WHY I WANT TO MAKE ALIYAH
by Barry Verstaendig
July 9, 2002
I want to make aliyah because …
- Hashem gave the land of Israel (the entire land!) to the Jewish people and intended
that we live there. That is why so many of our 613 commandments can only be
done in the land of Israel. Furthermore, the opening line repeated in many
paragraphs throughout the Torah “And when you enter the land…” conveys the idea
that winding up in the land of Israel is a major goal to both the Jewish people
as a whole and to individual Jews. In fact, we are commanded to thank Hashem
for giving us the land every time we eat a meal. (“And you will eat, be
satisfied, and bless Hashem, your God, for the good land that he gave you”
[Deuteronomy 8:10]. This is one of the two blessings that the Torah itself
requires us to say.) The Torah (Numbers 23:52-56) stresses that the land must
be divided up among the Jews such that each family will get its very own fair
share of the land.
According to some rabbinical opinions, settling in
the land of Israel is a commandment, while others maintain that one is merely
rewarded for doing so, though no commandment to settle in Israel exists. There
are no opinions (to my knowledge), though, which maintain that it is preferable
to live outside of Israel.[1] Thus, it would seem to me, that one would want to generate as much reward for
himself or herself as possible and live in Israel.
While it is true that Hashem exiled us from the land
of Israel many years ago, he promised to redeem us eventually and return our
inheritance to us. It seems to me that this time has arrived. The Jewish people
are reluctant to accept this now because there have been many previous
instances in Jewish history when significant portions of the Jewish nation
thought that the exile was about to end, only to be bitterly disappointed. For
example, 300,000 members of the tribe of Ephraim were murdered while they tried
to escape from Egypt prematurely. However, the present time is surely different
because the State of Israel has become firmly established among the countries
of the world and it has become established only because of events that can only
be described as miracles. This would not be the case if it were merely another
hoax. For that reason, I have no qualms about referring to the State of Israel
as “the first flowering of our redemption.” (Religious reason)
-
The Jewish people will never be safe in any other land. Though the people we live
amongst may seem perfectly willing to accept us and though our lives in exile
may be very comfortable, the nasty truth will one day be revealed: the people
of the countries we live in would prefer to kill us and expropriate our
property. It was revealed in Germany in 1933 and in Iran in 1979. It is becoming
clear in Western Europe today, and I have no doubts that it will become clear
in America tomorrow. The Western European nations, many of which helped their
Jewish citizens during the Holocaust, are beginning to enact anti-Semitic laws
similar to those that were enacted in Germany after Hitler came to power.
Western Europe, along with the western half of the United States and all of
Canada, has recently been the scene of many bias crimes. The New York area is
the best place for Jews of the Diaspora to live in today and it is soon going
to be the last safe haven for Jews outside of Israel. But one day, its turn
will come as well. (Secular Zionist reason)
-
It will help the State of Israel survive. Since the State of Israel is a
representative republic, it will only retain its Jewish character for as long
as it has a Jewish majority. And the Arab population in Israel is currently
growing much faster than the Jewish population is. If the “Palestinian Arabs”
are counted together with the “Israeli Arabs,” then there are almost more Arabs
than Jews in Israel today. Although the Palestinian Arabs may not be able to
vote in Israeli elections, it will be difficult, if not impossible, for the
Jews to remain in control of a land where they are outnumbered. No army can control
a land where the majority of the inhabitants do not want them in control.
Furthermore, the Jewish people must show to the world that we wish to remain in
control of certain areas by settling in them. (That is the only way to let the
world know that we seriously believe that we have a right to control those
areas.) Last week ten “illegal” settlements in the “West Bank” were dismantled
because nine of them were uninhabited and one had two families living in it. If
each of those settlements would have had 100 families living in it, then the
government would not have dismantled them. (Political reason)
- I
think that King David was correct when he sang “Behold! How good and how
pleasant it is for brothers to dwell together!” (Psalm 133). Have you ever gone
someplace where there were hardly any Jews (if you, say, were driving across
the United States and stopped in a hick town) and seen someone else wearing a
kippa? Did you feel that you were not strangers, but rather long lost friends?
No Jews are strangers to
each other because we are one extended family. In Israel, a camaraderie that
does not exist anyplace else exists because everyone belongs to the same
family. What could be more fun than living in a place like that? (Social
reason)
- My children will be raised in an all Jewish environment, and Jewish holidays will
be the national holidays. Israel is the only place in the world where our
Jewish identity need not be compromised with any other national identity.
(Cultural reason)
I know that in certain ways moving to Israel will be
very difficult. There is no doubt in my mind that there will not be times when
I will wish that I had remained in the United States. There are certain things
about the United States that the State of Israel cannot match at this time.
Israel does not have the natural or human resources of the United States. I
cannot think of any economic reason to move to Israel.
But I will invoke Channah Spiegelman’s comparison of
a Jew’s desire to make aliyah with Dorothy’s desire to return to Kansas in The Wizard of Oz.
The land of Oz was a beautiful, exciting, and colorful place while Kansas was dull, boring, and
black and white. Strangely, though, Dorothy wanted to leave Oz and return to
Kansas more than anything. Why? Because “there’s no place like home.” And for
the same reason, Jews should want to leave America and go to Israel.
Money isn’t everything. After a hundred and twenty
years, the amount of money one makes or the house one lives in or the business
one runs will not matter. But whether or not one fulfills a commandment will
matter. Whether or not one experienced a higher level of spirituality during
life because he or she lived in “a land watched by Hashem… from the beginning
of the year until the end of the year” (Deuteronomy 11:12) will matter. And
whether or not one helped fulfill his or her nation’s national aspirations will
matter.
In any case, working to increase the economic production of the United States is futile because empires
come and go. Just as the Roman Empire came and went, so, too, will the United States of America
disappear in a few hundred years. In fact, the United States is already
starting to disintegrate because its federal government has, over the past
sixty years, assumed more power than it is supposed to have under its
constitution. If the State of Israel is really “the first flowering of our
redemption,” though, then it will be around forever.
I considered staying in the United States and doing
all sorts of things. I considered joining the US Navy and I considered going
for a Ph.D., among other things. I decided against the US Navy because it would
be impossible to practice Judaism there. It is not the place for a Jewish man
to be in. And, once I realized that, I realized that no place in the United States
is an appropriate place for a Jew. A Jew belongs in Israel.