In the spring of 1967 the armies of Syria, Jordan and Egypt massed on Israel’s borders, their leaders openly forecasting the annihilation of the Jewish state. On May 22nd Egypt closed the Straits of Tiran and blockaded the Israeli port of Eilat, an act of aggression tantamount to the declaration of war. “Israel,” Prime Minister Levi Eshkol declared, “is obliged to defend itself.”1
With the United States warning citizens to leave the region, the Chabad community turned to the Rebbe for guidance. In a telegram to yeshiva students in Jerusalem he wrote, “Study with diligence and dedication… certainly certainly the guardian of Israel will neither slumber nor sleep, and you will report good news.” The Rebbe dispatched a similar telegram to the residents of Kfar Chabad. Both were widely publicized in the Israeli press.2
May 28th coincided with Lag B'omer, traditionally celebrated
with dancing, bonfires and field trips. In Israel the grim situation tempered
festivities.
At Chabad headquarters in New York thousands of children paraded to celebrate the holiday. “Your brothers and sisters in the land of Israel,” the Rebbe told the assembled crowd, “are in a situation where G‑d protects them and sends them blessing and deliverance.” With ringing confidence he proclaimed that the Jews in the Holy Land “will come out of the present situation successfully.” But “upon you and upon us,” he urgently enjoined the children, “rests the special obligation and merit of helping them.”
The Rebbe expressed firm conviction that when a Jewish child in America “will study another Torah verse, fulfil another mitzvah... allowing no opportunity to slip by,” and influence others to do likewise, “this rescues every Jew, wherever they may be, from the difficulties that they meet, bringing them G‑d’s blessings in increased measure… Then the Torah’s promise will be fulfilled… The Jewish people will dwell in the Land of Israel securely, and there will be peace…”4
Within two weeks the Israeli Defense Forces had swept to victory, taking control of the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights and the West Bank of the Jordan river, including the Old City of Jerusalem and the Western Wall. The Rebbe hailed their success as a miracle wrought by G‑d for his people. G‑d and his people, he emphasized, are bound together essentially. But their bond is made manifest through the study of Torah and the practice of mitzvot.5
The Rebbe never argued that Torah could be a substitute for
military defense. His chassidim served in the Israeli Defense Forces, and some
were killed in battle.6
In the Rebbe’s view, the success of military defense depends on the moral and spiritual vitality that Torah learning and mitzva observance engender. It was in this spirit that he initiated a campaign to encourage as many Jews as possible, especially soldiers, to perform the mitzvah of tefillin.9 The verse “all the nations of the world shall see that the name of G‑d is upon you, and they will fear you,”10 he often repeated “refers to tefillin.”11
At the heart of the Rebbe’s attitude towards the People and the Land of Israel was his conviction that the integrity of the Torah, the people and the land, are intertwined.12 He lobbied successive Israeli governments to make the halachic definition of a Jew binding by state law and so preserve the integrity of the people. If the halachic standard did not receive legal backing divisive definitions of Jewish peoplehood would proliferate.13
Similarly, he argued, compromising the integrity of the land also compromises the integrity of the Torah and the Jewish people. It is by Torah’s authority that the land belongs to the Jewish people, and it is only there that all the laws of the Torah can be fulfilled.14 Moreover, ceding territory displays weakness in the face of aggression, paving the way for further threats and putting Jewish lives at risk.15
Herein too lies the Rebbe’s point of departure from secular
Zionist ideology. Historically,
The Rebbe never allowed such ideological differences to become catalysts for alienation. Israeli leaders, including David ben Gurion, Zalman Shazar, Menachem Begin, Ariel Sharon, Shimon Peres and Binyamin Netanyahu regularly consulted with him, and attested to his incisive knowledge of diplomatic, military and social affairs. Only by working with Jews of all stripes, to further their common causes, could integrity be preserved.17
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