Wednesday, July 26, 2023

American Orthodoxy’s Response to the Establishment of the Jewish State

 



by Rabbi Berel Wein


During the Second World War, American Jewry, at least the Jews in Chicago where I lived, knew that the situation in Europe was bad, but I don’t think any of us knew how bad it was. The Jewish community back then had no real political power and not much wealth. There was a general malaise. American Orthodox Jews felt there was little they could do. 

On top of that, the religious structure of the American Jewish community was very weak. The younger generation of Jews in America was basically non-observant. The majority of American Jews had inherited their family traditions, but were not Jewishly educated or observant.  

In 1950, Look, a popular magazine in those days, dedicated an issue to the topic of 300 years of Jews in America, 1650-1950. In the article, the author stated that the Conservative movement would become mainstream Judaism—the Orthodox would disappear completely and the Reform would assimilate.  

There were dozens of boys on my block on the West Side of Chicago, all of them Jewish. We all went to public school. I was the only one of the group who was shomer Shabbos. Once I got older, I decided to go to law school even though I had always wanted to be a rabbi; there were no positions in the Orthodox rabbinate.  

Soon after World War II, refugees started to drift in. Some of the refugees, especially the rabbinic refugees, were people of immense strength and vision who said, “We’re going to build [Torah Judaism] all over again. We’re not satisfied with [American Jews saying], ‘This is America and this is how we’re going to do it.’” It was unacceptable to them. These were the teachers I had in Beis HaMidrash LaTorah, the Hebrew Theological College in Chicago. They were all European rabbis and great talmidei chachamim, tremendous people, all of whom had had very difficult lives. 

It was an all-Yiddish-speaking yeshivah. It was not so much that these rabbanim communicated to us the knowledge of Torah as much as the geshmak of Torah—how pleasant, how wonderful Torah is. The message they conveyed to us was how fortunate we were to be able to be in a place where we could study Torah. How fortunate we were that we could perform mitzvos. They never spoke about what  happened to them. They always spoke about what was going to be, and what we were supposed to be, and that it was our task to rebuild the Jewish people. Over time, dozens and dozens of Jewish leaders came from the yeshivah and, in fact, even entire communities in Israel. (The aliyah rate from Chicago was enormous.) 

But what really inspired us was the creation of the State of Israel in 1948. The birth of Israel was so unlikely, so unnatural. The years preceding it were so devastating: the British blockade, the Holocaust, the thousands of refugees, the internal strife. But G-d has His ways—which is basically the story of the Jewish people. 

I remember the day the State of Israel was declared; it was on a Friday afternoon. I walked to shul with my father, of blessed memory, who was not an especially outwardly emotional person; he had the stoicism of the Lithuanian Jews. But as we walked to shul, I saw that he was weeping. It made an enormous impression upon me. 


That Sunday night, the Zionist organization in Chicago sponsored a rally on behalf of the State of Israel at Chicago Stadium, where the basketball team played. There were about 20,000 Jews inside the stadium, and another 40,000 to 50,000 Jews in the parking lot. Golda Meir was the guest of honor; she was in America raising funds for purchasing arms on the open market in Europe since the American government wouldn’t sell arms to Israel. 

The program began with the raising of the Israeli flag to the stadium rafters. When that happened, 2,000 years of exile poured out of us. It was a sea of tears. Had I been running the program, I would have said, “That’s it. End it now. Better you’re not going to get!” Indeed, the rest of the program was anticlimactic.  

All my teachers from the yeshivah were in attendance, though none of them were Zionists. That made a tremendous impression upon us.  

When Ben-Gurion came to Chicago to sell Israel bonds in the early 1950s, there was a meeting at a big hotel. We went out of curiosity—we couldn’t afford to buy a bond, but we wanted to see what Ben-Gurion looked like. Our rebbi, who was not a Zionist, was also there. The next day, during the shiur, he asked, “What did you see last night?” He would always ask certain kinds of questions to give us a different perspective. “I saw 500 people and somebody speaking” wasn’t the answer he was looking for. 

“What I saw was that the children of Abraham stood in line to give away money,” he said. “That’s what I saw.” That was the attitude of the time: we must support the Jewish State. The truth is that many Jews felt that Israel wasn’t going to make it. They saw the country’s Communist-Socialist patchwork economy, which has never worked and never will, as doomed to failure. Moreover, Israel was taking in a million refugees and fighting a perpetual war with the Arabs. At the same time, the Soviet Union was saying, “we’re going to destroy you,” and the Western world was apathetic. There were great people, both in the US and in Israel, who said the State wouldn’t last fifteen years. But as I said, G-d has His ways.   

Concurrent with the creation of the State of Israel, in America there developed a much more learned, successful and influential Orthodox Jewish community than anyone ever imagined. I believe that without the State of Israel, Lakewood wouldn’t exist in America. Satmar wouldn’t exist in America. There’d be neither the OU nor YU. The State of Israel provided an unexpected, miraculous platform upon which the Jewish people could build themselves. So even though politically, and almost as a matter of doctrine, there are sects of Orthodoxy who say they’re opposed to the State of Israel, in reality they are dependent upon it. 

Jewish youth across the board spend a year in Israel post high school. Where do American Jews go for vacation? Where do we go to visit? The lynchpin for the revival of Torah Jewry in the Diaspora is the State of Israel.  

There are electric moments in life. The Six-Day War was one of them. At the time, I was in Miami Beach, where I was the rav of a shul. I was driving and had the radio on, and suddenly a news bulletin announced that the Old City of Jerusalem had fallen into Israeli hands. Then they played Colonel Motta Gur declaring “HaKotel b’yadeinu! Har Habayit b’yadeinu! The Kotel is in our hands! The Har Habayit is in our hands!” and Rabbi Shlomo Goren blowing the shofar. I stopped the car, and got out in the middle of the street, and so did everyone else because Miami Beach was 99 percent Jewish. Complete strangers got out of their cars and hugged each other.   

Today, when I reflect upon Israel, I think of the following story: When my oldest grandson was turning three, I wanted to buy him a toy that was educational and innovative and would last for years. After quite a bit of research, I purchased the toy and presented it to him. He spent the next hour playing with the box. 

That’s us. We are playing with the box. We don’t appreciate the gift that’s in it. How did Israel end up with seven million Jews? It’s the largest number of Jews ever in the Land of Israel. Look at Yerushalayim today. People complain about the traffic. My father told me that when he was in Palestine in 1925, studying at Mercaz HaRav, there was one traffic light at Rechov Jaffa and King George. How did it happen that a bunch of shoemakers learned to fly an F-16?! 

Maybe we play with the box because if we played with the toy, it would overwhelm us. So we allow ourselves to be distracted by all the static—nonsense and politics. Meanwhile, the country is being built, and the Jewish world is being rebuilt. Mi milel l’Avraham heinikah banim Sarah?  [Who would have said to Avraham that Sarah would nurse children?] (Bereishis 21: 7) Who would have ever imagined such a thing?  

If you live long enough, you see a lot of things. That’s why the Gemara says, “Im chochmah ein kan, ziknah yeish kan, If there isn’t wisdom, there’s age, i.e., life experience.” I’m fortunate to have witnessed many things no one thought could ever happen.   

In Israel today, everything is on the ascent. I’m optimistic about us. I think the future of the Jewish people lies in the State of Israel. The exile is the tail of the dog, not the head. I think the Orthodox will get stronger, even though we face enormous challenges. Although truthfully it’s hard to predict anything about the Jewish people. If history has taught us anything, it’s taught us that our future is always unpredictable. But I think we’re too far along the way for it not to continue. Therefore, I believe even greater things are in store for us.   

Rabbi Berel Wein, founder and director of the Destiny Foundation, is a renowned author, lecturer and historian.

31 comments:

Garnel Ironheart said...

If you look back at November 1947 and May 1948, you see that most of "the Gedolim" were full of blessing and praise for God for giving us Israel back. Only the extremist crybabies like the Satmar and the Munkatcher were crying and tearing their clothes in grief.
But things have a way of changing. A small group has managed to revise history and now it's the opposite. The Gedolim? Never celebrated! Never supported! Everyone saw it the Satmar's way!

Anonymous said...

Please understand. The gdolim sow what ended up with the "Yiddishhe medine"..
Are erlich they are.. what they did with the sfardim..

Anonymous said...

He failed to explain why Lakewood and satmar would not be around if not Israel.
It's nonsense

Jack Setton said...

7:52
"What they did with the sfardim"
Whatever they did, they did in Israel, and they are coming back to the fold by the tens and thousands, witness the thousands of Sfardie Moisdois, and their inter-marriage rate marrying out of the fate is practically zero, as opposed to the USA Ashkanizim that are intermarrying by at least 85% according to the PEW and Bnei-Brith research.
We Sefardim are thankful to Hakodosh Baruch Hu that we have a "Yiddishe Medina"

not everything is so black and white said...

many gedolim were against hakamas hamedinah. in fact, the maharitz dushinsky led a delegation advocating for jerusalem to be an international city controlled by the united nations. yes, those who were opposed to it tended to be from the edah hachareidis, but some of them were not, including the yekkishe breuer rabbonim. ironically, the munkatcher, reb boruchul rabinowitz zl was actually a zionist! (yes, his father in law, the minchas eleazar was anti zionist, but he died in the 1930's). interestingly, although the brisker rav rav velvel ztzl and beis brisk are known as anti zionist, the brisker rov himself held that during the 1948 war, open miracles occured to help the yidden. ( it is unclear if the brisker rov held it was because at that point the religious zionist tefilla's had power because they were "ernst" or if because Hashem himself created the neis to save the yidden, but the zionists had squandered the opportunity). (see the brisker rov volume 2 by reb shimon meller, they bring this whole debate).

Anonymous said...


Typical polemic
There were very distinguished others who preferred to keep an aloof distance.
There were bigger dilemmas &
graver issues
Whether it would turn positive or negative, Israel was far from a priority

Anonymous said...

We have no permission to take ourselves out of Galus with strength. See Ksubos Daf 111. This has nothing to do with Satmar. Indeed it failed as Israel is the most dangerous place to live both physically and spiritually. Nowhere is the Galus felt as much as in modern day Israel.

Anonymous said...

As implied in original article re:Description of his mentors
There were distinguished Jews who remained aloof.
The Jewish world had graver issues to emphasize.
The new state just wasn't a priority either way.

Dusiznies said...

1:33
"with strength?"
What does that even mean? Do you know what that means?
It is 2023, and there are now over 7 million Jews living in Eretz Yisrael. More Frum Jews live in Israel than anywhere in the entire world.

You scribble:
"Indeed it failed as Israel is the most dangerous place to live both physically and spiritually"
"spiritually?" What the hell are you talking about? There are more Misdois Ha'Torah and Kollim in Israel than anywhere in the world!
"physically?" Words right of the mouths of the Meraglim!

Your stupid comment:
"Nowhere is the Galus felt as much as in modern day Israel."
Nowhere in the entire world can a Frum Jew go dressed as he pleases in public than in the Zionist Stae.
In Chutz Leaartz Jews are covering up in baseball caps..


Dusiznies said...


Anonymous not everything is so black and white said...
You write:

"many gedolim were against hakamas hamedinah. in fact, the maharitz dushinsky led a delegation advocating for jerusalem to be an international city controlled by the united nations.

Many of those Gedoilim were annihilated in the Holocaust, and if they would have had visas, they would have survived!

With all due respect to Harav Dushinski z"l his delegation failed, thank G-d, and was one of the worst ideas ever to have been put forward.Can you just imagine Yerushalyim being controlled by the UN??
Are you insane? The UN is and always was a hotbed of rabid anti-semitism, and Rav Dushinski's idea is proof positive that Gedoilim should stay out of politics.

I just love the following comment you made:
"1948 war, open miracles occured to help the yidden. ( it is unclear if the brisker rov held it was because at that point the religious zionist tefilla's had power because they were "ernst" or if because Hashem himself created the neis to save the yidden, but the zionists had squandered the opportunity)."

Guys, this commenter, questions whether Hashem himself created the neis to save the yidden"
He isn't sure, it's up in the air...
So you believe that are times that "Hashem isn't up to do everything" and sometimes He creates a Neis, and sometimes He doesn't"
In my days in Yeshiva if a guy expressed that view he was considered an apikoras. And you say that it was the Brisker Rav himself that questioned that....... hmmmmmmmmm????????

Lapid said...

1:33
When he says "strength" he means fighting with his mother-in-law.
This "strength' business is passé it's all over, most of us are already here!
That argument you can put in the waste basket, most Jews already live here and in fact you do not need "strength" to come to Israel, you need an application for Aliyah.

Cohen Y said...

He held actually neither. Rather complex

Cohen Y said...

Anachronistic projecting.

Had the UN been left in charge,the middle east;the world; obviously the UN itself from near it's inception; would have probably been so different as to be presently unrecognizable

Anonymous said...

He created a neis.
But not due in any way to their credit.
Almost can be termed-in spite of.
Due to larger circumstances.
Without the zionist state it likely would have been better
That is what he held

Gedalye Greenberg said...

3:39
"Not due to their credit"
How do you know that? I'll bet you made that up!

"Without the zionist state it likely would have been better "
It would have been a lot better if there wasn't a Holocaust!
It would have been a lot better if most of the Jewish Kings in the Times of the Tanach weren't a bunch of Ovdei Avodah Zara, and murderers!

"That is what he held"
he was obviously wrong, and history has proven that!

Anonymous said...

3:39
"Not due to their credit" what sheer arrogance?
You know? What stupidity!
Sicko!

Mr. Gold Beit Shemesh said...

To the guy who wrote:
""many gedolim were against hakamas hamedinah"

That could be but what is fascinating is that MOST of the Gedoilim and leaders of Klall Yisrael settled in the Zionist State of Israel post WW2 and post "Hakamas Medina" . One looks with admiration as even if they disagreed they loved Eretz Yisrael regardless of who was running it!

So to say that "many gedoilim were opposed to the State" without immeditaly stating the fact that they actually settled there despite their misgivings of a State is being dishonest and disingenuous.

Anonymous said...


"would have been a lot better if most of the"
So let's repeat their errors .Yet Again.
The definition of..


Sorry you both,too bad.
flippant empty belchers.
He was far superior to both of you
THAT IS what he stated

Anonymous said...

Window dressing

Anonymous said...

Impudence of idiots
He was stupid?! That's a first.

Anonymous said...

They would have settled there under the Mandate in the same circumstances

Anonymous said...

7:52
The mandate? LOL
Every single country under British rule rebelled against their tyranny and cruelty. The British were in a way a lot of worse than the Germans. Under the mandate the British bastards, ym"s, they sent boats that escaped from Europe back to to the Germans!
"they would have settled there under the mandate " How sick and depraved some people are!

Lakewood Batlen said...

Harav Dushinski's bizarre idea was dead in the water before it took off, even the Eida which he was part of, was adamantly against this. Practically all Gedoilim at the time thought that this was crazy idea and not at all prudent in light of the UN's open anti Semitic agenda.Only someone who was totally oblivious of what was happining around the world would come up with such a harebrained doomed to failure idea.
Just imagine Yerushalayim being under international law today, you would need permission to build any home or expand any home or build a Yeshiva or a Moised. Jews wanting to live Yerushalyim would need permission from countries such as Russia, Korea, and China to be able to worship at the Kotel.
Crazy? No?.

Anonymous said...

Yes, Palestine flourished under the Mandate.
There were difficulties then.Same or less as been since
But that wasn't good enough for the nationalists.
Just like Tzidkiyahu or the biryonim

So the British went sort of south.The world was getting worse because of those same- what was that -ah nazis
There were several Jews in big jobs in the cabinet who could have stopped it,had they desired.
Here we go again.How sick & depraved people are.
Nobody on the planet considering the Brits worse than the Nazis, unless you're a fanatic lechi terrorist. & disingenuous about it too.
The Brits for the record took in more refugees than the US,Canada,or Australia

Most countries are worse off now than then.

Anonymous said...

Who told you such stuff
It would possibly be a nicer atmosphere than now
& Without much of the garbage

Anonymous said...

The world progressed in human happiness in those few generations than it has since or before

In Palestine,we would have had everything we have now without all the endless grievances that came with Jewish or secular rule
What ruined it was the communist chauvinism & nationalist mix
The Brits could punish the Arabs & get away with it

Too many have drunk, unsurprisingly the Kool aid

Gedalye Leibowitz said...

1:44, 1:46 and 2:47
You are apparently the same guy
Britain at one point controlled over 70 countries as they said "The Sun Never Sets on the Union Jack" because of their extreme brutal cruelty that they subjected their subjects they eventually had no choice but to give independents to 62 countries. They residents of these countries rebelled and were murdering their oppressors, the British, and the Brits had to put their heads between their knees and run.
The British throughout their History were the cruelest sadists that one can possibly imagine. You can pick up any history book and read the atrocities that their murderous kings and queens subjected their subjects. The extreme cruelty of the Nazis was for a period of 10 years, while the brutal extreme violence of the Brits was over a thousand years, read Churchill's history on England! Jews were expelled from England in 1290, but not before they were subjected to rape, pillaging, pogroms and their homes confiscated. But that didn't stop famous British Authors like Shakespeare from describing Jews as "vile creatures" and that was 300 years with not a Jew living there and chances are that these authors never even met one single Jew!

The Brits under the mandate knew prior to the Chevron attack and other Arab riots, that the Arabs were planning an attack but decided to let the "arabs vent" for a couple days. Let us not forget that the Brits took random innocent Jews off the streets and murdered them. They turned ships of European Jews that had just escaped the Holocaust and sent them back. In Cyprus, Jews were held in concentration Camps under torturous conditions by the Brits, these Jews had escaped the Holocaust. Most of those books written about the Cyprus detention camps describe the brutal treatment by British troops.

For anyone to suggest that people not just Jews, would have been better off living under the British mandate, is either a liar at best, or a very sick depraved individual and a masochist at worst.

To the rabbis that suggested that Eretz Yisrael be under the jurisdiction of the UN, one can now see how crazy and bizarre this was. Would we want Jews to beg China, Russia, Korea or Iran, if they can extend a mirpesset?

I suggest that people stop quoting these rabbis because by quoting their ridiculous outrageous advice they are causing a huge Chillul Hashem because they are causing people to ridicule and mock them!
They themselves would now with hind-sight agree that those ideas were off the wall.

Dusiznies said...

Dear readers
I am closing debate on this subject as it is only going around and around without convincing anyone. If a guy still thinks that Eretz Yisrael should still be under the mandate or that Yerushalyim should be an international city then he is refusing to see reality and there is no use in continuing this.
The facts are that the Zionists built a beautiful country fulfilling almost all the prophecies, built a home for over 7 million Jews and has the merit of having more Torah learned in the State than anywhere in the entire world. For someone to continue debating this fact, a fact that even a blind person can see is to stick their gullible head in the sand, and even if Hashem told him the same thing, he wouldn't be convinced!

Concerned said...

I know you already closed the debate, but there is one point that I think is important that was not made yet....
Israel, since becoming an independent state, has become a magnet for secular and religious Jews. For secular Jews, Israel is a lifesaver.. as they would be facing a 70% inter marriage and assimilation rate in the diaspora. In Israel, assimilation is practically not existent. In

Anonymous said...



Even those rabbis of yore who may accept that Israel has at present in spite of everything become a mitigated sort of progress, would unhesitatingly state it was concern of their firm negativity, which as a deterrent stirred it to avoid veering too far off the rails
Indeed some stated it then

Anonymous said...

Pardon,would any of you accept if
He told you it was a window dressing generational failure
?
Exactly