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Birthright Journal: Part 2 - Love the Land
There are the spiritual exiles, the sudden ascensions into the other realm—Mohammed rising from the ruin of the Temple Mount. Words are tied to this land. To go to Israel to live is to make “Aliyah,” to “rise up.” A word for “east” in Hebrew also alludes to “past,” (kedma/yamei kedem) an allusion to the direction of origin and the home of Abraham. We face east when praying, facing towards Jerusalem, towards return, towards the past. There is the recent past: 1948 Independence, wars: ’56, ’67, ’73—the occupancy of Lebanon, the recent Intafada, the Gaza pull-out. The land is overwhelmed with boundaries—with border fences, ancient and modern walls, check-points, mountains, canyons, deserts. It is hard to ignore the boundaries, the sense of here and there, of us and them. Wherever our Birthright Israel group seemed to go, we were always navigating borders. Lines were in sight, other lands loomed over ours. I was made conscious of my otherness too, of my Americanness; I did not speak the language so I was susceptible to presentation, vulnerable to the way the Israelis turned English against me. The first greeting to Israel was in a literal sense confusing. The way they said, “Welcome home,” was unsettling. It made me feel twice displaced.
How they pointed out the wall they were constructing. How in our bus Arik, our tour guide, would always say, pointing 500, 300, 100 yards away, “There is the border.” How when the sun came up it had to first pass over the mountains in Jordan. How on the last day we visited Yad Vashem, the National Holocaust museum, and I realized the scars and how they cut deep into the valleys as if ploughed with barbed wire.
Addressing a room full of American college kids, all exhausted from the twelve hour flight, gave him the energy to confront us. “I am arrogant, yes, but do we not have a reason to be arrogant?” he said, grinning again, showing us his straight white teeth. “God gave us the land of milk and honey, but forgot to tell us about the neighbors.” 1Fine, Lawrence. Physician of the Soul, Healer of the Cosmos. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003. Fine’s endnote for the quotation used: Yaari, Iggrot, pp. 144-160. I have drawn on the English translation found in K. Wilhelm, ed. Roads to Zion (New York: Shocken Books, 1948), pp. 15-27. Fine’s bibliographical note is: Yaari, Abraham. “History of the Pilgrimage to Meron” (in Hebrew). Tarbiz 31 (1961): 72-101.
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Birthright JournalRabbi Brant Rosen in Africa |
"God gave us the land of..."
"God gave us the land of..." The Israeli Arab seems to be speaking there as an Israeli - implicitly referring to his Arab brethren "neighbors" as the enemy.
I think what is so challenging about his talk is that it is hard for me to imagine members of the Arab minority in Israel taking Israeli national identity so seriously. The Israeli flag has a Jewish star on it. Israel is referred to as "The Jewish State." Arabs, other than Druze and some Bedouin, don't serve in the Israeli Army. And here he is, albeit comparing his own situation with that of the American Indian, talking as one of "us."