Religious
Jews Fall Divided
By Shelomo Alfassa
/ Jewish Voice March 31, 2006
This
week an election with the lowest voter turn out in Israeli history
took place. Failure. Failure is the word that sums up the political
tidal wave that once again drowned the Torah loving Jews in the political
sphere. This is not a public foray against my people, the Torah loving
Jews, it is solely meant to be a reminder that we must unite to be
successful.
The cultural phenomena that has taken over much of the haredi world,
that of leaving politics to the secular population, is hurting us.
The Jews that desire to live their lives under the guiding light of
the Torah have virtually handed the control of the purse strings and
the secular laws to those who will continue to pass laws against them.
At the same time, the non-haredim, let's call them the "plain
vanilla" orthodox world, also remain divided.
Among
the Torah loving parties, the Sephardi oriented SHAS party won 13
seats, the National Union-NRP won 9, the Ashkenazi group United Torah
Judaism won 6. Combined, this is 28-the same number Kadima received.
The Central Elections Committee announced that each Knesset seat represented
24,000 votes. That means that somewhere near 675,000 voters cast ballots
for Torah loving parties. This is simply not enough. If all the Torah
loving parties would have united, they would have tied Kadima. In
addition, if the rabbis (and it can only be the rabbis that make this
happen), would have encouraged a massive vote by all of their communities
and students, there is no doubt that the Torah parties would have
crushed every poll with overwhelming votes. In addition, tens of thousands
of "religious" votes were no doubt lost by voting for the
multi-splintered Likud.
The
members of Kadima are now in charge. They will control the parceling
and distribution of land to an enemy that remains focused on killing
us. Members of Kadima include the same people who cut the funding
to the yeshivot, to the Jews on welfare, and to the community centers.
But
this is not only about fiscal issues. On the same day that Bibi Netanyahu
lamented that the Kadima election result was a "body blow"
to Likud, the Hamas terrorist "cabinet" approved in a 71-36
vote that the "Koran is our constitution, dying for the sake
of Allah is our biggest wish." Was this covered by the world
media-no. Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev summed up
the Hamas view when he said, "The sad fact is that, when Hamas
speaks about a 'just peace' they are unfortunately talking about a
peace without Israel." Of course we know that to "cooperate"
means either Hamas gets their way or the terrorist attacks begin again.
This makes sense, as we are talking about a terrorist organization
running a so-called government. An Israeli news agency reported that
the newly appointed Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyah
said shortly after his Hamas government was ratified, that it is one
of "shahidim" (martyrs).
Jews
that are united around the Torah need to unite amongst each other.
They must make a protective fence so that their lives will be protected,
thay their land will be protected, that their schools won't be closed,
that funding to poor women and children won't be cut. No longer can
the yeshiva world afford to sit still and remain outside the realm
of politics. Like a colossal army, Torah loving Jews must unite and
stand together or once again they will fall. This week's loss can
be offset by starting to unite for the future. The fragmentation of
the Torah loving world, over matters of pride and self-importance,
must end. Burying our eyes in a book and saying "everything will
be ok" is not enough. Torah loving Jews cannot expect non-Torah
loving Jews to protect them, their interests and their future.
Kadima
fully plans to give away much of Judea and Samaria to the Arabs. Gaza
was the start, Hebron is next, as are other communities. This is not
alarmist thinking, this is Kadima's platform. It is clear the secular
left has an agenda that is not in line with that of the Torah community,
so if we are going to strive to change this, we must work in unison.
We can admit it-we lost. But we can no longer remain in this same
mode.