire <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">parashiyyot,<\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\"> it is invalid.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><b><span data-contrast=\"auto\">The question of the Land of Israel reaches even deeper than we imagine. The whole future of the Torah depends on it.<\/span><\/b><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Unfortunately, the way modern Judaism, even <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">frum<\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\"> Judaism, is developing in the Diaspora, it is missing this three-dimensional perspective. It is limited to lines and planes. Judaism has become fossilized in the <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">beit midrash,<\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\"> cemetery, and ceremonial forms. I am not saying that these things are unimportant, but they are very far removed from reflecting the beauty and splendor within Judaism. This is Judaism without gusto, profundity, and loftiness\u2014flat, monotone, and gray. Is it any wonder that the younger generation does not want to hear from us, and it is difficult to entice its members to come to the synagogue? The young people going out into the street, full of sociopolitical problems and doubts, philosophical questions and queries, hear nothing from our modern rabbis and non-Orthodox clergymen but a couple hackneyed phrases and banal sayings. Why is that? Judaism, instead of being a worldview, has become a cult religion, that which Judaism despises to no end.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">The difficult method of deepening and broadening the Jewish Weltanschauung consists not only of theoretical analyses and philosophical work\u2014that, too, is a difficult task\u2014but even more so of participating in such a life as compels Judaism to be reborn in its fullness and multidimensionality. \u201cThe heaven is My throne and the earth is My footstool\u201d (Isa. 66:1): one can only have a heaven, an ideology, a spiritual conception of the world, when there is terra firma beneath one\u2019s feet. When concrete, ordinary life demands it, requires depth, formulation and framing of new values, new ideals, new norms and worldviews; when life is multidimensional, colorful, diversified, and deep and, as the Roman poet Terence said, \u201cI consider nothing human alien to me\u201d \u2014then will a multidimensional, all-embracing, heaven-storming Judaism emerge: \u201cRiding through the heavens to help you, through the skies in His majesty\u201d (Deut. 33:26). By contrast, when concrete life is robbed of many aspects of human creation, like a state, political activity, jurisprudence, the whole clash between capital and labor, a comprehensive education, and so on and so forth, then spiritual life perforce becomes crippled, shrinks, withers, and fades.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">Is it any wonder, then, that Judaism has become a cult religion, a ritual, etc.? There is no need to formulate a Jewish political philosophy, labor ideology, social ethics, and so on, for, where those things are concerned, we live in a Gentile world. Here is where Ahad Ha\u2019am erred regarding the primacy of a \u201cspiritual center.\u201d A spiritual center is undoubtedly important, a spiritual renaissance is certainly needed, but there can be no spiritual center without a physical center, there can be no soul without a body. For us, the halakhah follows the House of Hillel, which contends that \u201cthe earth was created first and heaven thereafter, as it says, \u2018When the L-rd G-d made earth and heaven\u2019 (Gen.\u202f2:4)\u201d (Hagigah12a). There can be no heaven without the earth.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">In my opinion, it is here that the religious conception of the ideology of the return to Zion lies hidden. I do not refer simply to the mitzvah to settle the land or to other <\/span><i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">mitzvot <\/span><\/i><span data-contrast=\"auto\">connected with the land. Much more depends on this: the entire character of Judaism and its essence. Will Judaism remain a unidimensional line or a two-dimensional plane, or will it be transformed into an all-encompassing space\u2014long, wide, and deep, with distant horizons and unending boundaries\u2014in a word: a true worldview? I believe that, even with the best of intentions, Diaspora Jewry cannot accomplish this. Observance can exist but not a multidimensional Jewish society.<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\">This is not simply some abstract reflection but an actual necessity if we expect that out of Gehenna will emerge a new Jewish persona with a new view of life, a new system of values, who will make the great paradox of Abraham\u2019s covenantal vision, of Moses\u2019 \u201cThe L-rd! the L-rd! a G-d compassionate and gracious,\u201d a reality; who will bring us both into contact with world culture and into tension with it. Contact and participation, but also tension and opposition\u2014this is the prophetic ideal of \u201cAnd a man wrestled with him until the break of dawn,\u201d and this can only be fulfilled in the Land of Israel.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><span data-ccp-props=\"{}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3><strong>More in this section:<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/the-medinah-through-a-torah-lens\/\"><strong><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\">Medinat Yisrael: Through a Torah Lens<\/span><\/strong>\u2014<em>Rabbi Joseph Ber Soloveitchik; Rabbi Dr. Yitzchak Isaac Halevi Herzog; Rabbi Shlomo Yosef Zevin; Rabbi Tzvi Pesach Frank; Rabbi Yehuda Amital; Rabbi Yaakov Friedman; Rabbi Dr. Aharon Lichtenstein<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/the-birth-of-the-jewish-state-rabbinic-views-and-perspectives\/\"><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><strong>The Birth of the Jewish State: Rabbinic Views and Perspectives\u00a0<\/strong><\/span><em>compiled and translated by Rabbi Eliyahu Krakowski<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/voices-of-faith-memories-of-1948\/\"><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><strong>Voices of Faith: Memories of 1948<\/strong><\/span>\u00a0<em>by Rabbanit Miriam Hauer, Rabbanit Puah Shteiner and Rabbi Berel Wein; interviews by Toby Klein Greenwald<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/cover-story\/a-bridge-of-paper\/\"><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><strong>A Bridge of Paper<\/strong><\/span> <em>by Charlotte Friedland<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The question of the Land of Israel reaches even deeper than we imagine. The whole future of the Torah depends on it.\u00a0<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":25031,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ep_exclude_from_search":false,"_cloudinary_featured_overwrite":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[28,199,62,75,121,119],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-25026","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-books","category-cover-story","category-israel","category-jewish-thought","category-the-rav","category-yom-haatzmaut","issues-summer-2023-5783"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Return to Zion: An Excerpt - Jewish Action<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"The question of the Land of Israel reaches even deeper than we imagine. 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