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God’s Chosen Peoples
By Dr. Robert D. Crane
The popular Norwegian writer,
Jostein Gaader, in his article
of August 5th in the
Aftenposten,
“God’s Chosen People"
asserts that Israel is history,
meaning that it has no future.
Such a statement can be accepted
by a Muslim as true only if one
first defines what one means by
“Israel.”
Obviously no Muslim could ever
accept the current Israeli
regime as worthy of moral
recognition, nor do any Muslims
see how any Jew could do so
either. President Ahmadinejad
of Iran called for the
elimination of Israel, but he
carefully did not call for
eliminating the Jews in Israel.
He called for regime change in
both Israel and the United
States. Zionist demagogues
perverted both his words and
their meaning to suit their own
agenda, which provided further
grounds for any objective person
to reject the moral legitimacy
of the current government of
Israel. One could go further,
which Ahmadinejad did not, and
say that both the government and
the State of Israel are
hopelessly illegitimate. The
overwhelming majority of the six
billion people in the world
would agree.
Now we come to the not so
obvious. Recognition of a state
in international law does not in
any way imply approval either of
the government or of the
sovereign state itself. The
reason is that in Western
international law any power that
controls more than 50% of a
given territory can legitimately
claim sovereignty over it. This
may be a stupid principle, but
this is the law taught in every
one of the world’s law schools.
The trend in jurisprudence is
toward the development of
customary international law to
modify this principle, but this
process has yet a way to go.
The conclusion could be
supported that the Palestinian
government, which Israel does
not recognize, could quite
legitimately recognize the State
of Israel without compromising
its unalterable opposition to
the continuation of Israeli
oppression.
Why would Hamas advocate such a
revolutionary approach? The
answer is simply that this would
be compatible with the initial
foreign policy framework
advanced in Prime Minister
Isma’il Haniya’s first foreign
policy statement. He called
this framework hudna. This was
presented and its potential
implications developed in
several articles of commentary
in
http://www.theamericanmuslim.org
The purpose of hudna very simply
is to turn enemies into friends
This is recommended in the
divine revelation of the Qur’an
as the basis for both conflict
management and conflict
resolution. The greater the
animosity, the greater the need
for hudna. This is why now is
the time to recognize Israel.
This act of shock and awe could
lead Jews and Muslims over a
period of time, years and
decades, to transform their very
identity, so that they can
recognize themselves as two
peoples who over the centuries
have been each other’s most
reliable friend.
As far as the Jews being a
chosen people is concerned, of
course they have been chosen.
They have been chosen for
thousands of years to be models
of loving submission to God,
just as every other people has
been chosen simply because every
person has been so chosen.
Historically, neither the
Christians nor the Muslims can
claim superiority in fulfilling
their divine missions.
The orthodox Muslims now have a
great opportunity to lead the
way, and they would be joined by
many of the leading Orthodox
Jews. A cooperative movement of
such understanding and action to
undo the grievous mistakes of
the past is waiting to be born,
but the morally superior side
must make the first move.
One may legitimately ask which
is the morally superior side.
This would depend on which
representatives of each side one
has in mind. The Qur’an urges
everyone to compete in doing
good “as in a race.”
Muslim extremists increasingly
appear to have picked up the
arrogant Christian concept that
the covenant with the Jewish
nation has passed to
themselves. This would imply
that no other nation and no
other religious group has a
covenant with God? If one
denies that Judaism as a
religion is a legitimate and
continuing path to God one is
denying that Jews as members of
a religion, regardless of their
race, have a continued
responsibility before God to
practice universal justice.
Such religious prejudice would
be worse than racial prejudice
as an expression of the
primordial arrogance committed
by Al Shaitan.
Even the term Zionist can be unnecessarily
derogatory. Muslims can be
spiritual Zionists precisely
because they are Muslims. A
spiritual Zionist calls for the
return to God, not for the
return to any physical place
regardless of the
circumstances. Who are we to
say that God did not provide the
Holy Land as a home for the
Jews, and for the Christians,
and for Muslims? Only when the
followers of any religion become
exclusivist and deny the dignity
and legitimacy of other paths
are they either ignorant or
evil. Christian Zionists in the
sense of Christians who want to
bring about an exclusivist
empire by exploiting either
secular or millenarian Jews as a
temporary tactic are hypocrites
and besmirch the good sense of
Zionism that lies at the
spiritual, not the political,
level.
The greatest spiritual leader of the
twentieth century, Rebbe Abraham
Izaac Kook, spelled out this
whole concept of spiritual
Zionism better than anyone else
ever has. As the Chief Rabbi of
Palestinian from 1919 to 1935,
he condemned in the harshest
words the diabolical trend
toward politicizing Jewish
Zionism. By indirection, of
course, he was condemning also
Muslims who distort the
spiritual nature of Islam as a
guide to transcendent justice
and to its expression in
individual and community respect
for human responsibilities and
rights.
Superficial Jew-baiters, like their
counterparts among
Muslim-baiters, confuse the
polar opposites, the Zionism of
Rebbe Kook and the opposite
force that has erupted in the
person of his own son and his
Gush Emunim settler movement.
The distinction was explained in
the words of Rebbe Kook
published in November, 2003, in
my article “From Clashing
Civilizations to a Common
Vision,”
http://www.theamericanmuslim.org,
which was based on an article
that I wrote but never published
more than twenty years ago.
The past century of spiritual perversion by
the exclusivist ideology of
secular and apocalyptic Zionism
is appalling. It has become a
parody of everything that is
truly Jewish. No other
religious people have ever
perverted their own religion as
have the Jews, and the current
madness is not the first time
they have done so.
The traditionalist Jewish mission is best
expressed by Rabbi Michael
Lerner in the title of his
magazine, Tikkun, which in
Hebrew means to heal, repair,
and transform the world. He
says that all the rest is
commentary. His mission is
fourfold: to help overcome
American selfishness and
materialism; to help heal the
inner wounds of the Jewish
people, so that they no longer
assume that danger lurks
everywhere and no longer see the
world only through the prism of
the Holocaust; to help support
peace between Israel and the
Palestinian people in a context
of security, social justice, and
the full rights of both peoples
to self-determination; and to
help build a new bottom line of
love and caring, ethical,
spiritual, and ecological
sensitivity, and awe and wonder
at the grandeur of the universe.
The only alternative to dark visions of a
twenty-first century holocaust
is dialogue between Jews and
Muslims designed specifically to
transform the self-identity of
each, as suggested in Dr. Laura
Drake’s article, “Reconstructing
Identities: The Arab-Israeli
Conflict in Theoretical
Perspective,” in the scholarly
publication of which I was the
Managing Editor at the time, the
Middle East Affairs Journal,
Winter/Spring 1998, pp. 39-92.
The goal of the Jews must be to
return to the spiritual core of
their religion, best exemplified
by Rebbe Abraham Isaac Kook, in
which Zionism is the return to
God, and Israel is the song of
God bringing sparks of wisdom,
mercy, and love to all peoples.
The political expression of this mission is
perhaps best found in the
concept of the Abraham
Federation. This has been
articulated now for decades by
the global justice movement
advocated by the Center for
Economic and Social Justice,
which was founded and headed by
the Jewish elder statesman,
Norman Kurland, at
http://www.cesj.org/homestead/strategies/regional-global/abrahamfederation-nk.html.
The goal of both Muslims and Christians must
be to return to the spiritual
core of their religions. The
spiritual core of Islam includes
the centrality of justice and
the articulation and
implementation of its inner
essence of love, which demands
respect for all Jews and for the
Jewish nation, so that all the
peoples of the Holy Land can
enjoy justice.
American Muslims must struggle to support the
enlightened Jews who understand
their own religion, because
Zionism has corrupted both the
Jewish people and the political
process in America. It has
thereby imposed a heavy guilt on
Americans for bringing the
Jewish people in the Holy Land
perhaps eventually to the brink
of extinction and exposing tens
of millions of Muslims and
Christians in the Middle East
and America to a fiery death.
In order to understand the true dynamics of
conflict in the world, we must
be aware that the suffering in
the Holy Land is the result of a
conflict between two
civilizational paradigms, one
the spiritual, which
automatically serves as a bridge
among cultures, and the other,
the secular, which sees material
power as the only variable in
the world and automatically
breeds war.
This conflict has been the governing theme
throughout the
five-thousand-year history of
Palestine. In the first half of
a masterly work of 700 pages by
Roger Garaudy, which I spent
three months editing from the
French into English in 1994 but
could never publish, he explores
five millennia of Palestinian
history and demonstrates that
the historical role of the many
peoples that enriched the
population of Palestine was to
serve as a catalyst for
religious and cultural
enrichment. Their location at
the intersection of three of the
world’s five continents, and
their Semitic languages, which
are best suited of all languages
to express the subtleties of
divine revelation, may explain
why the common message of the
revealed religions was given
through prophets in this pivotal
part of the world.
Unfortunately, however, the millennia-long
history of Palestine reveals
that for relatively short and
limited periods, Palestine
served not as a civilizational
conduit but as a block against
civilizational interchange and
as a source of rivalry and
warfare between hostile
empires. The destiny of
Palestine has been to accelerate
both cooperation and clash among
civilizations. Today it serves
both roles simultaneously, and
its future will determine the
future of humanity.
The great spiritual leaders of the world have
long perceived that justice in
the Holy Land, and especially in
the ecumenical capital of the
world, Jerusalem, is the pivotal
issue for all of humankind.
Their warnings speak universally
to all religious communities in
all times and places, though
their words might be directed in
the first instance at their own
peoples.
Perhaps the greatest such leader was Abraham
Isaac Kook, who led the Jewish
community in Palestine for
twenty years until his death at
the beginning of the first great
Palestinian national-liberation
movement in 1935. He taught
that every religion contains the
seed of its own perversion,
because humans are free to
divert their worship from God to
themselves. The greatest evil
is always the perversion of the
good, and the surest salvation
from evil is always the return
to prophetic origins. Rebbe
Kook’s wisdom has been collected
in Abraham Isaac Kook, The
Lights of Penitence, The Moral
Principles, Lights of Holiness,
Essays, Letters, and Poems,
translation and introduction by
Ben Zion Bokser (Paulist Press:
N.Y., Ramsey, Toronto, 1978),
published in The Classics of
Western Spirituality: A Library
of the Great Spiritual Masters
under the supervision of Seyyed
Hossein Nasr, Fazlur Rahman,
Huston Smith, and others.
Although the fundamentalist Gush Emunim
invoke Rebbe Kook as their
mentor, they make the
sacrilegious error of turning
his spiritual teaching into a
call for secular nationalism of
the most extreme kind. Abraham
Isaac Kook’s entire life spoke
his message that only in the
Holy Land of Israel can the
genius of Hebraic prophecy be
revived and the Jewish people
bring the creative power of
God’s love in the form of
justice and unity to every
person and to all mankind. “For
the disposition of the Israelite
nation,” he asserted, “is the
aspiration that the highest
measure of justice, the justice
of God, shall prevail in the
world.” Universally recognized
as the leading spokesman of
spiritual Zionism, Rebbe Kook
went to Jaffa from Poland in
1904 to perfect the people and
land of Israel by bringing out
the “holy sparks” in every
person, group, and ideology in
order to make way for the advent
of the Messiah.
This was the exact opposite of “secular
Zionism,” which resulted from
the assimilationist movement of
19th century Europe, compounded
by the devastating blow of the
holocaust to traditionalist
Jewish faith. Thus alienated
from their own culture, and
vulnerable to modern nationalist
demagoguery, a growing portion
of the Jewish nation came to
elevate control over physical
land to an ultimate value and
goal, and therefore to transform
the land of Israel into a golden
calf.
As a Lurianic Cabbalist, committed to the
social renewal that both
confirms and transcends halakha
or Jewish law, Rebbe Kook
emphasized, first of all, that
religious experience is certain
knowledge of God, from which all
other knowledge can be at best
merely a reflection, and that
this common experience of “total
being” or “unity” of all
religious people is the only
adequate medium for God’s
message through the Jewish
people, who are the “microcosm
of humanity.”
“If individuals cannot summon the world to
God,” proclaimed Rebbe Kook,
“then a people must issue the
call. The people must call out
of its inner being, as an
individual of great spiritual
stature issues the call from his
inner being. This is found only
among the Jewish people, whose
commitment to the Oneness of God
is a commitment to the vision of
universality in all its
far-reaching implications and
whose vocation is to help make
the world more receptive to the
divine light by bearing witness
to the Torah in the world.”
This, he taught, is the whole
purpose of Israel, which stands
for shir el, the “song of God.”
It is schlomo, which means peace
or wholeness, Solomon’s Song of
Songs.
But, he warned, again “prophetically,” that,
“when an idea needs to acquire a
physical base, it tends to
descend from its height. In
such an instance it is thrust
toward the earthly, and brazen
ones come and desecrate its
holiness. Together with this,
however, its followers increase,
and the physical vitality
becomes strikingly visible.
Each person then suffers: The
stubbornness of seeking
spiritual satisfaction in the
outer aspect of things enfeebles
one’s powers, fragments the
human spirit, and leads the
stormy quest in a direction
where it will find emptiness and
disappointment. In
disillusionment, the quest will
continue in another direction.
When degeneration leads one to
embrace an outlook on life that
negates one’s higher vision,
then one becomes prey to the
dark side within. The spiritual
dimension becomes enslaved and
darkened in the darkness of
life.”
Rebbe Kook warns that “the irruption of
spiritual light from its divine
source on uncultivated ground
yields the perverse aspect of
idolatry. It is for this reason
that we note to our astonishment
the decline of religious Judaism
in a period of national
renaissance.” “Love of the
nation,” he taught, “or more
broadly, for humanity, is
adorned at its source with the
purest ideals, which reflect
humanity and nationhood in their
noblest light, but if a person
should wish to embrace the
nation in its decadent
condition, its coarser aspects,
without inner illumination from
its ancient, higher light, he
will soon take into himself
filth and lowliness and elements
of evil that will turn to
bitterness in a short span of
history of but a few
generations. This is the narrow
state to which the community of
Israel will descend prior to an
awakening to the true revival.”
“By transgressing the limits,”
Rebbe Kook prophesied, the
leaders of Israel may bring on a
holocaust. But this will merely
precede a revival. “As smoke
fades away, so will fade away
all the destructive winds that
have filled the land, the
language, the history, and the
literature.” Always following
his warning was the reminder of
God’s covenant. “In all of this
is hiding the presence of the
living God. It is a fundamental
error for us to retreat from our
distinctive excellence, to cease
recognizing ourselves as chosen
for a divine vocation. We are a
great people and we have
blundered greatly, and,
therefore, we suffered great
tribulation; but great also is
our consolation. Our people
will be rebuilt and established
through the divine dimension of
its life. Then they will call
out with a mighty voice to
themselves and to their people:
“Let is go and return to the
Lord! And this return will be a
true return”.
At the same time, professed who
always sharply defended the
validity of both Christianity
and Islam as religions in the
plan of God, “the brotherly love
of Esau and Jacob [Christians
and Jews], and Isaac and Ishmael
[Jews and Muslims], will assert
itself above all the confusion
[and turn] the darkness to
light.”
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