Shlomo Goren
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Shlomo Goren (1917-1994), was an Orthodox Religious Zionist rabbi in Israel who founded and served as the first head of the Military Rabbinate of the Israel Defense Forces and subsequently as the third Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of Israel.
Rabbi Goren's original family name was Gorenchik. He was born in Zambrow, Poland and immigrated with his family to the British Mandate of Palestine in 1925. He served in the Israel Defense Forces during three wars, wrote several award-winning books on Jewish law, and was appointed Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv in 1968. Rabbi Goren served as Chief Rabbi of Israel from 1973 to 1983, after which he established a yeshiva in Jerusalem, which he headed until his death.
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[edit] Childhood
Goren was raised in Kfar Hasidim, a village of religious Jews near Haifa that his father co-founded. He began studying at the Hebron yeshiva in Jerusalem at age twelve, where he was identified as a prodigy. His first book was published when he was seventeen years old.
[edit] Military career
Goren's career was characterized by a commitment to the Religious Zionist values of his youth. He volunteered for the Haganah in 1936, and served as a chaplain for the Jerusalem area during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, during which he tested for and qualified as an IDF paratrooper. Goren was eventually promoted to the rank of Brigadier-General. Following the establishment of the state of Israel, Goren was appointed Chief Rabbi of the Military Rabbinate of the IDF with the rank of Major-General, a position he held until 1968. Rabbi Goren used the opportunity to help establish and organize the military chaplaincy's framework, streamlining processes to get soldiers accommodations for kosher food and prayer services. Goren personally wrote a new prayerbook to accommodate the different prayer styles used by various ethnic groups serving in the army.
Goren also served in the 1956 Suez Crisis and the 1967 Six Day War, where he was promoted to a full General. Goren was on hand during the capture of East Jerusalem on June 7, 1967, where he gave a prayer of thanksgiving broadcast live to the entire country. Shortly afterwards Goren, blowing a shofar and carrying a Torah scroll, held the first Jewish prayer session at the Western Wall since 1948. The event was one of the defining moments of the war, and several photographs of Goren, surrounded by soldiers in prayer, have since become famous around the world and particularly in Israel. The most famous photograph shows Rabbi Goren blowing the Shofar against the background of the Western Wall. .[1]
[edit] Controversy
Rabbi Goren attracted many admirers through his passion for Religious Zionism and his combining Zionist activism with a commitment to Judaism and Jewish scholarship. However, his uncompromising personality later resulted in him becoming a polarizing and controversial figure in Israeli politics.
Rabbi Goren spent most of his term as Chief Rabbi of Israel attempting to reconcile Jewish religious teachings with modern problems of the state, including advancements in technological progress and various high-profile conversion cases. Goren often clashed with his more conservative rabbinical colleagues, including his Sephardic counterpart, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, and Rabbi Yosef Shalom Eliashiv, then a member of the Israeli Supreme Rabbinical Court.
One example of Goren's desire to adapt halakha to changing realities in science was his controversial stance on Kiddush Levana, the monthly blessing over the new moon. A prayer customarily added after the blessing contains the words "just as I dance before you and am unable to touch you." Rabbi Goren claimed that since the Americans landed on the moon in 1969, this line should be changed to reflect that it is in fact possible to touch the moon.
[edit] Temple Mount activism
Rabbi Goren was also well-known for his controversial positions concerning Jewish sovereignty over the Temple Mount. On August 15, 1967, shortly after the Six-Day War, Goren led a group of fifty Jews onto the Temple Mount, where, fighting off protesting Muslim guards and Israeli police, they defiantly held a prayer service.[2]
Goren was sharply criticized by the Israeli Defense Ministry, who, noting Goren's senior rank, called his behavior inappropriate. The episode led the Chief Rabbis of the time to restate the accepted laws of normative Judaism that no Jews were allowed on the mount due to issues of ritual impurity. The secular authorities welcomed this ruling as it preserved the status quo with the Waqf, the Islamic authority. Disagreeing with his colleagues, Goren continually maintained that Jews were not only permitted, but commanded, to ascend and pray on the mount, a position also held by a minority within the Religious Zionist movement.
The actual question of Goren's radicalism remains controversial. One widely-repeated story about Goren claims that shortly after the Israeli capture of the Temple Mount, the rabbi either argued that Israel should destroy the al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock, or simply said that it would have been a "good thing" if they had been accidentally destroyed.[3] The charge, made by General Narkiss, an eyewitness, in an interview with Haaretz [4]that Rabbi Goren incited to destruction of the mosques has been repeatedly used to claim there is a Jewish Extremism comparable to Islamic extremism. Rabbi Goren's close assistant Rabbi Menachem Ha-Cohen who was with Rabbi Goren throughout that historic day denied ever hearing Rabbi Goren make such a remark. Rabbi Goren himself personally denied this charge several times. [5]. However Goren did make a speech later that year to a military convention, recorded and later broadcast on Israel's army radio[6] in which he said of the Dome of the Rock and the al-Aqsa Mosque that: ‘Certainly we should have blown it up. It is a tragedy that we did not do so.’ [7]
Another possibly apocryphal story claims that Goren accidentally entered Hebron and the Cave of the Patriarchs on June 8, 1967, before the IDF had captured the city, and was greeted with white flags.[8] The city was taken by forces under Colonel Amitai, the Jerusalem area commander, by the evening of June 7 against only scattered light resistance.[9]
Goren repeatedly advocated or supported building a Third Temple on the Temple Mount from the 1960s-onward, and was associated with various messianic projects involving the site. In the summer of 1983, Goren and several other rabbis joined Rabbi Yehuda Getz, who worked for the Religious Affairs Ministry at the Western Wall, in touring a chamber underneath the mount that Getz had illegally excavated, where the two claimed to have seen the Ark of the Covenant. The tunnel was shortly discovered and resulted in a massive brawl between young Jews and Arabs in the area. The tunnel was quickly sealed with concrete by Israeli police. [10] The sealed entrance can be seen from the Western Wall Tunnel, which opened to the public in 1996.
Goren also made headlines after his term as Chief Rabbi had expired. He was deeply opposed to the Oslo Accords and in 1993 declared that it was Halakhically forbidden to dismantle any settlements in the Biblical land of Israel, and encouraged any soldiers ordered to do so to refuse. In 1994 he announced that Halakha made it a "duty" for Jews to kill Yasser Arafat. Rabbi Goren, who was a strong supporter of alliances between Evangelical Christians and Israel, also denounced meetings between Israel and the Holy See, calling it "blasphemy beyond expression."[11]
However, Goren also spoke out against Jewish terrorism. In 1981 he and Rabbi Ovadia Yosef officially condemned a shooting attack on the Temple Mount by a Kahanist immigrant which resulted in the death of one Muslim bystander and the wounding of several others. In a joint statement released by the Chief Rabbis, they declared that "We and the entire Jewish people attack and deplore the criminal act of murder in every possible way. Through this abominable act [Alan] Goodman has removed himself from the Jewish people...".[12]
During the protests against returning Israeli settlements to Egypt in the Sinai to Egypt, a group of young extremists took over a bunker in the settlement town of Yamit. Rabbi Goren was brought by the army to convince the extremist leader, Yehudah Gordon to leave the bunker peacefully. Communicating through a porthole in the bunker, Gordon refused. Rabbi Goren responded that he had a shiduch for Gordon. Gordon's brazen response that Rabbi Goren should shove her through the porthole caused Rabbi Goren to depart angrily.
[edit] Vegetarian lifestyle
Rabbi Goren was a strict vegetarian, a decision he made after visiting a slaughterhouse in Canada to perform an inspection of kashrut. Some claim he was the second vegetarian Chief Rabbi, the first being Abraham Isaac Kook.
[edit] Family
Goren was married to Tzfia Cohen, the daughter of prominent Religious Zionist Rabbi David Cohen, the Nazir of Jerusalem, and the sister of Rabbi She'ar Yashuv Cohen, former deputy-mayor of Jerusalem and the present Chief Rabbi of Haifa. Both Goren's father-in-law and brother-in-law were also prominent rabbinical vegetarians.
Rabbi Goren often visited his daughter in Forest Hills, New York, and prayed at the Young Israel of Forest Hills on his visits.
[edit] Quotes
- "It is clear that according to Halacha (Jewish religious law), a soldier who receives an order that runs contrary to Torah law should uphold the Halacha, and not the secular order. And since settling the land is a commandment, and uprooting the settlements is breaking the commandment, the soldier should not carry out an order to uproot settlements. This government does not lean on a majority of Jewish support, but rather on Arab votes. According to the Halacha it does not have the authority of a majority, and therefore government directives to uproot the settlements do not have the authority of the majority of the people."[13] (NRP newspaper Hatzofeh, December 19, 1993.)
[edit] Bibliography
- The Crown of Holiness, an interpretation and commentary on Maimonides' Mishneh Torah, 1934.
- Sha’rei Taharah, a study on the laws of niddah, 1940.
- Ha-Yerushalmi ha-Meforash, commentary on the Jerusalem Talmud, 1961. Recipient of the Israel Prize for Jewish Scholarship.
[edit] External links and references
- Shlomo Goren
- Jsource Biography
- OU Biography
- Rabbinic Teachings on Vegetarianism, edited by Richard Schwartz, Ph.D., from the Jewish Virtual Library
- Goren Biogaphy from Western Wall Heritage Society Newsletter
- Gorenberg, Gershom. End of Days : Fundamentalism and the Struggle for the Temple Mount. Free Press, 2000. ISBN 0-684-87179-3
Preceded by Isser Yehuda Unterman |
Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of Israel Shlomo Goren 1973–1983 |
Succeeded by Avraham Shapira |
[edit] References
- ^ Goren at the Dome of the Rock. (Hebrew). haaretz.co.il.
- ^ You must specify title = and url = when using {{cite web}}.. pbs.org.
- ^ Let if Fall, (citing Goren's views on the Dome of the Rock and the Temple Mount). arutzsheva.com.
- ^ Haaretz 31 December 1997, also cited in Nur Masalha, The Bible and Zionism:Invented Traditions, Archeology and Post-Colonialism in Palestine-Israel, Zed Books, London 2007 p.79
- ^ The Political Role of the Israeli Chief Rabbinate in the Temple Mount Question
- ^ Broadcast of 31 Dec 1997
- ^ Nur Masalha, The Bible and Zionism:Invented Traditions, Archeology and Post-Colonialism in Palestine-Israel, Zed Books, London 2007 p.79
- ^ Israelis Against Israel. (Goren at Hebron). frontpagemag.com.
- ^ Randolph Churchill, W.S.Churchill,The Six Day War, 1967.
- ^ Preparations for a Third Jewish Temple. (Goren about Temple Mount). templemount.org.
- ^ The End of History—Messiah Conspiracy.. ramsheadpress.com.
- ^ Goren denounces terrorism. jcpa.org.
- ^ Settlement Snapshots. fmep.org.