Twentieth-Century Hasidic-Zionist Homiletics: The Case of Netivot Shalom by “the Rebbe Painter”, Avraham Ya‘akov Shapira of Drohobych
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“The reason that they avoided ascending [to the Land of Israel] with Ezra […] was that they were lazy, and to calm their conscience they said that the end has not yet come; and we also saw many ultra-orthodox leaders making such a mistake in recent decades, not encouraging aliya [to the Land of Israel] when there was a good opportunity for it. […]; division is the reason for the exile (Yoma 9) and peace and unity constitute the tikun (repair).”
2. Netivot Shalom: The Homily as Part of the Dynastic Legacy
The mother of my father’s father, Rabbanit Hadassah Feygele, who came to the Land of Israel with us and died in Jerusalem aged near 100, was the granddaughter of the Admor of Ruzhin […] and she told us […]that when the Admor of Ruzhin arrived in Sadigura he did not become an Austrian citizen but purchased a Turkish travel permit, upon which was written “citizen of Jerusalem”. Since then, all members of the family are citizens of Jerusalem. And the son of that same Hadassah Feygele was my grandfather, of blessed memory, my father’s father, the Admor of Ruzhin, Rabbi Ḥaim Meir Yeḥiel Shapira, who burned with the fire of his love for Zion, and the light of this fire was a brand for all those who approached him and went up with him to Zion.
3. “A New Instruction Shall Go Forth from Me”: Activism as Divine Revelation and the Extended Process of Redemption
They arrived at Tyre and remembered the Land of Israel, raised up their eyes and tears flowed, and they tore their clothes and read this biblical verse: ‘And ye shall possess it, and dwell therein. And ye shall observe to do all the statutes’ [Deuteronomy 11:31–32]. They said that dwelling in the land of Israel is equal to all the commandments of the Torah.
And my father, the lord teacher and Rabbi, may the memory of the righteous be a blessing, used to say that the two commandments, the love of Israel and the settling of the Land of Israel, are equal to the whole Torah […] and the Devil (s”m) in his tricks overturned these in the minds of some people, including God-fearing and flawless people, [so these commandments became] prohibitions in order to interrupt the steps of redemption. And with deep sorrow, we need to look for (Torah) sayings and facts that permit them.
I saw in the writings in my possession, from the late, honored, holy Rabbi of Ruzhin, my grandfather, of blessed memory [...] in these words: it is said “and a new instruction shall go forth from me” [Isaiah 51:4]. And this is difficult (to understand) because it also written “the Lord will not change nor covert his law”.14 But truthfully the Torah we were given includes stories about the holy patriarchs, about Israel, and Esau, and Laban, and what the Blessed Holy One did since then until now is not written.
And this is what the scripture meant in saying “a new Torah will go forth from Me” and “it shall be said of Jacob and of Israel, what hath God wrought” [Numbers 23:23]. “From me”, meaning from what I have accomplished until now. And in my humble opinion, in his holy words he, of blessed memory, [meant] that “the Torah that will go forth from me”, “that will be said of Jacob what has God wrought from then until now” is the Torah of the days called the days of the Messiah [...] and all human deeds that seem plain are part of the Messiah’s arrival, may he come soon, and we must reveal in them the work of God in this direction, and, as the sages said, the redemption of Israel will come gradually.
4. The Vision of Redemption and the Attitude to Arabs in the Land of Israel
“For I trust not in my bow, neither can my sword save me” [Psalm 44:7] but rather my sword―this is prayer―and my request―this is supplication […] and because Moses’ hands make war […] only to say to you that when Israel looked upwards and made themselves a servant to their father in heaven, they would win.
The Holy Zohar explicates “and he wrestled (ve-yea’vek)” [Genesis 32:25] is from the root of the word dust (avak),18 that this dust and contemptibility dominates the spirt of the nation of Israel. And in my humble opinion this is the reason preventing the redemption of the land and the fulfillment the commandment to settle the Land of Israel […]; and in their eyes it seems that the commandment is to do nothing and in this way he [Samael] entraps them.
And we merited all these allusions, thank God, to see in our days the awakening from below of the future redemption, to come soon in our days, that all the kingdoms admitted the right of the Jewish people to the Land of Israel, and it is, according to the Admor, may the memory of the righteous be a blessing, the expression of Esau’s thanks for the blessings.
Since the main suffering of the Messiah’s arrival and the obstacle for redemption is that other nations are residing in our land, and how will they be eliminated for our sake […] there will be no need to eliminate the people that reside in the land, rather the redemption of Israel will inspire blessings unto them as well.
5. Humility, Reproach, and Unity in the Land of Israel as a Condition for Redemption
And they, of blessed memory, said that before the redemption Elijah will come to make peace in the world, and to return the heart of the fathers to the sons and the hearts of the sons to the fathers, and not to strike the land with excommunication and ostracism, but rather to bring close the distant under the wings of the divine presence.
6. Understanding and Revelation, an Acute Call for a National-Zionist Messianic Consciousness
And this is God’s oath, that also in the time of hiddenness and exile, the windows are open towards Jerusalem because from there the revelation will penetrate with the providence of the creator, blessed be He, before the eyes of all.
God, blessed be He, calls us to leave the exile, in the name of my mother…..and Rabbi Yitzhak reads the words “my mother” (le’imi) as denoting my people (le’umi),24 […] which means that we will unite and gather to be called by the name le’om [people] and people of God and not, God forbid, to assimilate with those nations, and that we should not make the mistake that it is possible to learn and fulfill the Torah also outside of Israel […] and in the days of our third redemption, when the danger of assimilation and denial is greater, we will require the most lofty name, imi (my mother).
In particular, in our time we [see] that the divine providence gave us the ability to redeem our holy land from the hands of strangers, how much more so that the obligation falls on each and every individual from Israel not to miss, God forbid, the opportunity and to use this great merit for the good of the people and the land.
7. Revelation in Nature and Divine Providence in the Land of Israel
Anyone who lives in the Land of Israel and delves into all that has emerged and is emerging there, from the time that Israel became a nation to this day, this person stands astonished and amazed at the power of divinity revealed precisely in the natural way, because since the destruction no nation nor people successfully settled permanently in it, and most of the land is not planted nor grows, like it stands and waits for the return of her sons. And anyone who looks at the Western Wall, which has stood since the first Temple and through various revolutions, while all the forts are covered with dirt, this person comprehends the providence of the Blessed Name concealed and hidden in nature (teva) which in gematria is equal to God (elohim).
That the actions of the Hasmoneans caused the appearance of the miracle of Hannukah, we find this in Kedushat Levi, for this reason, we say [the blessing] “who performed miracles for our fathers in those days and at that time” […] in our actions for the people and the holy land we can also arouse natural miracles and in this way bring closer the complete redemption.
The Hasmoneans did well that they did not sit idle but with their actions set in motion the miracle of the oil that lights up our eyes to see miracles within nature, every day, at all times, and every hour, by contemplating the actions of the Creator, blessed be He, His presence is hidden in human actions without His knowledge, and thus God will grant us quickly to see the raising of the horn of Israel between the material and the spiritual and will bring close the end of the salvation by bringing the redeemer soon in our days, amen.
8. Conclusions
Funding
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Conflicts of Interest
1 | For a study of a Hasidic leader from the Ruzhin dynasty, see (Brandes 2006). For bibliographic information regarding a Hasidic leader active in Palestine, see (Alfasi 2010). For a reference to Avraham Ya‘akov Shapira, see (Alfasi 2010, p. 91) and (Alfasi 2006, p. 441). On messianic concepts between the two World Wars in the Munkacs dynasty (albeit not Zionist), see (Inbari 2014). |
2 | For a nonacademic study of Ḥaim Meir Yeḥiel, the Rebbe of Drohobych and father of Avraham Ya‘akov Shapira, with various family accounts of their their immigration to Zion and establishing the “company for the settlement of Eretz Yisrael”, see (Kempinski 2010). |
3 | The question of messianism and Hasidism is extremely broad. For a survey and analysis of different responses to Scholem’s claim, as advocated by Dinnur, Isaiah Tishby, Elliot R. Wolfson, Moshe Idel, Mor Altshuler, Arie Morgenstern, and others, see (Dauber 2009). For an analysis of the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s messianic message in the 20th century, see (Wolfson 2009). |
4 | Regarding the Agudat Yisrael orthodox organization and its non-Zionist attitude, see (Fund 1999). On anti-Zionism of Satmar Hasidism, see (Myers 2013; Keren-Kratz 2017). Regarding Satmar and other anti-Zionist stances of Hasidic branches in America, see (Magid 2019, pp. 263–310). |
5 | Rabbi David Moshe of Tshortkov (Chortkov) supported political Zionism and was in contact with Herzl, as was his successor, Rabbi Israel Friedman of Tshortkov. See (Alfasi 2010, pp. 67–69). |
6 | Haim Meir Yehiel Michl’s attitude is manifest in his Hasidic work Hashalom veha’aḥdut. |
7 | For example, he reports traditions that he heard in the name of Rabbi A. I. of Sadigura, see (Shapira 1928, p. 17), another story regarding him as well as the Magid of Mezritch, (Shapira 1928, p. 35), and a statement made by him (Shapira 1928, p. 37). |
8 | He emphasizes that the distant should be treated pleasantly, even while reproaching them. See, for example, (Friedman 2006, Genesis, p. 4). |
9 | See also (Friedman 2006, p. 108): “Unity is a condition for the redemption” and later in the homily, p. 110. And a homily on Vayeḥi from 194, p. 113. A similar homily about the same verses from 1944/45 on the portion Haḥodesh (Tazri‘a), p. 215 (a homily that recurs also in Netivot shalom). Further, see the homily on the importance of unity from 1938/39, Vayikahel, p. 205. And also from 1941, p. 249; 1938, p. 359. Yet, at the same time, he makes unity dependent on accepting the yoke of the heavenly kingdom―faith leads to unity, an idea that recurs on several occasions and is developed broadly in the homily for 15th of Av 1938, pp. 373–74. It is unclear how he guides his followers to create unity with those that do not take this yoke upon themselves. |
10 | Knesset Israel, literally the assembly of Israel denotes both the Shekhina, the feminine divine presence, and the nation of Israel. |
11 | The tsaddik as a central aspect of Hasidic ethos has been discussed thoroughly in scholarship. For example, see (Green 1977; Biale et al. 2018, pp. 165–70, 822–23). |
12 | Compare to Kook’s kabbalistic view of history as divine manifestation, as analyzed by (Garb 2004). |
13 | On the Land of Israel in earlier Hasidic thought, see (Hallamish 1998; Idel 1998; Goshen-Gottstein 1998; Hershkowitz 2022). |
14 | In the liturgical prayer Yigdal. |
15 | For religious Zionist attitudes vis-à-vis the Arabs and conquering the land of Israel, see (Schwartz 2011; Burgansky 2012). |
16 | Translation of Rashi from M. Rosenbaum and A.M. Silbermann’s translation, London, 1929–1934. |
17 | And compare the topical discussion by Ya‘akov Friedman where the war-related dilemma is more complex (Friedman 2006, Va-yishlach (Kislev 14, 1947), p. 65). |
18 | A pun on the Hebrew root for the words dust and wrestling: a.v.k. |
19 | Found in a letter printed in the collection Zimrat Ha’aretz edited by Moshe Tzvi Fogel, see (Fogel 1941, p. 7). |
20 | Regarding the controversy, see (Assaf 2011, pp. 407–10). |
21 | On the role of preaching and reproach in early Hasidism, see (Etkes 1997; Piekarz 1978, pp. 96–172). |
22 | For a discussion of this aspect of Kook’s attitude towards sinners in relation to kabbalistic and Hasidic ideals, see (Mirsky 2014, pp. 97–98, 168). |
23 | On the idea of Abraham and the inner commandments in Hasidism, see (Green 1989). |
24 | The interpretation and identification between the nation and mother is a pun because they are both written using the same Hebrew letters but with different vowels. |
25 | On Reines’ perception of nature and divinity as an imminent perception of faith rooted in Maimonides, see (Schwartz 2002, pp. 51–56). |
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Sachs-Shmueli, L. Twentieth-Century Hasidic-Zionist Homiletics: The Case of Netivot Shalom by “the Rebbe Painter”, Avraham Ya‘akov Shapira of Drohobych. Religions 2023, 14, 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050581
Sachs-Shmueli L. Twentieth-Century Hasidic-Zionist Homiletics: The Case of Netivot Shalom by “the Rebbe Painter”, Avraham Ya‘akov Shapira of Drohobych. Religions. 2023; 14(5):581. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050581
Chicago/Turabian StyleSachs-Shmueli, Leore. 2023. "Twentieth-Century Hasidic-Zionist Homiletics: The Case of Netivot Shalom by “the Rebbe Painter”, Avraham Ya‘akov Shapira of Drohobych" Religions 14, no. 5: 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050581
APA StyleSachs-Shmueli, L. (2023). Twentieth-Century Hasidic-Zionist Homiletics: The Case of Netivot Shalom by “the Rebbe Painter”, Avraham Ya‘akov Shapira of Drohobych. Religions, 14(5), 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050581